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Iraqi Christians Seek Return,
Sense Extinction

By Kelley B. Vlahos
11-17-2009

How easy it is to declare Iraq "turned around" while an ancient people face the swirling desert sands of their own extinction.

While it might sound a bit hyperbolic, there is no denying that the Christian minority in Iraq is slowly bleeding out, even as U.S. lawmakers justifying their support for the invasion of Iraq – such as Senators John McCain, Joseph Lieberman, and Lindsey Graham – insist the United States military made that country a better place to live.

Millions of Iraqis, including the Christians who have fled the country since the 2003 invasion or who have lost family members in targeted killings or kidnappings, probably disagree. While their brethren in exile encounter unemployment, isolation, and even homelessness because of the worldwide economic crisis, the Christians who remain in Iraq are subject to ongoing intimidation and violence from Muslim fundamentalist militias and even the Kurds who once took them in under wartime duress.

"We are considered the weakest of the weak. That is why we are targeted, because we don’t have the means to fight back and our Christian teaching does not allow us to fight back," insists Joseph Kassab, executive director of the Michigan-based Chaldean Federation of America, which advocates for the welfare of all Christian Iraqis. Though numbers vary a bit, Kassab says there are approximately 400,000 Christian Iraqis left in the country, down from a pre-war population of about 1.4 million (other estimates place the remaining number of Christians at between 500,000 and 600,000, down from 1.2 million).

Nevertheless, says Kassab, "we are dealing with the issue of survival here," and things are getting worse. Many Christians – who as of 2003 accounted for about 3 percent of Iraq’s population – fled to the northern Kurdish areas after being persecuted by militias in Baghdad and other urban centers after the invasion. Now, according to news reports and a recent alert by Human Rights Watch (HRW), they are struggling in the crossfire – along with other ethnic minorities like the Yazidi, Shabak, Turkmen, and Kakai communities – between the dominant Kurds and usurped Arabs, particularly in Nineveh province.

From the HRW report:

"Both Kurdish and Arab authorities lay claim to Nineveh’s disputed territories, and since 2003, the Kurdistan Regional Government has been in a position to reshape the reality on the ground through its extensive security and political presence. To consolidate its grip, it has offered minorities financial and other inducements to win their support while simultaneously using repressive measures to keep them in line. Kurdish forces have engaged in arbitrary arrests and detentions, intimidation, and in some cases low-level violence, against minorities who have challenged regional government control of the disputed territories. …

"Extremist elements in the Sunni Arab insurgency, for their part, view minority communities as ‘crusaders’ and ‘infidels.’ Some have carried out devastating attacks that have killed hundreds of civilians. Nineveh’s provincial capital, Mosul, has become a hotbed of the insurgency in part because the regional government’s hegemony in the immediate area has alienated Sunni Arabs long accustomed to positions of privilege and power under previous governments."

The recent uptick in violence against these Christians and other minorities follows years of persecution. Baghdad is pretty much drained of any Christians, according to reports, and only 300 Christian families total are still living in the southern part of the country, declared Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk, in a recent interview with Aid to the Church in Need.

"I feel more pessimistic now than ever before," he said in September. "We do not have the same hope that we had before. In fact I am not seeing any signs of hope for the future. Our whole future hangs in the balance."

What Happened? One Man’s Account

Kassab charts the apparent demise of his people, veering wildly from the predominant view in the U.S. that things are finally on the right path in Iraq.

"After the invasion of 2003, people cheered up – mainly the members of the religious and ethnic minorities of Iraq, because they thought democracy was coming," he says. "I was in Iraq in 2004, and everyone was cheery and happy. The people in U.S. uniform were happy too. It wasn’t long after that we saw a dramatic change to things nobody had expected."

"Many Iraqis became more sectarian than secular. This did not help the minority people at all. Then there was a significant brain drain in Iraq. The intellectuals, the professors, the educated people became targeted by the fundamentalists and the militias," according to Kassab. "[Christians] were assassinated and put out of work, and they fled Iraq."

