Reprinted in Juan Cole's Informed Comment:
 
Not that anyone should expect Professor Cole to draw the
obvious conclusions, that is not about to happen, but when even
Cole cannot deny the facts for what they are you know
that things are pretty bad.
 
BTW, this account of Muslim treatment of non-Muslims is entirely
consistent with Muslim treatment of Hindus, Buddhists and Christians
in most of India during the Mogul era and before, essentially a
thousand year reign of terror that ultimately led to  approximately
70 million deaths and a similar number of cases of enslavement.
It also is consistent with treatment of Zoroastrians in Iran which
resulted in that country's Zoroastrian majority now reduced
to a remnant of  about 25,000 officially even if, unofficially,
there probably are several hundred thousand   -out of a  population
of about 80 million. Same story for north Africa, which once
was predominantly Christian.
 
The historical record is far more persuasive about the highly touted
sense of "Muslim tolerance" than all the words in the world.
 
 
 
Billy
 
 
============================
 
 
 
 
_Iraq: Christians Say Terror Drove Them From  Mosul_ 
(http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/juancole/ymbn/~3/zgypHkkdK00/christians-terror-mosul.html?utm_sourc
e=feedburner&utm_medium=email)   
Posted:  24 Jul 2014 12:59 AM PDT 
 
By Abdul Hamid Zebari via RFE/RL 
Rawan Jinan, a 25-year-old Iraqi Christian, says when she received an order 
 on June 18 to leave Mosul within 24 hours, she could not believe her eyes. 
The order came in the form of a letter delivered to every Christian home by 
 the Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the 
Levant  (ISIL), which rules Iraq’s second-largest city. The letter offered the  
recipients just three choices: to convert to Islam, to begin paying a 
monthly  tax for practicing a religion other than Islam, or to be executed if 
they  remained in Mosul. 
Jinan, now in a refugee camp near Irbil, in the Kurdish autonomous region,  
says she and her husband stared at the paper in amazement. “We were 
prepared for  anything, but we were not expecting to be banished from our city 
in 
this  manner,” she says. “When we first heard Christians should leave the 
city, we  thought this meant that Mosul was about to be targeted by heavy 
shelling. We did  not know they were going to rob us and throw us out.” 
The couple initially thought the letter was an evacuation, not expulsion,  
order because they and their two young sons — one 4 years old, the other 18  
months — had already fled fighting in Mosul once. That was when ISIL 
captured  the city in three days of combat that ended with the rout of the 
Iraqi 
Army on  June 9. 
The Honeymoon’s Over 
But after that fighting ended, the family returned amid reports that the  
Islamic State promised to guarantee the safety of all religious minorities in 
 the city, so long as they respected Islamic law. 
At first, she says, the militants seemed almost protective. “They welcomed  
us, and asked us what we needed, asking us to contact them if anyone 
bothered  us.” 
In return, the city’s Christians saw no reason why they would offend the  
city’s fundamentalist new rulers. Christian women had already long been 
wearing  the “abaya,” the figure-shrouding outer garment Muslim women wear for 
modesty  outdoors, and both Christian men and women mostly stayed within 
their own  neighborhoods to avoid trouble. 
But the honeymoon period, which contrasted starkly with the Islamic State’s 
 reputation for cruelty toward religious minorities in areas it occupies in 
 Syria, did not last long. As soon as the militia was firmly in control of 
Mosul,  the mood began to change. 
Then, Jinan says, the militants began to enter Christian churches,  
intimidating priests and making people afraid to go to their places of worship. 
 “
They did not only enter the churches,” she says. “They also went into the  
shrine of Prophet Younis [the Old Testament prophet Jonas], which they  
demolished. They also demolished monasteries.” 
The reported destruction of the tomb of Jonas was shocking for Mosul’s  
Christians and many mainstream Muslims alike, because he is revered by both  
faiths. The tomb itself is housed in a mosque built on a site where a church  
once stood, and the interlayering of faiths around the site had long been a  
symbol of Mosul’s tradition of religious tolerance. 
Things soon got worse. 
On July 16 and 17, Jinan says, a black painted symbol began appearing on  
Christian homes. “They began marking Christians’ homes with the letter ‘N’  
within a circle and the phrase ‘property of the Islamic State.’ When we 
asked  why, they said that ‘this would ward off anyone coming to loot [your 
home]  because looters will fear that this house belongs to us. You need not 
be afraid;  there’s nothing wrong,’” she recalls. 
But the Christians were feeling terrorized. The letter N stood for “Nasrani,
”  a term used for Christians in the Koran that refers to Nazareth, the 
hometown of  Jesus Christ. By this time, the Islamic State was also replacing 
the crosses  atop some churches with their own black jihadist flags, as if 
they had been  seized in a holy war. “I saw the flags on the Orthodox Mar 
[St.] Ephraim  Cathedral and the Chaldean Bishop’s Seat,” Jinan notes. 
Driven From Their Homes 
When the order with three choices came, Jinan says she and the other 
several  thousand Christians in the city had no trust left in the Islamic 
State. 
She  personally did not even inquire about the amount of the “jizya,” or 
religious  tax, the militants promised would grant Christians immunity. The 
amount has been  variously reported by other refugees as being around $100 
monthly. 
Instead, Jinan and her husband rushed to get their sons and fled by car to  
one of the Christian towns to the east of Mosul on the Nineveh plain. From  
there, they proceeded on to the greater safety of Ayn Kawa, a town just 
inside  the Kurdish autonomous region where they remain today. 
The Kurdish autonomous region, which is religiously tolerant and is guarded 
 by its own powerful security forces, puts her beyond the reach of the 
Islamic  State. But Jinan says she and most other refugees lost many of their 
possessions  to the Islamic State’s fighters, who shook them down as they fled 
from  Mosul. 
The fighters took the money her husband was carrying and searched their  
luggage thoroughly, stealing clothes and even baby diapers. They also treated  
their victims with open contempt. “They opened the can of baby milk and 
poured  its contents into the street,” she says. “We begged them to give us a 
bottle of  water for the children, to quiet them, but they opened the water 
bottles and  poured out the water in front us.” 
Now, with Mosul less about 80 kilometers to the west but her former life  
closed to her, Jinan says she doesn’t know what to expect next. 
Her options range from waiting for the Iraqi government to retake Mosul —  
something she calls unlikely when the Islamic State is at the gates of 
Baghdad —  to emigrating, something she says she never had to consider before. 
Her only certainty is that her family now would not want to return to Mosul 
 even if it could. “No Christian, and I for one, will return to the place 
where I  lived, where I was persecuted, and from which I have been expelled,” 
she  says. 
Reported from Irbil by RFE/RL’s Radio Free Iraq correspondent Abdelhamid  
Zebari. Written by Charles Recknagel in Prague. Translation from Arabic by 
Ayad  al-Gailani  
Copyright (c) 2014. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio 
Free  Europe/Radio Liberty

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