I care, but I don’t know what you or I can do as a practical matter.  My son’s 
Australian girlfriend is of direct Assyrian Christian descent.  Her extended 
family is very involved with this tragedy that has been in the making for 
decades.  Her cultural group has a seat at the UN as displaced people.

 

As a side note, she speaks 5 languages including an old Aramaic dialect that 
presumably goes back to the time of Christ (underscoring the tragedy for these 
displaced people).  She was at a gathering of people who speak this dialect and 
was flabbergasted when a guy from India shows up speaking the same dialect that 
he learned in India.  I presume that he learned the dialect in a direct lineage 
from Thomas.  Any ideas on this linguistic connection Ernie or Billy?

 

Chris

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2014 3:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Christians under seige in northern Iraq -protected by the Kurds

 

There is at least one Christian leader who has made this into an issue,

Pat Robertson.  On balance this is all for the good even if, true to form,

Robertson has done so in his usual bumbling way, someone who is basically 

poorly informed and is clueless about much of what he is talking about.

At least he sees the problem, is trying to understand it, and is making

an appeal to other Christians to help.

 

So far, while there may be believers who I do not now know about,

he is the only one. I know that Ernie cares about this here at RC.org,

but there is no evidence that anyone else does. What does this say?

 

You tell me.

 

 

Billy

 

-----------------------------------------------

 

 

 

 

 

Iraq's Waterless Christians: The Campaign to Expel a Religion
Jason Motlagh ("Bloomberg," July 22, 2014)

Qaraqosh is one of the last refuges in northern Iraq for Christians fleeing 
persecution by the militants of Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, who swept 
into the region in June. A historic Christian city of 50,000 about 19 miles 
southeast of Mosul, Qaraqosh is under the formidable protection of the 
well-armed Peshmerga—the Kurdish fighters whose autonomous region disputes the 
area with both ISIL and the Iraqi central government based in Baghdad. Now, in 
a further effort to oust Christians from land they have inhabited for two 
millennia, the Islamic militants have begun turning off a precious utility: 
water.

Since taking Mosul on June 10, ISIL militants have squeezed Qaraqosh and nearby 
Christian villages by blocking the pipes that connect the communities with the 
Tigris river. Without a sufficient number of deep wells to fill the gap, the 
city must have water trucked in, at huge cost, from Kurdish-controlled areas 
just 15 miles away. Since ISIL took over key refineries in northern Iraq, the 
price of fuel has spiked across the region. The parched residents of Qaraqosh 
must pay about $10 every other day to fill up emergency water tanks, no small 
sum in this economically depressed part of Iraq.

Outside one of the town’s 12 churches, people queue from 6 a.m. until midnight 
to get their daily rations from a well. Flatbed trucks are joined by children 
with pushcarts and riders on bicycles bearing empty jugs. “Our lives revolve 
around water,” says Laith, 28, a school teacher who returned with his family a 
day earlier from a suburb of Erbil, the Kurdish regional capital, 45 miles 
away, to which thousands of threatened Christians have migrated. Though aid 
agencies have erected several water depots around town, supplies are limited, 
barely enough to sustain large families in the 100-degree-plus heat. Plans to 
dig new wells will take at least several months to fulfill.

Christians have been fleeing ISIL-controlled territory since the militants and 
their allies overwhelmed the garrisons of the Baghdad government in Mosul, 
Iraq’s second-largest city and its most Christian. The Islamic State, which 
sees itself as the restoration of the caliphate to rule all Muslims, 
immediately imposed anti-Christian rules, ordering Muslim employers to fire 
Christian workers. The homes of Christian religious leaders were ransacked and 
occupied by militants. A Christian population as old as the faith shrank from 
3,000 families to several hundred in weeks.

On July 18, ISIL ordered non-Muslims to convert or pay a tax last imposed 
during the Ottoman empire. If not, they would face “death by the sword,” 
according to a decree that was read out in city mosques and broadcast from 
loudspeakers around town. Many families then fled to Qaraqosh. Keen to absorb 
the disputed territory, the Kurds dug in around Qaraqosh and three smaller 
Christian villages, to the relief of refugees and locals who have faced the 
mortar attacks accompanying ISIL’s offensive.

“The [militants] want to erase our history and break our faith,” says Father 
Amanoel Adel Kalloo, a Syrian Catholic priest from Mosul who has taken shelter 
in Qaraqosh with more than 470 families. “We must struggle to preserve this, 
but so much has already been lost.” Father Yosef, a second displaced clergyman, 
said that the hard deadline set by the militants to depart or convert has 
forced people to abandon homes and businesses, often with little more than a 
car and some clothing.

Apart from the enforced drought conditions, electrical blackouts last most of 
the day. Merchants say business has been hamstrung further by a trade “embargo” 
that ISIL has placed on surrounding Muslim towns that used to trade with 
Qaraqosh. Shops are mostly shuttered, and work is scare. Firaz Petros, 27, says 
the situation has compelled him to car-pool an hour each way to Erbil, where he 
works in waste disposal. “We’re barely earning enough to live,” he says, adding 
that he and fellow local commuters share the cost of a $45 daily gas bill.

Despite the hardships—and the presence of jihadists less than a mile beyond the 
city limits—local religious leaders say that must resist the urge to leave, or 
risk losing their centuries-old identity. For Christianity to endure in Iraq, 
“we must stay until the end,” says Archbishop Basile Casmoussa of the Syrian 
Catholic church in Mosul, who was kidnapped for a day by radical gunmen in 
2005. With his exiled flock in Qaraqosh, he laments that mass is not celebrated 
in Mosul for the first time in 1,600 years. He draws hope, however, in the fact 
that churches in Qaraqosh are still drawing crowds. “Our faith is being 
tested,” he says.

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