Before the war, Christians were a learned, professional class that enjoyed civilian jobs and some deference from former dictator Saddam Hussein. But like Kassab himself, many fled during the 1980s to avoid conscription into Saddam’s Ba’ath Party, and the dictator’s treatment of Christians became increasingly erratic and brutal as he became more paranoid and unstable through the 1990s. "He prevented newborn babies to be given Biblical names, and [he] nationalized our institutions," says Kassab.

But nothing could prepare his people for what was to come after Saddam fell. Out-of-work Ba’ath soldiers became armed brigands. Sunnis and Shi’ites roamed the streets, seeking scapegoats. Churches were targeted. Christians who had lived in relative harmony with their Muslim neighbors before were now branded traitors and accused of colluding with the Americans, of being "infidels" and "crusaders."

"The whole situation in Iraq led very frail communities in Iraq, like the Christians, to be hurt first and foremost. They don’t have tribal people to help them, they are small. People were kidnapped and killed right in front of their neighbors and families. We’ve had people crucified. Some women have had acid tossed in their faces."

And it all happened with seemingly little rhyme or reason, other than to punish arbitrarily – whether it be the Chaldean archbishop of Mosul, who was found in a shallow grave after he was kidnapped in March 2008, or the 5-year-old boy who was kidnapped and killed, his small body found partially eaten by wild dogs, in a small village outside Mosul in May of this year.

The Shia-dominated government in Iraq, led by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, has made many promises to stop the violence, but so far, has not come through, says Kassab. Meanwhile, with only two Christian members of parliament, it is extremely difficult to exert political pressure internally. In November, one of the parliamentarians, Yonadam Kanna, called for a formal inquiry into the recent killings.

"We definitely get sweet words [from the government], no doubt about it, and a lot of sympathy," says Kassab, "but not all the action."

Refugee Crisis

Many Christians have joined the 2.5 million internally displaced Iraqis and the more than 2 million who have fled the country, mostly to Jordan, Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Iran, and Turkey.

Thanks to the efforts of groups like the Chaldean Federation, some Christians have been resettled in Europe and the U.S. in increasingly larger numbers. After a political bottleneck in the U.S. (the Bush administration had a hard time acknowledging publicly that anyone would want to leave Iraq after the invasion), upward of 35,000 Iraqis of all religious and ethnic backgrounds have been granted asylum in the U.S. since 2007. Reports indicate as many as half are Christian.

But hard economic times all over have led to disastrous outcomes for some of these refugees. In Sweden, Iraqi Christians are actually being kicked out after courts declared the fighting in Iraq over. "Some of the asylum-seekers are now forced into hiding to avoid being sent back to Iraq," according to one investigation by the Swedish press.

In America, this is the worst possible time to be an immigrant. For example, in 2008, 2,415 Iraqis arrived in the greater Detroit area – which as of September had an unemployment rate of 17 percent – an increase of 1,565 percent over 2006, according to a Georgetown University study released in October. However, funding to the state to help refugees actually decreased during that period, according to the report.

"Across the United States, many resettled Iraqi refugees are wondering how, after fleeing persecution at home to seek refuge in a country that barely tolerated them, they have found themselves in ‘the land of opportunity’ with little hope of achieving a secure and decent life. From Washington, D.C., to Detroit to San Diego, recently resettled Iraqi refugees face odds so heavily stacked against them that most end up jobless, some even homeless. …

"The United States Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) is unique in giving new life and opportunity to millions of refugees, accepting many times more than the rest of the world combined. But this report finds that the United States is opening its gates to refugees and simply forgetting about them after they have arrived."

Longtime residents and citizens are now competing more vigorously with recent immigrants for American jobs, heightening tensions and fueling the political demagoguery behind recent debates over immigration, illegal or otherwise. This month, activists in the "tea party" movement attempted to turn the public’s ire on immigrants, too, by joining up with anti-immigration forces for a series of Nov. 14 protests across the country.

The irony is that Iraqi Christians like the three men who attempted to cross the Rio Grande last summer after paying a hustler $20,000 each would not be in such a desperate place were it not for the U.S. invasion of their country. Furthermore, Iraqi Christians have been largely ignored by one of the most powerful political movements in the U.S. – Christian conservatives – at a time when they could use a hand the most. Because it’s not "politically correct" for these Republican foot soldiers to talk about the plight of women, children, and refugees caused by the Bush administration’s war policies, their efforts to address the issue have been minimal.

