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Christians of Iraq
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Updated list of Opression and Murders of the Assyrians in Iraq Not reported by the International Press
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Who Are Christians of Iraq?
Most people think of the Middle East as mostly Arab and Moslem and was always that way. Such is not the case. Before the seventh century invasion of the Middle East by Moslem Arabs the predominant population of Mesopotamia (today's Iraq), Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Lebanon and Egypt was none Arab Christians. The growth of Islam in these countries waƒs not due to a sudden influx of Arabs but gradual conversion to Islam by the native population who later became to be known as Arabs. It was not until the eleventh century when Moslems became a majority in Iraq.
Christians of Iraq trace their ancestry to the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians. They are known by various names such as Assyrians, Chaldeans for those who belong to the Chaldean Church and Syriacs for the members of the Syrian Orthodox church. There is no specific statistics about the total population of Christians in Iraq but they are estimated to be about one million.
During the tolerant period of the Abassid Caliphate (758-1258) Assyrians scholars of both Nestorian and Jacobite denominations contributed greatly to the advancement of the Islamic civilization by translating the available knowledge form the Syriac and the Greek languages into the Arabic. This ushered an era which is known as the "Golden Age". The first directors of the "House of Wisdom" an institution specifically established by AI-Mamun in 830 AD to translate all the available existing knowledge including, medicine philosophy, mathematics, astronomy and other sciences into the Arabic were Assyrians. To show the extent of the Assyrian contribution to educating the Arabs it suffices to say that from a hundred Galen's treaties ninety six were translated form the Syriac language the rest directly from the Greek. Many Greek books no longer existed in their native language.
Yuhanna ibn Masswaya a physician and teacher was the first director of the House of Wisdom and the president of the first Arab University. He has been credited with having written nearly fifty works. His students were known to be well versed in logic and the writings of Galen. He conducted an assembly in Baghdad on regular basis known as "Majlis" which was a combination of lecture room and consulting hour where he saw patients, lectured his students and discussed scientific topics for the benefit of the general public. One of his most famous students was Hunayn ibn-Isahq who became the second director of the House of the Wisdom.
(Arab Civilization to AD 1,500", D.M. Dunlop, New York 1971 p.220)
Hunayn is considered to be the greatest and the most productive translator of all. "According to Ibn-abi-Usahbi'ah he was the author of more than one hundred original works, but few of these are extant". (Whiple 27) He translated twenty books of Galen into Syriac, and fourteen treaties into Arabic. He revised sixteen translations made previously by Sergius of Ras al-'Ayn (Rish-Ayna). Most of the translators of the next generation received their training from Hunayn and his pupils."Translation from the Syriac language to Arabic was so widespread that even the Nestorian Patriarch Timothy who was a good friend of al-Mehdi and his sons Musa, Harun and Ali is known to have translated the 'Topics of Aristotle' first from the Syriac in (782-3) and later retranslating it from the Greek original with the help of the malikite Patriarch.
Christian Doctors were famous for their extensive medical skills. Members of the Bakht-Eisho family served as court doctors for seven generations. The Beit Qarra family of Harran who were still practicing a corrupted form of the ancient Assyro-Babylonian religion contributed greatly to the Arab Knowledge of astronomy and mathematics. The rise of the Arabic as a language of education contributed to the decline of the Syriac language.
The arrival of the Crusaders followed by the Mongols inflamed Muslem passions against the none Muslem communities. Because of continued massacres the Assyrians population gradually declined in number but survived mostly in the plain of Nineveh, SoutheastTurkey, Mountains north of Mosul, and northwest Iran. Turkey's world war one massacres resulted in the death of 750,000.
During Saddam's wars with the Kurds hundreds of Assyrian villages were destroyed their inhabitants were rendered homeless, driven out of their historic homeland, and scattered as refugees in large cities or the neighboring countries. dozens of ancient churches some dating to the early centuries of Christianity were bombed and turned into rubble. The teaching of the Syriac language was prohibited and Assyrians were forced to give their children Arabic names in an effort to undermine their true identity. Those who wished to hold governmental jobs had to sign ethnicity correction papers which declared them arabs.
The fall of Saddam which was hoped to bring peace to Iraq has unleashed religious violence against the Christian community in Iraq. Unless special attention is given to their plight by the US and the Iraqi government this ancient people will continue to suffer grievously as they have in the past.
Since the American invasion Christians of Iraq have been subjected to terrorism. Hundreds of thousand families who suffered murder, kidnapping, or were threatened with violence have left behind their livelihood in Iraq and have fled to Syria, Lebanon and Jordan in search of security. As refugees, in these countries, they are ineligibles to work, send their children to the public school or use the government run medical care.
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