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Iraq’s Christians At Risk Of Annihilation

IRAQ’S CHRISTIANS AT RISK OF ANNIHILATION
By Charles Tannock

The Japan Times, Japan
Oct 5 2006

Ancient Communities Persecuted

LONDON — The world is consumed by fears that Iraq is degenerating
into a civil war between Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds. But in this
looming war of all against all, it is Iraq’s small community of
Assyrian Christians that is at risk of annihilation.

Iraq’s Christian communities are among the world’s most ancient,
practicing their faith in Mesopotamia almost since the time of
Jesus Christ. The Assyrian Apostolic Church, for instance, traces its
foundation back to 34 A.D. and St. Peter. Likewise, the Assyrian Church
of the East dates to 33 A.D. and St. Thomas. The Aramaic that many
of Iraq’s Christians still speak is the language of those apostles —
and of Christ.

When tolerated by their Muslim rulers, Assyrian Christians contributed
much to the societies in which they lived. Their scholars helped usher
in the "Golden Age" of the Arab world by translating important works
into Arabic from Greek and Syriac. But in recent times, toleration
has scarcely existed.

In the Armenian Genocide of 1914-1918, 750,000 Assyrians — roughly
two-thirds of their number at the time — were massacred by the
Ottoman Turks with the help of the Kurds.

Under the Iraqi Hashemite monarchy, the Assyrians faced persecution
for co-operating with the British during World War I. Many fled to the
West, among them the Church’s patriarch. During former Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein’s wars with the Kurds, hundreds of Assyrian villages
were destroyed, their inhabitants rendered homeless, and dozens of
ancient churches were bombed. The teaching of the Syriac language was
prohibited and Assyrians were forced to give their children Arabic
names in an effort to undermine their Christian identity. Those who
wished to hold government jobs had to declare Arab ethnicity.

In 1987, the Iraqi census listed 1.4 million Christians. Today,
only about 600,000 to 800,000 remain in the country, most on the
Nineveh plain.

As many as 60,000, and perhaps even more, have fled since the beginning
of the insurgency that followed the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Their
exodus accelerated in August 2004, after the start of the terrorist
bombing campaign against Christian churches by Islamists who accuse
them of collaboration with the allies by virtue of their faith.

A recent U.N. report states that religious minorities in Iraq "have
become the regular victims of discrimination, harassment, and,
at times, persecution, with incidents ranging from intimidation to
murder," and that "members of the Christian minority appear to be
particularly targeted."

Indeed, there are widespread reports of Christians fleeing the country
as a result of threats being made to their women for not adhering
to strict Islamic dress codes. Christian women are said to have had
acid thrown in their faces. Some have been killed for wearing jeans
or not wearing the veil.

This type of violence is particularly acute in the area around Mosul.

High-ranking clergy there claim that priests in Iraq can no longer
wear their clerical robes in public for fear of being attacked by
Islamists. Last January, coordinated car-bomb attacks were carried
out on six churches in Baghdad and Kirkuk; on another occasion, six
churches were simultaneously bombed in Baghdad and Mosul. Over the
past two years, 27 Assyrian churches have reportedly been attacked
for the sole reason that they were Christian places of worship.

These attacks go beyond targeting physical manifestations of the
faith. Christian-owned small businesses, particularly those selling
alcohol, have been attacked, and many shopkeepers murdered. The
director of the Iraqi Museum, Donny George, a respected Assyrian,
says that he was forced to flee Iraq to Syria in fear of his life,
and that Islamic fundamentalists obstructed all of his work that was
not focused on Islamic artifacts.

Assyrian leaders also complain of deliberate discrimination in the
January 2005 elections. In some cases, they claim, ballot boxes did
not arrive in Assyrian towns and villages, voting officials failed to
show up, or ballot boxes were stolen. They also cite the intimidating
presence of Kurdish militia and secret police near polling stations.

Recently, however, there are signs the Iraqi Kurdish authorities are
being more protective of their Christian communities.

Sadly, the plight of Iraq’s Christians is not an isolated one in the
Middle East. In Iran, the population as a whole has nearly doubled
since the 1979 revolution; but, under a hostile regime, the number of
Christians in the country has fallen from roughly 300,000 to 100,000.

In 1948, Christians accounted for roughly 20 percent of the
population of what was then Palestine; since then, their numbers
have roughly halved. In Egypt, emigration among Coptic Christians is
disproportionately high; many convert to Islam under pressure, and
over the past few years violence perpetrated against the Christian
community has taken many lives.

The persecution of these ancient and unique Christian communities,
in Iraq and in the Middle East as a whole, is deeply disturbing. Last
April, the European Parliament voted virtually unanimously for the
Assyrians to be allowed to establish (on the basis of section 5 of
the Iraqi Constitution) a federal region where they can be free from
outside interference to practice their own way of life. It is high
time now that the West paid more attention, and took forceful action
to secure the future of Iraq’s embattled Christians.

Charles Tannock is vice president of the Human Rights Subcommittee
of the European Parliament and British Conservative foreign affairs
spokesman. Copyright Project Syndicate 2006 ()

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.project-syndicate.org
Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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