London Telegraph
 
Iraq's beleaguered Christians make  final stand on the Mosul frontline
Some Christian  families from Mosul have sought refuge in St Matthew’s 
Monastery, writes Richard  Spencer. Others vow to take a stand against the 
Islamists - whatever the cost 

 
By _Richard Spencer_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/richard-spencer/) , Bartella 
6:00PM BST 21 Jun 2014  


 
 
Captain Firaz Jacob knows he may well be mounting a last stand at the  
frontiers of the Christian settlement of Bartella on the outskirts of Mosul. 
 
Less than a mile down the road are the jihadists of  Isis, the Islamic 
State of _Iraq_ (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/)  
and al-Sham, and the portly,  middle-aged Mr Jacob is aware that his 
home-grown militia are outnumbered. 
 
“I stand here waiting for my destiny,” he said, as he stood this week by 
the  last check-point on the road to Mosul and the black flags waiting in the 
desert. 
 
Speaking of why he and his men were refusing to give up and go, Capt Jacob  
said was determined to resist the jihadists and their allies, who last week 
 over-ran most of the rest of northern Iraq. 
 
“We will stay here despite everything,” he announced. “All these armed 
groups  we have seen, but nevertheless we will remain. We love our Christian 
way of  life, we love our churches and we love our community.” 


 
 
Between the Sunni and Shia Arabs of Iraq lie a patchwork quilt of other  
ethnic groups and faiths, many of whom have been reconsidering their future in 
 the most obvious possible way since the allied invasion a decade ago 
unleashed  the sectarian militias and their death squads.  
Anywhere between half and three quarters of Iraq’s Christians - Chaldean  
Catholics, Syriac Orthodox, and the rest - have left the country and the 
Middle  East to start new lives abroad since 2003.  
The town of Bartella, ten miles from Mosul, is largely Assyrian Orthodox, 
and  its 16,000 citizens currently face a very vivid incarnation of an 
ever-present  threat. They have been car-bombed at least twice in recent years, 
but this time  their presumed adversaries have an army.  
In Biblical times, the Assyrians were the imperial rulers of Ninevah, in  
which province Mosul still sits today.  
According to the poet Byron, when the empire roused itself “The Assyrian 
came  down like the wolf on the fold, And his cohorts were gleaming in purple 
and  gold”.  
This week Mr Jacob, a father-of-three wearing a small pistol tucked into 
his  jeans, an over-tight T-shirt, and a pot belly, had a small band of 600  
volunteers to help him. They were backed up by some Kurdish troops sent from 
the  city of Erbil an hour’s drive away.  
If the jihadists are to be believed, he has nothing to fear. Through its  
social media accounts, the alliance of Isis and former Baathists from the 
Saddam  Hussein regime that now runs Mosul has assured the wider world that 
they have no  quarrel with the Christian minority.  
So long as they observe the new rules - Sharia, implemented strictly - 
their  places of worship will be protected. 
 
 
These are places of worship that go back thousands of years. The oldest  
extant church in the world, dated by its murals to the first half of the third 
 century, is just over the border in Syria.  
Monks from St Matthew’s Monastery near Bartella, where Christian families  
from Mosul have sought refuge, are thought to have helped translate Greek  
scientific and philosophical texts into Arabic for the eighth-century Caliphs 
of  the Abbasid empire in Baghdad, an example of co-operation that seems 
remote  today.  
Bartella’s coadjutor bishop, Father Kyriakos Johanna, repeated perhaps more 
 in hope than expectation the views of many Sunnis from Mosul, who claim 
that  what happened there was a local uprising against the oppressive Shia 
rule of the  Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, as much as an extremist 
Islamist  takeover.  
When Isis swept in last week, they did so on the back of public discontent  
with rule from Baghdad. Many Sunni Muslims say that they have as much - if 
not  more - to fear from the jihadists as Christians yet still support the 
ejection  of government troops.  
“I understand that these people wanted freedom,” Fr Kyriakos said. “
Freedom  is everything, and the government pushed them to the edge.”  
He said that, contrary to reports, there was no indication that churches in 
 Mosul had been attacked by the insurgents or that Christians who remained 
had  been threatened.  
As did others, he pointed out that since the government left conditions had 
 got easier for residents - there were no car bombs, and security walls 
that  divided the city had been taken down. That is partly, of course, because 
those  who set off the car bombs and made security walls necessary are now 
in charge.  
The truth of these reassurances remains to be seen. In neighbouring Syria,  
when the jihadists arrived in the city of Raqqa, which they now completely  
control, residents also thought life was better for a while. Then they took 
over  the two churches, tore down the crosses, and turned them into jihadi 
battalion  recruiting stations.  
In Mosul, there seemed to be little choice for the thousands of Christians  
who fled the city as the insurgents arrived, phoning each other in the 
early  hours of the morning last week to alert each other to what was 
happening. 
 
