Iraqi
Christians face persecution
Threatened
with torture, burning, bombing for not joining 'resistance'
WorldNetDaily.com June
25, 2004
Assyrian Christians recently
liberated from Saddam Hussein's regime are suffering a string
of deadly attacks church leaders believe are religiously motivated.
Christians and churches
have received letters in Arabic threatening that if they don't
follow Islamic practice and support "the resistance,"
they will face the consequences: "torture, an burning or
exploding the house with the family in it," says Elizabeth
Kendal, researcher for the World Evangelical Alliance Religious
Liberty Commission, in a report published by the Assist News
Service.
Mandaean Christians, who
follow the teachings of John the Baptist, have been receiving
the same threats and suffering the same violence, Kendal says.
The unchecked Islamic aggression
is forcing the Christians to flee, she states, citing some examples.
On June 7, four masked
men drove into the Christian Assyrian Quarters of the Dora district
of Baghdad and opened fire on Assyrians going to work. Four were
killed and several others
wounded.
In the afternoon, the same
day, three Assyrian women were killed in another drive-by shooting
as they returned home from working at the Coalition Provisional
Authority.
On 22 March, an elderly
Assyrian couple was murdered in the Assyrian district. The wife
was beaten to death and the husband had his throat cut.
As WorldNetDaily reported,
Ken Joseph Jr., an Assyrian who directs Assyrianchristians.com,
says several developments that "bode ill for Christians
in Iraq are causing believers to flee
the nation."
Facing next Wednesday's
deadline for transfer of power, a temporary constitution that
reads Islam is the "Official Religion of the State,"
and the failure to receive even one position on the
Executive Council and only one ministry post the Christians
of Iraq are voting with their feet, says Joseph.
Kendal says the Assyrian
Christians greatly fear that the history of abandonment and massacre
of their minority group is about to repeat itself.
Historians regard the Assyrians
as the indigenous people of Iraq. In biblical times, their homeland
was centered around the Nineveh plains in Upper Mesopotamia,
now northern Iraq, where they were visited by the prophet Jonah.
The Assyrian Church of the East was founded in AD 33. Some 600
years later Arab invaders put the Assyrians under Muslim domination.
Invasions over the centuries
nearly eliminated them. The Assyrians fought for the Allies in
World War I and were promised autonomy in their homeland upon
victory. But they were abandoned to the mercy of the Ottoman
Turks when the British mandate was lifted in 1932, resulting
in the massacre of two-thirds of the population.
In Saddam Hussein's secular
state, the Assyrian remnant suffered severely under his discriminatory
ethnic policy of Arabization.
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