Though earnest champions like Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) have promised to advance their cause on Capitol Hill, Christian Iraqis must compete for crumbs in Washington’s bread line against myriad organizations with more money and better lobbyists.

According to Kassab, Christians don’t want to feed from the trough; they want to return to Iraq. These ancient Christians – Chaldeans, Assyrians, and Syriaks – descend from the earliest Christian communities in Greco-Roman antiquity. They speak the original language of Christ – Aramaic – and claim Mesopotamia as their home. "This is our ancestral line," says Kassab. These Christians don’t want to resign themselves to the unmerciful sands of time, and certainly not to the backlash of struggling Americans who might resent them.

But first there must be safety and, yes, respect for and official recognition of Iraq’s ethnic and religious minorities, says Kassab. So far, contrary to what McCain, Lieberman, and Graham say about the "success" of U.S. military action in Iraq, this has not happened.

As Kassab puts it, "When the United States came to Iraq, it came with the assumption that democracy should take root, number one, and that all people of Iraq should be protected. This is not happening – not the democracy, not the protection of the people."

 


 

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Home

Iraqi Christians Seek Return, Sense Extinction Nov. 18, 09

Minority Communities in North Iraq Appeal for Protection Nov. 18, 09

Turkish Hackers Facilitate Assyrian Book Sales Nov. 15, 09

Re-integration of Iraqi Refugees Nov. 15, 09

Violence against minority communities in Nineveh Province Nov. 10, 09

U.S. State Department annual International Religious Freedom Report 2009 Nov. 10, 09

Disappearance, Forced Conversions and Marriages of Christian Women in Egyt Nov. 10, 09

Assyriska rises to Sweden's promised land Nov. 10, 09

Militants Kill, Kurds Intimidate Iraqi Minorities Nov. 10, 09

Ancient canal network is recasting archaeologists' understanding of t
he Assyrian capital
Nov. 3, 09

Refugees Turn Their Backs on Iraq Nov. 3, 09

Asking for international investigation about who is terrorizing Iraqi Christians
Nov. 3, 09

October = Teeshreen-I

Foreign Degrees in Hand, No Jobs in Sight for Assyrian Refugees Oct.15, 09

Biblical music with lyrics drawn from the Aramaic and Greek texts Oct. 14, 09

Iranian Female Converts Charged With Apostasy, Spreading Christianity
October 14, 2009

British MPs Call for Investigation of Kurdish Militia in Assyrian Assassinations
October 14, 2009

Assyrian refugees- After ruin in Iraq, a new Life in Minnesota Oct.r 13, 2009

Who is driving non Arab minorities out of Iraq? October 10, 09

U.S. government is failing to help Iraqi refugees resettle Oct. 10, 09

Conflict Between Arabs and Kurds in the Nineveh Province Oct. 10, 09

Christians in Iraq fearing more violence October 07, 2009

Iraqi Government's Inaction about Crimes against Christians Oct. 07, 09

Meeting With Iraqi Official about the plight of Assyrians Oct. 06, 09

Marathon in Brussels Calls Attention to Assyrian Persecution Oct. 05, 09

Body of Kidnapped Assyrian Businessman Discovered in Iraq Oct. 04, 09

Kidnapping of Christian Assyrians in Kirkuk Continues Oct. 04, 09

Iraqi Arabs Wary Of Joint Patrols With Kurds In North Oct. 04, 09

Angelina Jolie Urges World Not to Forget Iraqi Refugees Oct. 04, 09

Anti-Kurdish Militia Demonstrations in Iraq's Mosul Oct.r 02, 09

“Assyrian Medical Society Responds to Refugee Medical Concerns”
October 02, 2009

September = Eilool

ancient-assyrians-asccomplishments.html

The US and the Internal Islamic Threat Sept. 29, 2009

Assyriska defeats Syrianska 1- to Zero Sept. 28, 2009

Kidnapped Christian Doctor Released in Northern Iraq: Police Sept. 28, 2009

Fire Destroys Assyrian Club in Sweden Sept. 28, 2009

Assyrian city of Nineveh Sept. 27, 2009

Kidnapped Assyrian Doctor in Iraq Freed, in Critical Condition Sept. 23, 2009

Statement of Pax Christi Delegation which visited Iraq Sept. 22, 2009

Muslim Man Beheads Christian in Egypt Sept. 21, 2009

Bishop of the Assyrian town of Qaraqosh explains why it's demographic balance should not be changed. Sept. 19, 2009

