http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/13/world/europe/13sweden.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Sodertalje Journal
Far From War, a Town With a Well-Used Welcome Mat 
 
Dean C. K. Cox for The New York Times
Hanin Tawlik pinned a photo of the Rev. Ragheed Ganni on Vicky Sallom at a 
memorial service for Father Ganni recently in Sodertalje, Sweden. 

By IVAR EKMAN
Published: June 13, 2007
SODERTALJE, Sweden, June 11 - Walking down the carpeted aisle of Sodertalje's 
low-slung St. John's Church on a recent morning, Anders Lago's broad, blond 
features looked out of place among the crowd of hundreds of black-clad Iraqi 
mourners at a memorial service. 


Providing a Welcome Mat 
 
The New York Times
In Sodertalje, Arabic can now be heard almost everywhere. More Photos ยป 

Mr. Lago is the mayor of this scenic Swedish town of 60,000 people, which last 
year took in twice as many Iraqi refugees as the entire United States, almost 
all of them Christians fleeing the religious cleansing taking place next to 
Iraq's anti-American insurgency and sectarian strife. 

So the mourners are now part of Mr. Lago's constituency, and their war is 
rapidly becoming Sodertalje's war - to the mayor's growing chagrin. Sodertalje, 
he says, is reaching a breaking point, and can no longer provide the newcomers 
with even the basic services they have the right to expect.

About 9,000 Iraqis made it to Sweden in 2006 - almost half of the 22,000 who 
sought asylum in the entire industrialized world. This year, when the United 
States has promised to take in 7,000 Iraqis, around 20,000 are expected to seek 
asylum in Sweden.

Many of them are expected to find their way to this thriving town nestled among 
cold lakes and steep pine and birch-covered hills about 18 miles southwest of 
Stockholm. During 2006, following a migration route for Middle Eastern 
Christians laid down almost half a century ago, more than 1,000 Iraqis arrived 
here. This year, up to 2,000 are expected to come.

Now areas like Ronna and Hovsjo, with the seven-story, boxlike apartment 
buildings typical of these Swedish versions of France's blighted immigrant 
neighborhoods or America's urban housing projects, are being nicknamed Little 
Baghdad and Mesopotalje, complete with shops hawking Iraqi delicacies, crowded 
apartments and innumerable stories of carnage and loss.

In one Ronna apartment, where newly arrived refugees gathered recently for an 
introduction to their new homeland as part of a municipal program, tragic 
stories were in abundant supply.

Mariam, a 36-year-old teacher from the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, came to 
Sodertalje in late March. She told of being grazed by a gunman's bullet while 
trying to leave Mosul with her family, and seeing one of her sons shot in the 
stomach.

"We left everything to be safe, and we came here to start a new life," said 
Miriam, an Assyrian Christian who did not want her full name used because her 
husband and two of her three sons had not yet managed to leave Iraq. "In Iraq, 
we were deprived of even the simple right to go to church, and we want to hold 
on to our religion."

Sweden grants asylum to all Iraqis except those from the relatively stable 
Kurdish areas, and the immigration authorities do not even register their 
religious affiliation.

But Sodertalje has been a magnet for Christian refugees since the late 1960s, 
when Assyrian immigrants from Lebanon, Syria and Turkey established a thriving 
community here. After the Persian Gulf war in 1991 and now, as extremists in 
Iraq step up their persecution of non-Muslims, more and more are trying to get 
here.

"They come here to survive," said Jalal Hammo, the chairman of St. John's, a 
Chaldean Catholic church, who arrived from Iraq in 1994. "The terrorists do all 
they can to make all Christians leave Iraq."

Culture shock for newly arrived Iraqis is felt far less here than it would be 
practically anywhere else in Sweden - or the West, for that matter. Here, they 
can speak their native Arabic almost everywhere, and have their choice of 
churches for the Christian denominations common in Iraq: Chaldean Catholic, 
Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholic.

In addition, they can see the games of two successful Assyrian soccer teams at 
the local stadium, as well as Suroyo TV, an Assyrian satellite TV station. But 
even though Sodertalje is the choice for many Iraqi Christians, it is becoming 
increasingly clear that their new lives present many challenges - partly as a 
consequence of Sodertalje's status as a haven of choice.

Most who make it here were relatively affluent - almost all have paid $10,000 
to $20,000 to get the papers they need to get out of Iraq - and they are often 
highly educated. But work in Sodertalje is scarce, especially for those with 
little knowledge of Swedish, and Iraqis who arrive now will have to wait 
several months to start regular Swedish classes.

Housing is also a problem. Like most of the refugees, Mariam has been living 
with friends since she arrived, and worries that she has greatly overstayed her 
welcome.

"After everything I had in Iraq, I have to suffer this humiliation," she said. 
"I want to work, I want to provide for my family, but what can I do here?"

Town officials are wondering that themselves. "The Swedish system for taking in 
refugees is broken," said Mr. Lago, the mayor. Because Iraqis are free to 
settle where they want in Sweden, he said, a place like Sodertalje faces an 
overwhelming burden of providing them with housing, schooling and work.

And even here, 2,000 miles from Iraq, the war continues to make its presence 
felt, as with Hazim, a wealthy, 50-year-old businessman who fled from Baghdad 
in March. Sitting among a group of compatriots in the Ronna apartment recently, 
he received a threatening cellphone call from Baghdad.

"For us, Iraq is a never-ending story," he said. "We came here, and we are 
still followed by the war."

And then there are Swedes like Mr. Lago, who learn about the horrors of Iraq as 
a part of their job. 

The service in St. John's Church, where Mr. Lago was a guest, was held in 
memory of the Rev. Ragheed Ganni, 35, a Chaldean Catholic priest from Iraq who 
worked at the church until last fall. In November, he decided to follow the 
tracks of those leaving Iraq for Sodertalje, but in the opposite direction.

On June 3, Father Ganni was shot to death, execution style, after celebrating 
Mass at the Holy Spirit Church in Mosul.


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