“There was some panic,” said Umm Saad, a housewife who had sought refuge 
with  her husband, mother-in-law and three children, in St Matthew’s, high up 
on a  mountainside overlooking the Plain of Ninevah.  
“People were ringing round and telling each other what was happening. We 
left  in what we had. We passed soldiers running, and throwing off their 
uniforms as  they went. We looked back and saw Isis burning a military vehicle 
of 
some type.”  
Hers is one of 20 families living for the time being in the monastery’s  
cells. Their dress - skirts, blouses and long, uncovered hair for the girls 
and  women - and demeanour is a contrast to that of the Sunnis living under 
Islamist  rule across large parts of Iraq and Syria.  
Umm Saad said she and other Christian women would already wear the abaya -  
the long cloak and hood worn by women in the Gulf - when on the street,  “
otherwise there would be trouble”. Since the insurgents arrived, even if 
their  forces of occupation are largely local Baathist remnants, they have 
posted rules  for the implementation of their strict Sharia.  
These demand that women should be covered and only go outside “if necessary”
.  Drugs, alcohol and cigarettes are banned, and all shrines, monuments and 
 graveyards - seen as idolatrous in Salafi forms of Sunni Islam - will be  
destroyed.  
When the jihadists arrived in the Syrian city of Raqqa, which they now  
completely control, residents also thought life was better for a while. Then  
they took over the two churches, tore down the crosses, and turned them into  
jihadi battalion recruiting stations.  
“We had to leave,” Umm Saad’s husband, Manhal, said. “We don’t want to 
live  in fear.” Other men said living was one thing, living as they wanted 
another.  
In some ways, the question is why these people did not leave before.  
Both of the couple had lost brothers-in-law to apparently sectarian murder, 
 their sisters’ husbands shot dead in the shops where they worked, one in 
Baghdad  in 2004, one in Mosul in 2008.  
They talked of returning to Mosul when they had discovered “who these 
people  really are”. But for all of these refugees, their real likely futures 
seem very  different. Umm Saad’s widowed sister and their brother already live 
in Sweden,  Manhal’s brother in Detroit.  
As such, they are part of a wider exodus. While the decline of the 
Christian  community began well before the fall of Saddam, it has been hastened 
since. The  community’s natural association with the “crusading” invader made 
them natural  targets for revenge, leaving aside other ideological motives.  
Among the victims were the Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Mosul, Paulos  
Faraj Rahho, who was found buried in a shallow grave in 2008, and Father 
Ragheed  Aziz Ganni, also of Mosul, shot by the jihadists who stopped them on 
the road  and demanded they convert to Islam.  
Today, the remaining Christians are made up of Assyrians and Syriacs,  
Armenians and Arabs, practising variants of the Orthodox and Catholic faith,  
many worshipping in otherwise almost extinct languages such as Aramaic, the  
language of Christ, or Assyrian itself.  
Andy Darmoo, an Assyrian who runs a London-based charity for Iraqi  
Christians, said he believed that of 800,000 to one million Christians in the  
country at the time of the allied invasion, no more than 200,000 remained.  
Sweden, Germany, the United Kingdom and America are the favoured  
destinations: in some cases Western governments inadvertently and 
understandably  
assist the sectarian cleansing of the country, by making it easier for  
Christians to find refuge.  
Some communities are re-establishing themselves inside the autonomous  
Kurdistan Regional Government area - assuming that this entity manages to hold  
off the insurgents’ advance.  
Thaer, a kebab-shop owner in Bartella, has no plans yet to join his three  
cousins in America. Fr Kyriakos said he would never join his son in Munich.  
The bravado is real enough. But the front line with Isis in the north of 
Iraq  is now 600 miles long. That is a long line for the Kurds and a few 
hundred  Christian militiamen to hold.

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