Assyrians in Iraq Hope for Autonomous Region Sept. 14, 2009

Chaldean Church denial of its Assyrian Heritage Sept. 14, 2009

Kurdish and syriac to be taught in Turkey for the first time Sept. 11, 2009

Cry My Beloved Nation Sept. 11, 2009

Christian Soldiers; Protecting towns in the Plain of Nineveh Sept. 07, 2009

Assyrian Empire: Bringing Civilization to the Near East Sept. 07, 2009

Sargis Agajan; Assyrian Christian Leader in Iraq Has Hope ! Sept. 03, 2009

From Security Withut Freedom to Freedom Without Security Sept. 03, 2009

AUA youth of America statement Sept. 03, 2009

Syria Opens the Gateway to Humanity for the Assyrian Medical Society
Sept. 03, 2009

Assyrian Refugees in Transit; Documentary Film Sept. 02, 2009

August = Thabakh

Assyrian Medical Society Sponsors Patients in Syria August 31, 2009

Chaldean Church promoting ethnic identity based on Church affiliation
August 31, 2009

Ancient Assyrians Accomplishments August 27, 2009

Assyrianhistory-accomplishments.html August 27, 2009

150 christians of Iraq face deportation in Sweden August 27, 2009

3 Iraqi refugees who crossed the Rio Grande and landed in a federal lockup August 25, 2009

A “Shrine” for almost every Assyrian child that has visited US for medical treatments August 21, 2009

Unique football rivalry in Sweden between two Assyrian migrant teams August 19, 2009

Pregnant Christian Dragged Naked Through Pakistani Police Station
August 18, 2009

Yalo; a novel, By Elias Khoury August 14, 2009

Polish Aid Organization Visits Assyrian Refugees in Syria
August 14, 2009

U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Letter to President Obama August 14, 2009

Australian Conference Calls Attention to Endangered Assyrians of Iraq August 14, 2009

University of Toronto archaeologists find cache of cuneiform tablets in 2,700-year old Assyrian temple August 13, 2009

Two Iranian Women Arrested for Converting to Christianity
August 13, 2009

UNPO Publishes Report on Kurdistani Elections August 12, 2009

Iraq's Christian Community At Risk of Disappearing. August 12,2009

Assyrian Refugees Expelled From Sweden -- Fleeing Again
August 11,2009

Attacks on Iraqi minorities soar August 11,2009

Iraq attacks raise fears of renewed ethnic tensions
August 11,2009

Large explosion rocks a village near Bartalah, kills dozens
August 10,2009

ASSYRIAN UNIVERSAL ALLIANCE TWENTY-SIXTH WORLD CONGRESS August 9, 2009

Mr. Obama, What About the Christians of the Middle East?
August 9, 2009

Bombing Christian family in Mosul August 9,2009

The Kurdistan region's Election Results for Our people
August 7, 2009

How to steal minorities voting rights, the Kurdish style?
August 7, 2009

Desperate plea for help came too late for ancient Assyrian leader August 7, 2009

Iraq's Assyrian Christians Find Temporary Home in Kurdish North August 6, 2009

Resolution on Genocide Committed by Ottoman Empire
August 6, 2009

Pakistan Must Abolish Blasphemy Law August 5, 2009

Christianity's long, storied tradition in Iran August 5, 2009

Business Models in Antiquity. August 2, 2009

Christian in Mosul deny the discontinuation of attacks
against them.
August 2, 2009

 

Tamuz = July

"I am Assyrian, not Kurdish. We were here first and now we are treated as strangers." July 29, 2009

