12/26/2013 1:02:16 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:

 
38 Dead After Bombings Strike Iraqi Christian Areas on  Christmas Day

 
 
By _Morgan Lee_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/morgan-lee/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
December 26, 2013

 
 
At least 38 people are dead and 60 wounded after two bombs went off on  
Christmas Day in Baghdad. One exploded outside a Catholic church as members of  
the congregation were leaving a Christmas Day service, while another bomb  
killed 11 in a market in a Christian neighborhood. 
The attacks will likely only incite more anxiety in Iraq's waning Christian 
 population, which has long been targeted by extremists following the U.S.  
invasion of the country and the toppling of Saddam Hussein. The population 
has  _dwindled_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/31/world/middleeast/31iraq.html)  down to less 
than 500,000 from 1.4 million in  2003. 
Dr. David Curry, president/CEO of Open Doors USA, said that he believed the 
 violence was part of a deliberate act to remove Christians from the  
country. 
"There is a concerted effort by extremists to drive Christians out of the  
Middle East," Curry said in a statement. "Iraq not only is a hostile, 
volatile  environment in general, but often the violence is directed 
specifically  
towards Christians. As a result, one of our field workers said that if the  
exodus of Christians from Iraq continues at the current pace, it is 
possible  there could be no Christians left in Iraq by 2020." 
Human rights activist William Warda told _Reuters_ 
(http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/12/25/us-iraq-christmas-idUSBRE9BO06I20131225)
  that he 
believed three to five Christian  families were leaving the country daily. 
"The future is very critical because of immigration," said Warda. "Many  
Christians … are fleeing from the country because of this issue, because there 
 is no sign of a bright future." 

Many Christians had been cautiously optimistic about celebrating this year  
after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite-led government made Christmas 
a  national holiday for the first time. 
Ammar Al-Hakim, one of Iraq's most powerful Shi'ite politicians, a group  
that like Christians have found themselves the target of al-Qaeda, attended  
and spoke at a Christmas Eve mass. Al-Hakim told the congregation that Jesus 
 Christ was an example of forgiveness and peace and offered solidarity to  
Christians. 
"They target you like they target us. There are people in this country who  
believe that anyone who has a different opinion should be killed," said  
Al-Hakim, as quoted by Reuters. "We are partners as targets. We are partners  
in this challenge. And we will remain partners in confronting extremism,  
violence and terrorism." 
Despite these gestures, Christians nevertheless took precautions. On  
Christmas Eve, outside a Catholic Church in Baghdad, "soldiers and police ran  
bomb detectors across cars, searched trunks and bags and patted down visitors  
before the evening ceremony." 
In Iraq, Christmas Eve this year coincided with two other politically  
significant events – the Shi'ite holy day of Arbain and a military offensive  
aimed at driving out al-Qaeda in the Sunni stronghold of Anbar province. 
State television coverage juxtaposed Iraqi troops with Shi'ite pilgrims  
dressed in black and people wearing Santa Claus suits. 
This is not the first time that Iraqi Christians have been targeted on a  
holy day. In 2010, a suicide bomb on Christmas Day killed  dozens.



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