Zenit News Agency, Italy
Jan 15 2005
Muslims Identify Christians As Western Enemies
BAGHDAD/MOSUL, Iraq — Being a Christian, “of the same religion as
the Western soldiers,” is enough to be the considered an enemy in
Iraq, says a Chaldean monk.
Father Waheed Gabriele Tooma’s statement was echoed by Fides news
agency, recalling the recent incident involving two Chaldean monks of
the Dora monastery south of Baghdad, kidnapped a few days ago by
unknown individuals and released two days later.
The “flourishing industry of kidnapping knows no end,” the agency
reported. The targets of religious Muslim fundamentalism are
foreigners, wealthy Iraqis — because of the ransom –, and religious
personnel, especially Christians.
Father Tooma, religious brother of the kidnapped monks, said to Fides
that “Iraq is a nation that dies every day, and not only because of
lack of food and medicines. It dies morally and culturally, deprived
of its identity, freedom, and right to live in peace as the other
nations of the earth. The path of this nation is dark; it seems to be
without a future. Children die no sooner they are born, without a
smile.”
It’s a situation from which the people flee. “More than 3 million
have emigrated abroad, among them, Christians,” he said.
“Only in the last months, after the attack on the Christian Churches,
more than 50,000 Iraqi Christians have emigrated to Syria, Jordan,
and Turkey, because of the threats received by Muslim
fundamentalists. What is the offense? Being Christians, that is, of
the same religion as the Western soldiers.”
On Dec. 7, two attacks destroyed the Armenian-Catholic church of
Mosul and the Chaldean Episcopal Palace of that city. They were part
of a series of attacks against churches which began in early August,
when four churches in Baghdad and one in Mosul were hit. Dozens of
Christians died in these attacks. Attacks against stores owned by
Christians in Iraq started earlier.
>From Mosul, the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation recently
confirmed, in a statement sent to ZENIT, that the situation of danger
for Christians is such that many have been obliged to emigrate “to
Syria or Jordan, and have left all their property to save their
lives.”
The nuns’ house in the Iraqi city is located in an area between “the
Americans, on one side, and the terrorists on the other,” which means
a constant danger that impedes them for days from leaving the
convent, even to go to Mass.
Despite the problems, the sisters are not thinking of leaving, given
that, as they affirmed, “we are here, in this neighborhood, our
neighborhood, and we will stay to witness to Christ crucified but
risen from the dead.”
The congregation has seven communities in Iraq, in which some 40
religious work in education and run residences for young people,
children’s homes, and health centers such as St. Raphael’s Hospital
in Baghdad.