http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/10517810/Iraqs-battle-to-save-its-Christian-souls-Christians-are-finished-here.html


Iraq's battle to save its Christian souls: 'Christians are finished here'
Ten years after the fall of Saddam Hussein, Christians have dwindled from 
more than a million to as little as 200,000. Colin Freeman reports on 
attempts to stem the exodus from Iraq's churches


By Colin Freeman, Baghdad

6:00AM GMT 15 Dec 2013

34 Comments

As the last remaining Christian priest in the Baghdad suburb of Doura, 
Archdeacon Temathius Esha no longer just puts his trust in God's 
all-seeing eye. Built into the wall of his vestry, amid pictures of 
Catholic saints, is a 16-screen CCTV monitor, keeping watch on every 
corner of his church in case of possible attack.

Along with the armed guard outside and concrete anti-blast walls, it makes 
St Shmoni's feel more like a fortress than a house of worship. And after a 
decade in which Doura's Iraqi Christian community has been robbed, 
kidnapped and murdered by Islamist extremists, it finds itself offering 
sanctuary to an ever-dwindling flock.

"Doura was once one of the biggest Christian communities in Iraq, with 
30,000 families," said Mr Esha, as he prepared for an afternoon 
congregation that barely filled two of the 22 rows of pews. "Now there are 
only 2,000 left. They feel they are strangers in their own land, and that 
makes them want to leave. The bleeding from migration is continuous."

Today, St Shmoni is one of just two of Doura's original seven churches 
still open, casualties of a period in which the area become one of the 
most notorious al-Qaeda strongholds in Baghdad. In the years that followed 
the US-led invasion of 2003, two churches were car bombed, while the 
others closed due to lack of numbers and the kidnapping for ransom of four 
of Mr Esha's fellow priests, which has left just him and a local monk 
remaining.

Over the years, his own church has had an improvised explosive device and 
two car bombs planted outside it. All were fortunately discovered before 
they were detonated.

Related Articles
  a.. Say a prayer for Christians in the Middle East

  18 Dec 2013
  b.. Ten years on, Saddam's legacy still haunts Iraq

  13 Dec 2013
  c.. Colin Freeman: Saddam's legacy still haunts Iraq

  13 Dec 2013
  d.. Al-Qaeda raises black flag in Iraq

  13 Dec 2013
  e.. Iraq is still bleeding 10 years after Saddam Hussein's capture

  12 Dec 2013
The picture in Doura is repeated across Iraq, and indeed the wider Middle 
East, where the onset of the Arab Spring has ended the protected status 
that the region's secular strongmen gave to religious minorities. In Iraq, 
a Christian community that numbered more than a million in Saddam 
Hussein's time is now thought to have shrunk to as few as 200,000.

 Isaac Napoleon, a worshipper at the St Shmoni Church in Dora (JULIAN 
SIMMONDS)

Those unable to join Iraqi diasporas in Europe and America often fled to 
sister communities in neighbouring Syria, only to find themselves in 
similar peril thanks to al-Qaeda's presence in the war against President 
Bashar al-Assad. In post-Mubarak Egypt, the Christians fear a similar 
reckoning, and only last month Pope Francis warned that the entire Church 
was in peril across the region, adding: "We will not resign ourselves to 
imagining a Middle East without Christians."

Yet with al-Qaeda once again on the rise in Iraq - more than 6,000 people 
have been killed in 2013, the most in five years - Christian communities 
such as Doura are already contemplating that very scenario.

Now, though, a last-ditch effort to end the exodus is under way, courtesy 
of the diminutive form of Louis Sako, appointed as the new Patriarch of 
Baghdad earlier this year. Before moving to the Iraqi capital he had 
served in the northern city of Kirkuk, where he had mediated in many 
kidnapping cases.

At first glance, the 64-year-old cleric is living proof of the Christian 
adage "blessed are the meek". He speaks with a soft voice, and, at only 
5ft 5in, is dwarfed by the armed bodyguards who these days accompany him 
at all times.

But in his first public address in March, delivered at St Joseph's church 
in central Baghdad, he broke with the Church's long-standing convention 
that speaking out about the problems would only make them worse.

Instead, he gave his congregation a blunt but powerful message, rich in 
historical resonance.

Iraq was their country as much as anyone's and if they left a 
2,000-year-old culture would die for ever. "I know your fears," he said. 
"But you have been here for 2,000 years and are at the origin of this 
country, together with the Muslims. Why is the little flock still afraid? 
Do not emigrate, whatever the pressures."

Earlier this month, the Patriarch returned to St Joseph's to ordain six 
new deacons for Baghdad, the first since the 2003 invasion. As a packed 
congregation sang a song entitled Peace for Iraq, the white-robed figures 
knelt before Mr Sako as he cut a lock of hair from each of them into a 
silver bowl, a traditional symbol of devotion.

