latimes.com
Op-Ed
Iraq's war on Christians
Oil and geopolitics prevent the United States and Western European 
countries  from speaking out against what amounts to genocide against 
Christians in 
the  Middle East.
Tim Rutten 
December 15, 2010 
 

As much of the world once more prepares to celebrate the birth of Christ, 
it  is a melancholy fact that many of the most ancient churches established 
in his  name are being pushed to the brink of oblivion across the region 
where their  faith was born.

The culprits are Salafist Islam's increasingly virulent  intolerance, the 
West's convenient indifference and, in the case of Iraq,  America's failure 
to make responsible provisions to protect minorities from the  violent 
disorder that has persisted since the U.S.-led invasion in  2003.

When America intervened to overthrow Saddam Hussein, Iraq's  Christians — 
mostly Chaldeans and Assyrians — numbered about 1.4 million, or  about 3% of 
the population. Over the last seven years, more than half have fled  the 
country and, as the New York Times reported this week, a wave of targeted  
killings — including the Oct. 31 slaying of 51 worshipers and two priests 
during 
 Mass at one of Baghdad's largest churches — has sent many more Christians  
fleeing. Despite Prime Minister Nouri Maliki promises to increase security, 
many  believe the Christians are being targeted not only by Al Qaeda in 
Iraq, which  has instructed its fighters "to kill Christians wherever they can 
reach them,"  but also by complicit elements within the government's 
security  services.

The United States, meanwhile, does nothing — as it did nothing  four years 
ago, when Father Boulos Iskander was kidnapped, beheaded and  dismembered; 
or three years ago, when Father Ragheed Ganni was shot dead at the  altar of 
this church; or two years ago, when Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Paulos  
Faraj Rahho was kidnapped and murdered; as it has done nothing about all the  
church bombings and assassinations of lay Christians that have become  
commonplace over the last seven years.

The human tragedy of all this is  compounded by the historic one. The 
churches of the Middle East preserve the  traditions of the Apostolic era in 
ways 
no other Christian rites or  denominations do. The followers of Jesus were 
first called Christians in Antioch  Syria, and it was there that the Gospels 
first were written down in Koine Greek.  For 1,000 years, the churches of 
Iraq and Syria were great centers of Christian  thought and art. Today, the 
Christian population is declining in every majority  Muslim country in the 
region and is under increasingly severe pressure even in  Lebanon, where it 
still constitutes 35% of the population.

Putting aside  America's particular culpability in Iraq, the West as a 
community of nations has  long turned a blind eye to the intolerance of the 
Middle East's Muslim states —  an intolerance that has intensified with the 
spread of Salafism, Islam's brand  of militant fundamentalism. Our ally Saudi 
Arabia is the great financial and  ideological backer of this hatred. In fact, 
when it comes to religion, the  kingdom and North Korea are the most 
criminally intolerant countries in the  world.

Oil and geopolitics prevent the United States and Western European  
countries from speaking out against what amounts to genocide, though something  
more sinister than self-interest also is at work. The soft bigotry of minimal  
expectation is in play, an unspoken presumption that Muslim societies simply 
 can't be held to the same standards of humane, rational and decent conduct 
that  govern the affairs of other nations.

Paradoxically, the one country in  the Middle East whose Christian 
population has grown in recent years is Israel,  where more than 150,000 
Christians 
enjoy religious freedom. That lends a  particular pathos to the way in which 
the current persecution of Christians  mirrors that which destroyed most of 
the region's ancient Jewish communities  following Israel's establishment 
in 1948. Iraq, for example, was home to one of  the Mideast's largest and 
most vibrant Jewish populations, one that predated  Christianity by many 
centuries. It was in the great Jewish academies along the  Euphrates that the 
more 
authoritative of the two Talmuds was argued out and  compiled after the 
Second Temple's destruction. All that was swept away in a  wave of hatred, as 
were all but vestiges of the equally ancient Jewish  communities in Morocco, 
Egypt, Yemen, Syria and, more recently, Iran.

As  one of the recent Christian refugees from Baghdad told the New York 
Times this  week, "It's exactly what happened to the Jews."

A world still dazed and  distracted by a world war's aftermath stood by and 
did nothing then. The West  has no such excuse now.

-- 
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