IRAQ: FLEEING CHRISTIANS FACE NEW HARDSHIPS IN TURKEY

<http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5687>http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5687
 



As renewed violence in Mosul halts return, 
refugees wait in Turkish legal limbo.

ISTANBUL, November 14 (Compass Direct News) – In 
this Turkish city’s working-class neighborhood of 
Kurtulus, Arabic can be heard on the streets, 
signs are printed in the Arabic alphabet and Iraqis congregate in tea shops.

In 99-percent Muslim Turkey, most of these Iraqis 
are not Muslims. And they are not in Turkey by 
choice. They are Christian refugees who fled 
their homeland to escape the murderous violence 
that increasingly has been directed at them.

It is hard to tell how many of Mosul’s refugees 
from the recent wave of attacks have made their 
way to Istanbul, but finding these residents here 
is not hard. A middle-aged Iraqi refugee who fled 
Mosul five months ago now attends a Syrian 
Orthodox Church in the poverty-stricken 
neighborhood of Tarlabasi, where gypsies, 
transvestites, and immigrants from Turkey’s east 
live in hopes of a better life in Istanbul.

Declining to give his name, the refugee said 
there is no future for Christians in Iraq and 
that nearly everyone he knew there wanted to 
leave the country. He said the only hope for 
Iraqi Christians is for Western countries to open 
their doors to Christian Iraqi refugees.

“We don’t have hope,” he said. “If these doors 
aren’t opened, we will be killed.”

Since October, violence in Mosul has pushed more 
than 12,000 Christians from their homes and left 
more than two dozen dead, according to U.N. and 
Christian organizations. In the face of Mosul 
violence, Iraqi Christians flee to Turkey before 
settling permanently in another country, usually 
in a place where their family has gone out before them.

Christian Sisters Killed

Weeks after the mass exodus of Mosul Christians 
to surrounding villages, Turkey and other 
nations, around one-third of families reportedly 
have returned due to the presence of 35,000 army 
and police and the Iraqi government offering cash grants of up to $800.

But those returning Christians were shaken again 
on Wednesday (Nov. 12), when Islamic militants 
stormed into the house of two Syrian Catholic 
sisters, Lamia’a Sabih and Wala’a Saloha, killing 
them and severely injuring their mother. They 
then bombed their house and detonated a second 
explosive when the police arrived, which killed three more.

The Christian family had recently returned after 
having fled Mosul. Many believe this attack will 
deter other Christians from returning to Mosul, 
and there are reports of Christians again leaving the area.

There has been a steady exodus of Christians from 
Iraq since the first Gulf War in 1991. The church 
in Iraq dates from the beginning of Christianity, 
but the population has plummeted by 50 percent in 
the last 20 years. The outflow of Iraqi 
Christians spiked in 2003 following the U.S.-led invasion.

Although Iraq as a whole has seen a dramatic 
decrease in violence due to last year’s surge in 
U.S. troops, the flight of Christians to Turkey 
has grown. One-third of the 18,000 refugees who 
registered in Turkey last year are from Iraq. In 
Syria, an estimated 40 percent of the 1.2 million 
Iraqis who have fled Iraq are Christians, though 
they make up only about 3 percent of Iraq’s population.

Monsignor Francois Yakan, the 50-year-old leader 
of the Chaldean Church in Turkey, said all Iraqi 
refugees are undergoing hardships regardless of 
religion, but that the situation is especially 
difficult for Christians since there is less support for them in Turkey.

“Muslims have the same difficulty as Christians, 
but there are more foundations to assist them,” 
he said. “The government notices Muslim 
immigrants, but nobody pays attention to us.”

Yakan travels to other countries to raise 
awareness of the plight of Iraqi Christians, 
trying to marshal the support of government and 
church leaders – last week he traveled to France, 
Romania and Germany. If Western governments don’t 
wake up to this crisis, he said, the results could be catastrophic.

“People don’t know the plight of Iraqi 
Christians. They have no government, no soldiers, 
and no power,” he said. “Christianity in Iraq is 
ending. Why aren’t they noticing this?”

Strangers in Strange Land

The unnamed Iraqi refugee in Tarlabasi said not 
even pleas from Iraqi priests can make them stay.

“The church in Iraq can’t stop the people from 
leaving because they can’t guarantee their security,” he said.

He came to Istanbul with his family but still has 
an adult son and daughter in the city. He hopes 
to join his brother in the United States soon.

