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  • Iraqi refugees need Christian solidarity

    Today.az, Azerbaijan
    May 6 2008


    Iraqi refugees need Christian solidarity

    By Annegret Kapp
    6 May 2008


    "Although I had been threatened many times in Iraq, I did not want to
    leave," says the Armenian Orthodox hairdresser Cayran. "But then my
    shop was burnt and the car of my husband, who used to work as a
    driver, was robbed. So we left everything behind and fled to Syria."

    "Stories of lost loved ones, the sudden need to flee home and
    community and the hardship of life as refugees need to be told. And
    those who have the power to help end the tragedy of being a refugee
    need to listen."

    At an April 2008 meeting of Iraqi Christian refugees and church
    representatives from around the world at the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East in Damascus, Iraqi Christians
    who are now refugees in Syria spoke as church members from the US,
    Germany, Lebanon, Pakistan and Sweden, along with the general
    secretaries of the World Council of Churches and Middle East Council
    of Churches listened.

    What the church representatives heard were stories of incredible
    suffering in Iraq and overflowing hospitality in Syria. They heard
    about the pain of living in Iraq and eventually leaving. They heard of
    the strain the influx of 1.5 million Iraqi refugees have placed on the
    economy of Syria creating the need for jobs, safety and security
    despite the unanswered questions of what next for the Iraqis.

    The prices for food and housing are skyrocketing, and it is extremely
    hard to find a well-paid job. "Even if there were no refugees, the
    economy would have to create thousands of job opportunities a year in
    order to integrate our young people who join the labour market," Samer
    Laham, director of ecumenical relations at the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarchate, explained to the visitors from abroad.

    That evening many spoke of the trauma suffered by their children and
    the insecurity of their future. Cayran said her son cannot speak
    normally since he closely escaped a kidnapping.

    "Animals live better lives than human beings in Iraq," said Samira, a
    Syrian Orthodox refugee. "At least they have the freedom to move. We
    were even too afraid to go to church because people were kidnapped
    from church."

    One day, when she was still living in Iraq, Samira went shopping with
    her daughter. "Three gunmen stopped us. They pushed my daughter around
    and asked her why she was in the street without a veil. Since then,
    she did not want to leave home and she dropped out of university."

    Aram, who had been a member of the Armenian Orthodox Church in
    Baghdad, said: "My wife and I knew some Christians who were killed. As
    our numbers were on their mobile phones, their murderers used them to
    call and threaten us."

    Aram also told about the mistrust that is poisoning communities in
    Iraq: "We had some friends, who turned out to work for the Mahdi
    Army. We thought they were friends, but they took our pictures in
    order to have us killed."

    Incidents such as the publishing of the prophet Muhammad cartoons in
    Denmark in 2005 benefit the extremists, who use them to justify their
    hidden agenda to kick "non-believers" out of the country, Munir from
    the Calvinist community in Baghdad is convinced.

    "My family was threatened: either you leave within 15 minutes or we
    will kill you," Munir described his own experience. He added that they
    did not know how serious the threat was, so they went to his sister's
    apartment next door and waited. Really an armed gang arrived. "They
    raped our wives, and even my eighty-year-old mother was beaten."

    After Munir's brother-in-law, who had been kidnapped, was freed, the
    family left "immediately, without even taking any clothes with us,"
    selling the apartment for a fourth of its value.

    But life in Syria is not easy, either, as the resources which refugees
    managed to bring with them are soon used up, and jobs are hard to
    find.

    "I have a brother and a sister outside the region," Munir said. "We
    depend on them and are a burden on them. But they cannot afford to
    send us money all the time."

    A psychological burden for many families is the knowledge that any
    emergency or illness will find them without protection. Kwarin, a
    father of four, left his job with a security company in Baghdad to
    join his family in exile and take care of his children. "My wife
    urgently needs an operation," he said, "but I have no money to pay for
    it."

    While the refugees are grateful to Syria and the churches there for
    welcoming them, many feel let down by the international
    community. Frustration prevails with regard to the Western embassies
    who have rejected visa applications again and again.

    "Do they want that parents go back to Iraq and get killed before they
    allow the children to get out? Must our young women go back and be
    raped before they are allowed out?" one man asked angrily.

    Cries of "No!" or even "Never!", both in English and Arabic, filled
    the room, as the question of whether they want to return to Iraq was
    put to the refugees. "Of course I want to go back to my country," a
    young woman from Basra explained. "But can you guarantee that I will
    not be killed? My relatives went back and were killed in one night."

    The Rev Dr Volker Faigle of the Evangelical Church in Germany thanked
    the men and women who gave their testimonies to the WCC delegation for
    this clear message. "We cannot bring airtickets or visas along," he
    acknowledged. "But my church and the Roman Catholic Church in Germany
    will join hands and approach the government, the parliament and the
    European institutions to tell them what we have seen and heard. (...)
    When we return to our countries, we will think of you, we will pray
    for you and we will act for you."

    The concern felt by Syria's Christian communities for their sisters
    and brothers in and from Iraq was tangible in all the encounters the
    WCC delegation had with church leaders.

    Patriarch Mor Ignatius Zakka of the Syrian Orthodox Church, who was
    himself born in Iraq, told the ecumenical visitors about a priest of
    his church who had been killed just one week earlier, after he
    conducted the Holy Mass. "We do not want Iraq to be emptied of
    Christians but if they are in danger there, how could we tell them to
    stay?" asked the patriarch.

    Many Christian refugees experienced that in Iraq belonging to a
    religious minority is dangerous. "Christians and other minorities are
    paying the price of the Iraq war," said Samer Laham, "because they are
    suspected of being traitors and of helping the allied forces - as if
    they were not an original part of the social fabric and had not shared
    the bread with their Muslim brothers since centuries. "

    So when they arrive in the host country, Christians put most trust and
    expectations for help on the churches. Denominational boundaries, on
    the other hand, are easily overcome. "Our church is an open house for
    Iraqi either to hold their own services or to join ours, said the
    Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch Gregorios III. He added that his
    patriarchate works hand in hand with an Islamic centre to care for
    Iraqi refugees, whether they be Christian or Muslim.

    Pastor Boutros Zaour, of the Evangelical National Church, said "it is
    Syria's destiny to be hospitable to refugees, ever since the Armenians
    fled here from the persecutions they suffered in the Ottoman Empire."

    "The personal stories the delegation heard were heartwrenching," said
    Clare Chapman, deputy general secretary of the National Council of
    Churches USA, at the end of the visit.

    "We must pray for the Iraqi refugees and work together as member
    churches of the WCC and as citizens of our home countries, to address
    the conditions they daily endure. We must take our responsibility
    seriously, as people of faith, to do whatever we can to support them
    as they try to rebuild the lives they lost through no fault of their
    own," she said.

    ------------

    (c) Annegret Kapp is web editor for the World Council of Churches
    (WCC) and a member of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg, Germany.

    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/7079
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