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Christian Aramaeans: Top Victim Of The US Policy In Mesopotamia (Fak

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  • Christian Aramaeans: Top Victim Of The US Policy In Mesopotamia (Fak

    CHRISTIAN ARAMAEANS: TOP VICTIM OF THE US POLICY IN MESOPOTAMIA (FAKE, COLONIAL IRAQ)
    Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

    American Chronicle
    http://www.americanchronicle.com/article s/77616
    October 13, 2008
    CA

    Complementing Western European colonial policies that date back to
    the 16th century, the US intervention in Mesopotamia (falsely called
    Iraq) against the tyrannical Pan-Arabist regime of Saddam Hussein
    ended up as total disaster for the massively emigrating Aramaeans,
    whose historicity in the area goes back to the last centuries of the
    2nd millennium BCE.

    The Aramaeans defended Nestorian Christianity (fallaciously considered
    as heretic by the Constantinopolitan and the Roman patriarchs) against
    the Sassanid Persian oppression and the Eastern Roman persecution.

    Due to the fact that for more than 300 years the Eastern Aramaeans had
    been persecuted by the then world´s two main power,s which succeeded
    one another in these territories of today´s SE Turkey, Eastern Syria
    and Northern Iraq, the acceptance of the Islam was easy at all levels,
    religious, linguistic, economic and political.

    Arabic is a close Semitic relative of the Aramaic; the taxes that
    the Aramaeans had to pay to the Islamic Caliphate´s authorities were
    lower than the heavy tributes leveraged by the Eastern Romans and the
    Sassanid Persians; the Islamic Caliphate was an oasis for the Eastern
    Aramaeans, and the Nestorians - rejecting the theory that Jesus was
    God - were very close to basic concepts of Islam that presents wide
    affinities with the Nestorian Christianity - which was a matter that
    the Western Christian churches and Freemasonic academia did their
    ingenious best to hide from the average Western people.

    Thus, many Aramaeans became progressively Muslims, contributed to the
    rise of the Islamic Enlightenment, Arts and Sciences, and gradually
    forgot Aramaic; however, the Nestorian Aramaeans were still numerous
    at the Ottoman times, representing more than a third of the local
    Mesopotamian populations.

    Targeted by the cruel colonial policies of France and England,
    they have been decimated over the past centuries due to the
    colonial practices of ´divide et impera´. For the evil plans of
    the Freemasonic colonial elites of Europe, the Nestorian Aramaeans
    have to disappear totally, and if this is not possible, to emigrate
    from their homeland and get dispersed.

    In forthcoming articles I will focus on aspects of the Anti-Christian,
    Freemasonic policies of the colonial powers France and England,
    but here I reproduce two recent features from IRIN and one report
    from AFP that make state of the calamitous situation to which the US
    paranoia in Iraq constrained the last remnants of a most illustrious -
    and most envied by the French and the English - Nation - the History
    of which has been monstrously falsified in the supposedly trustful
    universities and academic centers of the West.

    Iraq: Attacks Drive Thousands of Christians out of Mosul

    http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportI d=80872

    Baghdad, 12 October 2008 (IRIN) - Nearly 750 Christian families, about
    3,750 individuals, have fled their homes in Mosul, a city about 400km
    north of Baghdad, as Sunni Muslim extremists have increased attacks
    against this religious minority since 4 October, a local official
    said on 11 October.

    "We have registered so far 744 Christian families who left their
    houses in Mosul due to the recent attacks. Most have ended up either
    in relatives´ houses or churches or monasteries in nearby towns
    and villages where there are many Christians," said Jawdat Ismaiel,
    provincial director of the Ministry of Displacement and Migration.

    Ismaiel said these new internally displaced persons (IDPs) are
    distributed in seven towns and villages to the north and east of Mosul,
    the provincial capital of Ninevah province. He said there were about
    200 families in Qaraqoush, 187 families in Tal Skouf, 145 families
    in Bartila, 96 families in Baashiqa, 47 families in Karam Less,
    37 families in Tilkaif and 32 families in Alqoush.

    Ismaiel added that his teams are visiting all the towns and villages
    that have offered safe haven to Christian families in order to track
    their number, which is "increasing dramatically hour after hour".

