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Save Iraq’s Christians

SAVE IRAQ’S CHRISTIANS
By Svante Lundgren Vasabladet

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
May 29 2007

It is easy to become both dejected and confused regarding the situation
in Iraq. But there is a pattern behind the chaotic killing.

Or several patterns, to be more correct. Islamists kill Shiites because
they regard them as unfaithful. Shiites kill Sunnis in revenge for
the wrongs of Saddam. Baathists kill to create chaos.

And then there are the Christians.

Islamists have the country’s Christian minority as a target. A
Christian family woke up one morning and discovered their sons head
in front of the door. A Christian teenager was crucified in Basra in
October. Two nuns, 85 and 79 years old, were murdered in Kirkuk in
Mars. Priests are killed, churches are burned down, young Christian
women are raped. The only reason: they are Christians. Everything is
done in order create an Iraq that is Christenrein.

Before the liberation in 2003 about eight percent, less than 1.5
million of Iraq’s population, was Christian. 95% of Christians
are Assyrians in ethnicity (also called Chaldeans and Syriacs); a
smaller group are Armenians. They are not Christians as a result of
the Western missions of the 18th and 19th centuries; they trace their
Christian roots to the first century. The Assyrians have a history
that stretches further back in time, long before the Christian era.

They alone have the right to consider themselves as Iraq’s indigenous
population.

Many Christians had emigrated by the 1990s, but the big upheaval
came with the overthrow of Saddam. It is believed half of Iraq’s
Christians have fled the country since then. They constitute between
one third and half of all Iraqi refugees. They are tired of seeing
their churches being bombed and their friends killed. This is not
only a terrible tragedy at a personal level — an ancient culture is
at risk of becoming extinct. Most refugees have settled down in the
neighbouring countries of Jordan, Syria and Turkey. Sweden has shown
the greatest hospitality in Europe: The Swedish town of Sodertalje
has accepted as many refugees as the entire USA.

The Assyrians living in the West (there are tens of thousands in
Sweden alone) have done what they can in order to gain the attention
of the world community to the ongoing catastrophe, which some are
calling genocide. One of the strongest advocates is the award winning
Assyrian journalist Nuri Kino from Sweden. He recently visited refugees
in Jordan together with an Assyrian nun and wrote in his blog spot:

Sister Hatune, considered by some as the new Mother Teresa, has
built more than one hundred homes for poor Indians. She is known to
be an incredibly strong and enterprising person, something she also
proved to be. The first two days. But today she could not cope with it
anymore. "This is a genocide taking place in the quiet. We must tell,
we must stop it", she yelled as tears fell from her eyes.

Different Assyrian organizations have now united in the demand for
a small area in the north of Iraq, the Nineveh plain, to become an
Assyrian safe haven with autonomy. This area is mainly inhabited by
Christians. When the Kurds were threatened in the 1990s they were
given a protected area in the north which saved them from Saddam’s
terror. The Christians in Iraq are now in the need of the same
protection. Can the world community refuse to give them this?

During the many centuries in Diaspora the Jews pronounced each Easter
the hopeful words "Next year in Jerusalem". Assyrian youths around
the world have begun to greet each other with "Next year in Nineveh"
— a free Nineveh.

Have our ministers, our bishops, our civil organizations any opinion
in this issue?

Svante Lundgren is an author and a senior lecturer in Judaism from
the Åbo Academy Univerity, Finland.

This was published Vasabladet, a Finnish newspaper. Translated to
English by Munir Gultekin. Edited by AINA.

–Boundary_(ID_6FtHeBteFmFDgYKbLGWFGA)–

Nanijanian Alex:
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