Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Assyrian Christians Claim ISIS Assaults Tantamount to Genocide of 19

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Assyrian Christians Claim ISIS Assaults Tantamount to Genocide of 19

    Gospel Herald
    Feb 28 2015

    Assyrian Christians Claim ISIS Assaults Tantamount to Genocide of 1915,
    Ask 'Civilized World' to React Swiftly, Decisively

    By Isaiah Narciso


    Relatives of Egyptian Coptic men killed in Libya mourn at their house
    in al-Our village, in Minya governorate, south of Cairo February 16,
    2015. Thousands of traumatized mourners gathered on Monday at the
    Coptic church in al-Our village south of Cairo, struggling to come to
    terms with the fate of compatriots who paid a gruesome price for
    simply seeking work in Libya. Thirteen of 21 Egyptians beheaded by
    Islamic State came from the impoverished dirt lanes of al-Our,
    violence that prompted the Egyptian military to launch an air strike
    on Islamic State militant targets in Libya. REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih

    The Islamic terror group known as ISIS continued its march across Iraq
    and Syria this week, tearing down artifacts and persecuting religious
    minorities. However, they have directed much of their wrath against
    Assyrian Christians and their ancient culture.

    According to Peter BetBasoo of Assyrian International News Agency,
    ISIS has carried out atrocities against Assyrian Christians in both
    Syria and Iraq. These actions included murders, kidnappings of
    hundreds of men, women, and children, and teardowns of cultural
    resources, including burning down churches and priceless artifacts as
    shown in a YouTube video.

    Like Us on Facebook

    "This is genocide -- there is no other word for it," BetBasso wrote.
    "This is the erasure of a nation from the land which it has inhabited
    for 6764 years."

    BetBasoo noted the irony surrounding the timing of the ISIS attacks,
    noting that it is currently taking place on the 100th anniversary of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    "It is ironic that the ISIS attacks on Assyrians in Syria is occurring
    in 2015, the centennial anniversary of the 1915 Turkish genocide of
    Assyrians, Greeks and Armenians, in which 750,000 Assyrians were
    killed (75 percent), 500,000 Pontic Greeks and 1.5 million Armenians,"
    BetBasoo wrote.

    BetBasoo contended that ISIS knew what it was doing when the terror
    group carried out their attacks on important historical dates for
    Assyrian Christians.

    "ISIS is pretty savvy and is historically informed," BetBasoo wrote.
    "When ISIS pushed into the Nineveh Plain in Iraq last year, forcing
    200,000 Assyrians to flee their homes, they began their invasion on
    Aug. 7, which is the official Assyrian Martyrs Day, a day on which
    each year Assyrians remember their fallen."

    BetBasoo argued that ISIS was sending a message through its
    persecution of Assyrian Christians that it plans to destroy "the very
    foundations of world civilization."

    "It is in Mesopotamia where civilization as we know it began,"
    BetBasoo wrote. "Destroying Assyrian artifacts is ISIS's message to
    the world that it aims to eradicate the very basis of its civilization
    because it is not Islamic."

    According to Sean Savage of JNS.org, ISIS has attacked 35 Assyrian
    villages along the Khabur River in Hasaka, a city in northeastern
    Syria. Jeff Gardner, a spokesman for Restore Nineveh Now Initiative,
    spoke about ISIS actions against Assyrian Christians.

    "We are absolutely appalled, but not surprised, by the actions of
    [ISIS]," Gardner said. "They continue to do what they do - terrorize,
    murder and pillage."

    Savage reported that local Arab tribal leaders in Syria have attempted
    to act as intermediaries between ISIS and the Assyrian Christian
    community. The leaders wanted both sides to do a prisoner swap and
    urged ISIS to release civilian Assyrian Christians caught in the
    crossfire.

    "Immediately for Syria, we're calling for much broader international
    intervention," Gardner said. "We are calling on the public to support
    our relief efforts. Both governments and people need to respond to
    this crisis."

    According to Savage, the video showed ISIS fighters supposedly
    destroying priceless artifacts related to the Assyrian Empire and
    other ancient civilizations inside the Mosul Museum in Iraq. ISIS
    justified its destruction by claiming that they were forms of idolatry
    under its radical interpretation of Islam.

    "The Prophet Mohammed took down idols with his bare hands when he went
    into Mecca," an ISIS fighter said. "We were ordered by our prophet to
    take down idols and destroy them, and the companions of the prophet
    did this after this time, when they conquered countries."

    BetBasoo warned that the international community must react to ISIS
    soon or there will be dire consequences for the entire world.

    "The civilized world must find the courage to accept the force of its
    moral superiority and act on it," BetBasoo wrote. "If it does not, the
    world will fall into shadow."

    Gardner told JNS.org that would take more than mere words and air
    strikes from the international community to take out ISIS and protect
    minority groups in the region.

    "We need to move past just airstrikes and either mobilize
    international forces or continue to train indigenous forces like the
    Assyrians," Gardner said.


    http://www.gospelherald.com/articles/54559/20150228/assyrian-christians-claim-isis-assaults-tantamount-to-genocide-of-1915-ask-civilized-world-to-react-swiftly-decisively.htm

Working...
X