A group of Iraqi refugees at a tea shop in the 
Kurtulus area of Istanbul interrupted their card 
game to talk to Compass of their troubled lives.

“We can’t find any work,” said Baghdad-born Iraqi 
Jalal Toma, who acted as the translator for the 
group. He pointed to a young man at the table and 
said, “He works moving boxes and carrying things, 
and they pay him half as much as a Turk for a day’s work.”

All of the men are Chaldean Christians, a 
Catholic Eastern-rite church whose historical 
homeland is in northern Iraq, and came from Mosul 
in recent months. They are chronically 
under-employed and rely on financial help from 
family members abroad to make ends meet.

They had to flee their homes at a moment’s 
notice, taking along their families but leaving 
behind their cars, houses and most of their 
possessions. The men hope to join family members 
who live in foreign countries, but they harbor 
few hopes that they can ever return to Iraq again.

Offering Relief

Work is scarce for refugees and hard to come by 
legally in Turkey. To survive, most Iraqi 
Christians rely on money from families abroad or 
the handful of local church charities that 
struggle to keep up with the overwhelming volume 
of refugees, such as the Istanbul Interparish 
Migrant Program, an ecumenical umbrella group 
that unites the city’s parishes to assist migrants and asylum seekers.

Another such charity is Kasdar, the 
Chaldean-Assyrian-Syriac Humanitarian, Social and 
Cultural Organization, run by Yakan, the Chaldean Church leader in Turkey.

He launched Kasdar two years ago to provide a 
safety net for Christian refugees who live in 
Turkey’s legal limbo. Kasdar assists all 
Christians regardless of denomination or faith 
tradition and has 16 volunteers from an equally diverse background.

Yakan sees thousands of refugees pass through 
Istanbul each year. Most of them are Chaldean, 
and he knows of 60-70 people who fled due to the 
recent October violence in Mosul. He travels 
constantly to visit Chaldean refugees scattered throughout the country.

When refugees first arrive in Turkey, they must 
register with the United Nations as asylum 
seekers. The Turkish police then assign them to 
one of 35 cities to live in as they wait to 
receive official refugee status. These Christians 
face the biggest hardships since they don’t have 
access to the same social resources as refugees 
in Istanbul, said Metin Corabatir, U.N. High 
Commissioner for Refugees spokesman in Turkey.

“The Chaldean population faces problems in 
Turkey, especially due to the policy of 
resettling them to satellite cities,” said 
Corabatir. “The Chaldeans in Istanbul have NGOs 
[Non-Governmental Organizations] and churches to 
help them, but in satellite cities there is no 
church or community to help them.”

Most refugees send their children to school at a 
local center run by Caritas, a Catholic 
confederation of relief, development and social 
service organizations. Here, Iraq children 
receive education and lessons in basic vocational skills.

The wait for legal status can be as short as a 
few months or a couple of years. But complicated 
circumstances can push back the wait to five 
years, 10 years, or even 17 years – as it is now 
for a man who fled during the first Gulf War, 
Yakan of the Chaldean Church said.

Another church leader who has helped Christian 
refugees is 70-year-old Monsignor Yusuf Sag, 
vicar general of the Syrian Catholic Church in 
Turkey. His 350-person congregation assembles 
packets of clothes and food for the refugees.

Many who come to Sag also seek medical help. He 
has connections with doctors throughout the city, 
both Muslim and Christian, who offer basic 
treatment to refugees free of charge. Sag said he 
tries to help all who come to him, without asking 
them of their denomination or even their religion.

“Their situation is not a Christian problem, but a human problem,” he said.

Often Iraqi Christians work illegally, where they 
are vulnerable to extortion. Refugee workers in 
Istanbul said registered asylum seekers can work 
legally, but it is not uncommon for employers to 
garnish their wages or withhold them completely, 
with the foreigners getting little protection from police.

The Turkish government charges a refugee a 
residence tax of US$460 a year and will not allow 
them to leave the country until it is paid, 
making them remain in the country even longer. 
With all these hurdles to finding stable 
employment, many Iraqi refugees are never too far from homelessness.

“There was a family we found living on the 
streets – a husband, wife and two children,” 
Yakan said. “They have lived in Istanbul for six 
months and couldn’t even afford to pay rent.”

His foundation found the family an apartment and 
assisted them with rent, but they only have 
enough resources to help for two months.

Kasdar gave similar assistance to 54 families in 
October. But the organization can only help for a 
few months at a time and assist the most vulnerable refugees.

END


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<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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