    Aid deliveries

    He went on to say that 150 food and aid packages have been distributed
    so far to these families and at least 50 more were expected to be
    distributed later on 11 October. Each package includes four bed
    rolls, four blankets, four pillows, hygiene and kitchen materials,
    cans of food, lanterns, tomato paste, clothing for adults and children
    and toothpaste.

    In addition, Ismaiel said the displacement ministry is planning to
    build a makeshift tent camp in Bartila if needed.

    An accurate estimation of the Christian population in Iraq is not
    available but hundreds of thousands of Christians are known to have
    fled the country since the US-led invasion of the country in 2003
    for fear of attacks by both Sunni and Shia religious extremists.

    A local police officer in Mosul said that since 4 October police
    had found seven dead Christians who appeared to have been kidnapped
    by gunmen and killed execution-style. The latest was a construction
    worker killed on 8 October.

    The officer spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised
    to speak to media.

    Following these recent attacks, Ni´ma Noail, a 50-year-old Christian
    civil servant, decided to leave his house in Mosul and has ended up
    in a room in a church in Bartila.

    "We left everything behind us. We only took our souls," Noail,
    a father-of-three, said. "Relatives in other cities and friends in
    Mosul, including Muslims, advised me to leave after recent events."

    He called on the government and US-led forces to "honour their word
    to offer protection to Christians".

    Iraq: More Food Aid Needed for Displaced Christians - official

    http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?Repo rtID=80882

    Baghdad, 13 October 2008 (IRIN) - Calls for more humanitarian aid have
    been made as an increasing number of Christians flee their homes in and
    around the northern city of Mosul due to attacks by Sunni extremists.

    "As of today [October 12], the number of Christian families who
    have fled their homes in Mosul has reached 1,094 [about 5,470
    individuals]. They are still fleeing to nearby Christian towns and
    villages fearing attack by gunmen," said Jawdat Ismaiel, provincial
    director of the office of the Ministry of Displacement and Migration.

    Ismaiel told IRIN he had appealed to the ministry, the Iraqi Red
    Crescent Society (IRCS), and the International Organization for
    Migration to help with more food and other aid for these families.

    "The most needed items are food, blankets and bed rolls... We have
    distributed 350 items so far and we will distribute at least 200 more
    tomorrow," Ismaiel said.

    Falah Hilal, head of the IRCS office in nearby Ninevah Province,
    said his teams had supplied 525 families with aid in two towns.

    "These families are going through hard times, with panic, sadness and
    misery obvious in their faces," Falah Hilal told IRIN. "They have left
    their properties and their children are out of school... displacement
    is still under way."

    Each aid package includes four bed rolls, four blankets, four pillows,
    sanitary and cooking materials, canned food, a lantern, tomato paste,
    and clothing for adults and children.

    Investigation

    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has ordered an investigation
    "to adopt immediate and necessary measures to enable the Christian
    families displaced over the past few days to go back home," a
    government statement said.

    Ali al-Dabagh, a spokesman for the Iraqi government, on 12 October
    condemned "criminal groups trying to harm the coexistence and
    forgiveness principles among Iraqis".

    Al-Dabagh accused extremist groups of targeting "an essential segment
    of Iraqis, Christians with whom we have a long history of brotherhood
    and coexistence."

    In Mosul, an Iraqi army officer who preferred anonymity said: "We will
    protect Christians and their properties, and hunt down the terrorists
    behind these criminal acts, so as to help those who have fled their
    homes to return."

    Whilst there is no accurate data on the size of the Christian
    community, hundreds of thousands are believed to have fled the country
    since the US-led 2003 invasion. There were around 800,000 Christians
    in Iraq in 2003, according to Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako.

    A police officer in Mosul who preferred anonymity said that since
    4 October police had found seven dead bodies of Christians who had
    been kidnapped and apparently killed execution-style.

    sm/at/cb

    Iraq Pours in Police to Protect Christians

    http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gF Vy7yWCvTc6j79CDdEJJoGDIXUQ

    Mosul, Iraq (AFP) -- Iraq deployed around 1,000 police in Christian
    areas of Mosul on Sunday as thousands of members of the minority
    group fled the worst violence against them in five years.

    "Two (national police) brigades were sent to Christian areas in Mosul
    and churches were surrounded and put under tight security," interior
    ministry spokesman Abdul-Karim Khalaf told AFP.

