Thanks for this Ernie.  I have been disturbed about the reports I have read, 
including Billy’s yesterday.

Chris

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
Sent: Monday, June 30, 2014 11:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RC] Does even one American Christian give a damn?

 

To answer your question: yes. 

 

http://m.nationalreview.com/corner/380620/where-do-mosuls-christians-go-now-american-help-needed-nina-shea

 

There's a couple organizations mentioned about halfway down. 

 

E

 



Sent from my iPhone


On Jun 30, 2014, at 15:54, "BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical 
Centrist Community" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

The Daily Beast

June 29, 2014

 


Church Bells Fall Silent in Mosul as Iraq’s Christians Flee


The advance of ISIS has ended over a thousand years of Christian worship in 
Mosul—the latest chapter in the long decline of Christianity in the Middle East.

Last Sunday, for the first time in 1600 years, no mass was celebrated in Mosul 
<http://www.christiantoday.com/article/no.mass.said.in.mosul.for.first.time.in.1600.years.says.archbishop/38493.htm>
 . The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) seized Iraq’s second largest city 
on June 10, causing most Christians in the region to flee in terror, in new 
kinship with the torment of Christ crucified on the cross. The remnant of 
Mosul’s ancient Christian community, long inhabitants of the place where many 
believe Jonah to be buried, now faces annihilation behind ISIS lines. Those who 
risk worship must do so in silence, praying under new Sharia regulations that 
have stilled every church bell in the city.

The media has largely ignored the horrifying stories that are emerging from 
Mosul. On June 23, the Assyrian International News Agency reported 
<http://www.aina.org/news/20140623185542.htm>  that ISIS terrorists entered the 
home of a Christian family in Mosul and demanded that they pay the jizya (a tax 
on non-Muslims). According to AINA, “When the Assyrian family said they did not 
have the money, three ISIS members raped the mother and daughter in front of 
the husband and father. The husband and father was so traumatized that he 
committed suicide.”

Although few reports from ISIS-occupied Iraq can be corroborated, the group’s 
record of torture chambers, public executions, and crucifixions lends 
credibility to nightmarish accounts from the ground. Since the fall of Mosul, a 
litany of evils has replaced the liturgies of the Christians there: a young boy 
ripped from the arms of his parents as they ran from the ISIS advance and shot 
before their eyes, girls killed for not wearing the hijab.

Small wonder that since the fall of Mosul, tens of thousands of defenseless 
civilians have fled the ISIS onslaught 
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/06/22/the-tragic-exodus-of-iraq-s-christians.html>
 , including the region’s Christians, whose presence on the Nineveh plains 
dates back to the earliest centuries of Christianity. Most have left their 
homes with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

 

Steven and his wife Babyl, two Christian refugees now living in Erbil, left 
their home in Hamdaniya, in the Mosul area, which ISIS plagued for years before 
its recent conquest. In late 2013, ISIS sent Steven a letter that threatened 
him with beheading unless he left the city. At first, unwilling to let 
extremists uproot his life, he ignored the warning. But ISIS gunmen shot at him 
several times, their bullets accomplishing what their letter could not: 
persuading Steven and his wife—then newly pregnant—to flee to Jordan.

Despite the grave risk, the young couple returned to Hamdaniya in early June. 
Babyl had taken ill, and Steven, unable to find work in Jordan, desperately 
needed money for her medical care.

Several days later ISIS conquered Mosul. For a second time, Steven and Babyl, 
now eight months pregnant, fled their home. Their harrowing escape to Erbil has 
ended in a precarious and hardscrabble existence. They fear for their unborn 
child, a baby girl who will be born into a family with no belongings, no money, 
and little food. Steven summed up the situation at the end of an email: “I just 
want to get out of this hell.”

This human tragedy has its foundation in political instability. The idea of 
Iraq was conceived of by foreign policy elite in London; the last to cling to 
it are the foreign policy elite in Washington. As the Obama administration and 
State Department scramble to save Iraq, a reality that many on the ground have 
known for years is coming into focus: Iraq is falling apart. In the north, 
Kurdistan—a nation that may not be found on any western map—holds the greatest 
hope for those who seek the most fundamental freedoms. Since 2003, Christians 
have been fleeing to Kurdistan’s Nineveh plain. The Sunni Kurds, who tend to be 
secular in their politics, have offered them a helping hand in recent years. 

As the horrors unfolded in Iraq, back in Washington, in the briefing room of a 
presidential hopeful, an Iraqi bishop made a desperate plea for help via phone 
as a delegation of Iraqi Christians seeking greater support for the Kurds. “We 
have no food, no petrol, no [means] to protect ourselves. Where are America’s 
values? Where is our dignity?” Many in Washington are keen to see greater 
Kurdish autonomy, viewing them as the prudent third way between the Sunni 
states that have supported Islamist militants (Turkey, Saudi, Qatar) and Shia 
Iran and its puppets. The Kurds represent not only the best hope for an 
American ally in an increasingly Islamist-dominated region, but also the best 
hope for the survival of Christians and other religious minorities in the 
Middle East.

Just a few years ago, no one could have imagined a militant Islamist emirate 
stretching across the Fertile Crescent, threatening to expand into neighboring 
countries like Lebanon and Jordan. Today, it is difficult to imagine how ISIS 
will be defeated. Iraq's post-colonial borders have collapsed over the past two 
weeks as ISIS has consolidated and expanded an emirate from the Euphrates to 
within striking distance of Bagdad. Now it commands territory nearly as vast as 
that of either the Iraqi or Syrian governments. Barbarism and strategy are not 
mutually exclusive. ISIS will likely consolidate its gains near Baghdad, 
waiting for either the Maliki government to crumble or for the Shia militias to 
leave the capital.

The crisis of Iraqi Christianity precipitated by ISIS’s advance, which is 
critical in areas like Mosul, is the latest chapter in the dramatic decline of 
Christianity in the Middle East. Muslim (let alone Islamist) homogeneity in the 
region would be a cultural catastrophe with global consequences and national 
security implications for America. Lack of attention in the Western press is an 
indictment of a journalistic and political establishment that is mostly 
indifferent to one of the great human rights crises of our time.

The story of Christianity in Iraq is long and has entered its most difficult 
chapter to date. But ISIS will not have the last word. Although the future 
appears bleak, Steven and Babyl hope for the day when they can return home—the 
day when the church bells of Mosul can ring out once more

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  • [RC] Do... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
      • ... Chris Hahn

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