Baptist Press
 
Christian 'hemorrhage' increases in  Iraq 

Posted on Dec 3, 2010 | by Ava Thomas  
BAGHDAD (BP)--Rahim* took one bullet in the leg, then one in the head while 
 sitting in a church pew. But his death and the deaths of 50 other 
Christians  gunned down with him on Oct. 31 marked more than just the ends of 
their 
lives.  They symbolized the demise of the entire Christian population of 
Iraq, said one  Baptist worker familiar with the situation.

"This is not the start --  it's the period to a long-running sentence, the 
end of a tragic novel that's  been playing out for years," said Nik Ripken*, 
who has served 25 years with the  International Mission Board and is an 
expert on the persecuted church in Muslim  contexts.

The Islamic State of Iraq, an al-Qaida group, took credit for  the massacre 
at Our Lady of Salvation, a Syrian Catholic church in Baghdad, plus  the 
spate of bombings and killings that followed. The group claimed the violence  
was in response to the alleged detention of two women in Egypt said to have  
converted to Islam.

Major news outlets showed the world the bloodbath,  the most fatal single 
incident of violence since Islamic extremists began  targeting Christians, 
according to Compass Direct News in a Nov. 3 Baptist Press  article, 
http://bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=34004.

But that one highly  publicized tragedy doesn't account for the hundreds of 
thousands of Christians  who have been lost to Iraq one way or another in 
the past seven years, Ripken  said. More than half of the nation's Christians 
have fled Iraq since 2003,  according to Compass Direct News. Just shy of 
600,000 remain.

Most who  flee go first to Syria or Jordan then try to find permanent 
residence as  refugees in Europe, Canada, the United States or Australia, 
according to Bassam  Madany, whose ministry, Middle East Resources, offers 
perspectives on Islam from  a Christian viewpoint.

"This is probably one of the biggest flights in  recent history, and the 
world has stood silently by as it's been happening,"  Ripken said, noting that 
the losses might be even bigger than those claimed by  news sources. "It's 
been a hemorrhage since the second Gulf War. When Saddam  Hussein thanked 
the Christians on public television for supporting him -- even  though they 
were simply being peaceable under his rule -- he basically gave them  a death 
sentence. He put a big political target on their backs."

And, he  noted, there was no al-Qaida presence in the nation while Hussein 
was still in  power.

The persecution of Christians in Iraq since his removal has  reportedly 
ranged from crucifixions to rape. The Islamic State of Iraq "seeks  the 
establishment of harsh Islamic law and says all Iraqi Christians are targets  
for 
jihad," as USA Today put it.

As a result, many Iraqi Christians are  facing the decision of whether to 
flee with their families or stay and likely  face severe persecution. Church 
leaders in Iraq and worldwide are voicing  concerns this may nail the coffin 
shut on a Christian presence in the  nation.

"They will definitely leave," Faiz Bashir, curate of St.  George's, an 
Anglican church near Our Lady of Salvation, told USA Today. "We  hope it's not 
the end of Christians in Iraq, but if things get worse, if there  are attacks 
on the churches and killing on the streets, this will be  certain."

Christians are soft targets in Iraq, and the world has failed  to advocate 
for them, Ripken said.

The U.S. State Department did not name  Iraq as a severe violator of 
religious liberty when it released its annual  International Religious Freedom 
report Nov. 17. The decision came despite an  April recommendation by the U.S. 
Commission on International Religious Freedom  to add it as a "country of 
particular concern." 

"They [Iraqi Christians]  talk about their persecution as expected, as 
normal," Ripken said. "What they  talk about with brokenness is being rejected 
and forgotten by other people. The  international Christian community has 
been silent. Iraq needs the prayers of  Christians, for peace to come there so 
that Iraqi Christians can stay and those  who have left can return home."

A nation increasingly devoid of a  Christian witness will also need intense 
prayer, Ripken added. "Iraqis' access  to the Gospel is at stake."

Persecution has already stifled sharing  between Christians and their 
neighbors, he said. "Pray for the boldness of Iraqi  Christians to share the 
Gospel in the face of violence. This really needs to be  a burden we carry for 
our brothers and sisters in nations like  this."

Ripken said Christians around the world can be praying for a sense  of 
brokenness for brothers and sisters in Iraq, for an opportunity for Iraqi  
Christians to return home peacefully and for the Gospel to spread in the midst  
of suffering.

-- 
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