The real symbolism of the ceremony, though, was to show that in recruiting 
new blood to its senior ranks, the Church was digging in for the long 
term.

The Christian flock that Mr Sako has dedicated himself to saving is mainly 
Chaldean, an Eastern-rite Catholic faith that is independent of Rome but 
recognises the Pope's authority. For most of their time in Iraq, they and 
other Christian sects have co-existed peacefully with their Muslim 
neighbours. In Saddam's time they specialised as medics, teachers and 
academics – professions that earned them the trust and respect of the 
Muslim people.

As such, the invasion of 2003 – portrayed by some as a "Crusade" by fellow 
Christians – led to little in the way of direct reprisals.

However, in the lawless years that followed, their prosperity made them 
targets for kidnappers and criminals, who sometimes felt less guilty 
preying on non-Muslims. Almost uniquely in Iraq, Christians have no tribal 
structure, depriving them of the blood ties under which other Iraqis bind 
together in times of trouble.

As such, they have never formed self-defence militias, despite the fact 
that post-war Iraq offers little reward to those who turn the other cheek.

"Christianity in the Middle East has always encouraged its people to rely 
on the protection of the law, not the tribe," said Mr Sako in an interview 
with The Sunday Telegraph. "Right now, the law here in Iraq is very weak."

As al-Qaeda's presence in Iraq has grown, Christians have been targeted 
deliberately, with sporadic bombings of churches and killings of priests.

In 2010, al-Qaeda gunmen attacked an evening Mass at Our Lady of Salvation 
Church in Baghdad, taking more than 100 hostages. By the time the security 
forces stormed the building two hours later, 58 were dead.

 A sparsely attended service held at the church (JULIAN SIMMONDS)

The atrocity was condemned by senior Muslim clerics, but saw yet another 
huge spike in Christians leaving Iraq.

"A gunman poked his AK47 through the door and started shooting," said 
Bassam George, 24, who survived the attack by hiding along with others in 
the church's sacristy. "I spent the time just thinking, 'How can I face 
the God?' For a year afterwards, I had nightmares, and would drink a 
bottle of whisky every night just to sleep."

Mr George has no plans to leave Iraq. He points out that all Iraqis have 
suffered religious violence: while about 1,000 Christians have died since 
2003, at least 30,000 Muslims died in the sectarian civil war of 2006-07 
alone.

None the less, the minority status of Christians has left them feeling 
acutely vulnerable – nowhere more so than in Doura, which sits on a 
palm-lined stretch of the Tigris as it winds south of Baghdad.

Christians first settled here in the 1960s to work at the nearby oil 
refinery, with a cluster of churches, monasteries and seminaries giving 
the area the nickname "The Vatican of Iraq".

But during Saddam's reign, Doura also became populated with Salafists – 
Sunni hardliners put there to defend the city's southern flank in the 
event of an uprising in Iraq's Shia-dominated south. Post-war, the 
Salafists declared the area to be a mini al-Qaeda caliphate, threatening 
Christian women for not wearing headscarves and extorting tithes for 
non-existent "protection" services.

"In Saddam's time, Christians could worship freely, and as long as you 
avoided politics you could survive," said Mr Esha. "But since the war we 
have been attacked, robbed, raped and forced out of both Doura and the 
country.

"Often just psychological pressure has been enough; people will drive past 
here and fire guns in the air, or leave bullets and threatening messages 
outside Christian homes. Sometimes Islamic extremism is used as an excuse, 
sometimes it's just blackmail for criminal purposes."

For most of the past five years, the situation seemed to be on the mend. 
In 2008, after the US troop "surge" that drove most al-Qaeda fighters out 
of Baghdad, hundreds of Christian families who had fled Doura began coming 
back. At St John's Church – shut for months that year because of al-Qaeda 
threats – Muslims and Christians sang songs together that Christmas.

Now, violence is on the rise again. Only two weeks ago, eight corpses were 
dumped in Doura. The bodies are as yet unidentified, but the fact that 
they were blindfolded suggests that the sectarian death squads who took 
Iraq into its darkest days five years ago are back at work.

With that in mind, many of those gathered at Mr Esha's church last week 
would make this Christmas their last in Iraq if they could.

"I will leave whenever I can," said Isaac Napoleon, who has lost a brother 
and a son to terrorism. "Christians are finished here in Iraq."

Colin Freeman visits a church hit by a suicide bomber - 
telegraph.co.uk/video

--
I am using the free version of SPAMfighter.
SPAMfighter has removed 1505 of my spam emails to date.
Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len

Do you have a slow PC? Try a Free scan 
http://www.spamfighter.com/SLOW-PCfighter?cid=sigen

Kirim email ke