    He said the reinforcements had been deployed from midnight in the
    restive northern city, considered by US and Iraqi commanders as the
    last urban stronghold of Al-Qaeda in Iraq.

    Khalaf added that two investigation teams, one security and the
    other criminal, had also been deployed to probe a spate of attacks on
    Christians in Mosul since September 28, in which at least 11 people
    have been killed.

    An AFP correspondent said police had set up checkpoints at churches
    in the city's four heavily Christian areas and were patrolling the
    streets on foot.

    Nearly 1,000 Christian families have fled their homes in the city
    since Friday, taking shelter on the northern and eastern fringes of
    Nineveh province, according to provincial governor Duraid Kashmula.

    He said the violence was the worst against Christians in five years.

    "(It) is the fiercest campaign against Christians since 2003,"
    Kashmula told AFP on Saturday. "Among those killed over the past 11
    days were a doctor, an engineer and a handicapped person."

    At least three homes of Christians were blown up by unidentified
    attackers on Saturday, security officials said.

    Mosul military command spokesman Khalid Abdul-Satar said he did not
    know who was behind the violence but pledged to protect the Christian
    community.

    "We told the Christians through their churches and priests that we
    are ready to provide security to any house or individual that needs
    our protection. We have enough forces to do that," Satar said.

    At the Vatican, Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday condemned the violence
    against Christians in both Iraq and India.

    "I invite you to pray for peace and reconciliation as situations
    cause concern and great suffering.... I think of violence against
    Christians in Iraq and India," he said.

    Yunadem Kanna, one of only two Christians in the national parliament,
    said he had held urgent talks with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on
    the violence.

    "I just met with Maliki and he promised to deliver," he said, adding
    that the army and not just police had to move into the area in force
    if the law was to be upheld.

    The flight of Christians from Mosul came as Chaldean Archbishop Louis
    Sako last week called on the US military as well as Prime Minister
    Maliki's government to protect Christians and other minorities in
    the face of a rash of deadly attacks.

    In an interview with AFP, Sako called on US forces to do more to
    protect Christians and other minorities.

    "We are the target of a campaign of liquidation, a campaign of
    violence. The objective is political," Sako said.

    Since the US-led invasion of 2003 more than 200 Christians had
    been killed and a string of churches attacked, with the violence
    intensifying in recent weeks, particularly in the north, he added.

    There were around 800,000 Christians in Iraq at the time of the US-led
    invasion, a number that has since shrunk by around a third as the
    faithful have fled the country, the archbishop said.

    In March, the body of the Chaldean archbishop of Mosul, Paul Faraj
    Rahho, 65, was found in a shallow grave in the city two weeks after
    he was kidnapped as he returned home from celebrating mass.

    Iraq's Christian community includes various denominations, including
    Syrian Orthodox and Catholic, Armenian Orthodox and Roman Catholic
    congregations.

    Note

    Picture: Church in Arbil, Northern Mesopotamia (falsely called
    ´Iraq´)

    From: http://flickr.com/photos/11923090@N03/2094361914

    The Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East, current
    presided over by Mar Dinkha IV is an Aramaean Christian church, and one
    of the earliest churches to separate from mainstream Christianity. It
    that traces its origins to the See of Seleucia - Ctesiphon, said
    to be founded by Saint Thomas the Apostle as well as Saint Mari and
    Addai as evidenced in the Doctrine of Addai. This church is sometimes
    referred to as the "Nestorian Church", the "Syrian Church" or the
    "Persian Church."

    It has also been referred to, inaccurately, by a number of other
    names. These include Assyrian Orthodox Church, which has led some
    to mistakenly believe that it is a body of the Oriental Orthodox
    community. The church itself does not use the word "Orthodox" in any of
    its service books or in any of its official correspondence, nor does it
    use any word which can be translated as "correct faith" or "correct
    doctrine", the rough translation of the word Orthodox. In India,
    it is known as the Chaldean Syrian Church. In the West it is often
    known as the Nestorian Church although the Church itself considers the
    term pejorative. The church declares that no other church has suffered
    as many martyrdoms as the Assyrian Church of the East, which was the
    traditional name of the Christian Church of the Eastern Aramaeans.

    --Boundary_(ID_UTRB40z+HkudHVnXeQwCzA) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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