Q&A: Iraqi Kurdistan elections July 29, 2009

ASSYRIAN UNIVERSAL ALLIANCE 26TH WORLD CONGRESS SELECTS MAN OF THE YEAR.
July 29, 2009

Local Assyrians protest Iraqi church bombings July 29, 2009

Iraq’s Kurdish Region Elections, Derailed July 28, 2009

Patriarch: ‘Our survival depends on the unity of Christians’
July 27, 2009

Gunmen kill Iraqi Christian outside factory July 27, 2009

FIRST JOINT LOBBY OF UK PARLIAMENT BY IRAQI CHRISTIAN AND WELSH ACTIVISTS.
July 26, 2009

Coptic Human Rights Organization Condems recent Church Bombings in Iraq. July 25, 2009

Some Christians express doubt that their representatives will "obtain all their rights." July 24, 2009

Supporters Of Iraq's Assyrians Rally In San Francisco. July 23, 2009

Iraq Steps Up Security Measures for Christians.
July 23, 2009

US Lawmakers Send Letter Regarding Assyrians to Iraq's PM. July 22, 2009

Assyrian Medical Society helps Two Young Visitors from Iraq to Receive Vital Medical Care
July 22, 2009

Statement by the Executive Committee of the Council of Churches about persecution of Christians in Iraq. July 16, 2009

Amnesty International condemns attacks on Christian minority in Iraq. July 15, 2009

Shameful attacks. July 15, 2009

7 Iraqi Churches Bombed Within 48 Hours
July 14, 2009

Why is Britain Deporting Persecuted Christians? July 14, 2009

The Desperate Plight of Iraqi Christians July 13, 2009

Kurds, Arabs Cooperate; Christians Suffer July 13, 2009

Iraq Curfew in Some Christian Areas After Church Bombs July 13, 2009

Virgin Fatima Church in Mosul Bombed July 11, 2009

Assyrian Medial Society – Turkey Mission Press Release. July 11, 2009

Aramaic; The language of Christ is not dead in the Syrian village July 05, 2009

Video of British Parliament Report on Assyrian Persecution - Kurds Stealing Assyrian Land!
July 03, 2009

Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Dhimmitude
July 03, 2009

Secretary of Sate Hilary Clinton's Town Hall Meeting With PRT Leaders and Iraqi Partners
July 02, 2009

Khzirun = June

Britain's Indifference to the Plight of Iraqi Christians emphasised in the House of Commons June 27, 2009

USCIRF Expresses Concern Over Reported Attacks on Coptic Orthodox Christians in Egypt June 27, 2009

In Nineveh, tensions between Iraqi Kurds and Arabs simmer June 25, 2009

Dominican sister vows to remain in Iraq despite increasing violence June 24, 2009

Parliament of the Kurdistan region to ratifies the territory constitution June 24, 2009

Turkish Court Rules Against Assyrian Monastery
June 24, 2009

Iraq Kurds pass new constitution to include Kirkuk June 24, 2009

Fear of Massacre Grips Christian Village in Egypt; Crops Destroyed June 24, 2009

Muslim Mob Attacks Church and Loots Christian Homes in Egypt June 20, 2009

Christian Coptic Twin Boys Struggle Against Forced Islamization June 20, 2009

Organization Helps Injured, Ill Iraqis
June 20, 2009

A member of Drafting Kurdistan Constitution Describes Our Clergies interference in Politics as a "major crime" June 20, 2009

Assyrian Refugees in Sweden Caught in Political Struggle June 19, 2009

Autonomy and the Assyrians of Iraq
June 16, 2009

Motion in the UK Parliament for the return of our Churches June 16, 2009

Assyriska versus Syrianska; World's Most Competitive Football Contest June 10, 2009

Assyrian Medical Society Without Borders, Without Passports June 10, 2009

Sweden's New Asylum Policy
June 10, 2009

Rosie Malek-Younan Awarded Assyrian Woman of the Year June 10, 2009

THE HISTORICAL MESSAGE OF BERZAN BOTI June 4, 2009

The war on Christianity in the Middle East
June 4, 2009

ASSYRIAN UNIVERSAL ALLIANCE 26TH WORLD CONGRESS IN SYDNEY – AUSTRALIA June 3, 2009

Iraqi Christians in need
June 2, 2009

 

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