Christian Post
 
 
The Silent Exodus of Syria's  Christians
 
 
 
By _Nina Shea_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/nina-shea/)   , CP 
Op-Ed Contributor
February 8, 2013

 
In Syria's rebellion, no religious or ethnic group has  been spared 
horrific levels of loss and suffering, but its 2,000-year-old  Christian 
minority 
is now facing a distinct _persecution_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/persecution/) .
Under the cover of war and chaos, this group, which alone lacks militias of 
 its own, is easy prey for Islamists and criminals, alike. These assaults 
are  driving out the Christians en masse. This 2,000-year-old community, 
numbering  around 2 million is the largest church in the Middle East after 
Egypt's Copts,  and it now faces extinction. 
Archdeacon Emanuel Youkhana of the Assyrian Church of the East, despite  
recent heart surgery, is now constantly on the road in Lebanon and _Iraq_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/iraq/)  trying  to cope with the refugee 
crisis. He wrote to me today: 
"We are witnessing another Arab country losing its Christian Assyrian  
minority. When it happened in Iraq nobody believed Syria's turn would come.  
Christian Assyrians are fleeing massively from threats, kidnappings, rapes and  
murders. Behind the daily reporting about bombs there is an ethno-religious 
 cleansing taking place, and soon Syria can be emptied of its Christians." 
Official information and media reports about the Christians' fate has been  
sparse. A new report yesterday, by Nuri Kino, a Swedish journalist of 
Assyrian  background, sheds valuable light on the atrocities visited upon the 
Christians  inside Syria, and their ordeals in attempting to escape, relying as 
they must on  exploitative human-trafficking networks that have sprung up. 
Entitled "Between  the Barbed Wire," the report resulted from a trip 
sponsored by a Swedish  charity, the Syriac Orthodox _Youth_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/youth/)  Organization, to  assess the 
needs of refugees. It 
is based on over a hundred interviews this past  _Christmas_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/christmas/)  with  Christian refugees in 
Turkey and 
Lebanon. 
The refugees and the Lebanese bishops whom Kino and his team interview 
relate  that Christians are leaving in a torrent. Once they cross into Lebanon, 
guided  by Middle Eastern versions of "coyotes" through a harrowing series 
of  checkpoints guarded by various sides in the conflict, they mostly seek 
out the  local Christian communities for help. A clearly overwhelmed 
Archbishop George  Saliba, on Mount Lebanon, says about the refugees: "I want 
to help 
as many as I  can, but it is not sustainable. We have hundreds of Syrian 
refugees who arrive  every week. I don't know what to do."


Elsewhere in Lebanon, St. Gabriel's monastery has opened its 75 unheated  
rooms to over a hundred refugees. In another Lebanese Christian town, the 
Syrian  Catholic patriarch Ignatius Ephrem Josef III has converted a school 
building  into a shelter for the hundreds of refugees there now and the others 
constantly  arriving. The patriarch describes it as the "great exodus taking 
place in  silence." He also says he houses Christians who fled several 
years ago from  Iraq. All of the Christian towns visited for the report are 
scrambling to keep  up with the influx of Syrian Christians. Church leaders 
were 
grateful for the  beds, washing machines, heaters, and medicine brought by 
the Swedish  visitors. 
Some of the Syrians say they plan to stay in Lebanon until Syria "calms 
down"  and they can return to their homes. Many others say going back is 
"unthinkable"  and are making plans to try to get to _Europe_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/europe/)  either on valid  visas or by 
paying smugglers the 
going rate of $20,000. They are largely  small-business owners and skilled 
professionals - an engineer and his family, a  jeweler and his, a 
hairdresser, a medical student, etc. Many hope to be smuggled  to Sweden and 
Germany, 
where they can receive some state subsidies until they  find work. The town 
of Sodertalje seems to be a popular destination, with 35 new  Christian 
families arriving from Syria each week. Kino, himself a citizen of  Sodertalje, 
relates that there are already many Syrian Christians living there,  and 
Arabic is more common than Swedish.


The refugees were panic-stricken, pointing to some horrifying triggering  
event that forced them out - a kidnapping of a relative, a murder, or a 
robbery.  They feel they are targeted for being Christian, which means that 
militants and  criminals can assault them with impunity. Some point to a 
government that fails  to protect them; others to Islamists rebels who want to 
drive 
them out. A  refugee tells Kino: "Two men from a strong Arabic tribe 
decided one day to  occupy our farmland, just like that. When I went to the 
police 
to report, I was  told there was nothing they could do. The police chief 
was very clear that they  would not act, as they didn't want the tribe to turn 
against the regime." 
A woman from Hassake recounts how her husband and son were shot in the head 
 by Islamists. "Our only _crime_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/crime/)  is being  Christians," she 
answers when asked if there had been a 
dispute. 
A father says: "We're not poor, we didn't run from _poverty_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/poverty/) . We ran from  fear. I have to 
think about 
my twelve-year-old daughter. She's easy prey for  kidnappers. Three children 
of our friends were kidnapped. In two cases they paid  enormous ransoms to 
get the children back, and in one case they paid but got the  child back 
dead." 
Another man attests: "In Syria, you don't know who is your friend and who 
is  your enemy. The wealthy have it the worst. Criminals wait in line to 
kidnap  them." 
The refugees all fear the Islamists. When the jihad rebel units show up and 
 take over a town, like Rasel-Eyn, it loses its Christian population over 
night.  One man from there tells Kino: "The so-called Free Syrian Army, or 
rebels, or  whatever you choose to call them in the West, emptied the city of 
its  Christians, and soon there won't be a single Christian in the whole  
country." 
There is no complete data on the number of refugees. How many Christians 
have  fled is not known and escapees continue to come across the border each 
day. We  are only beginning to understand the peril they face. Archdeacon 
Youkhana  pleads: "The world must open their eyes to the  plight."

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