Appalling.

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2015 9:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Persecution of Assyrian Christians, destruction of ancient art by 
Muslim zealots

 

 

ISIS Onslaught Engulfs Assyrian Christians 

as Militants Destroy Ancient Art


Annie Barnard ("The New York Times," February 26, 2015)

ISTANBUL — The reports are like something out of a distant era of ancient 
conquests: entire villages emptied, with hundreds taken prisoner, others kept 
as slaves; the destruction of irreplaceable works of art; a tax on religious 
minorities, payable in gold.

A rampage reminiscent of Tamerlane or Genghis Khan, perhaps, but in reality, 
according to reports by residents, activist groups and the assailants 
themselves, a description of the modus operandi of the Islamic State’s 
self-declared caliphate this week. The militants have prosecuted a relentless 
campaign in Iraq and Syria against what have historically been religiously and 
ethnically diverse areas with traces of civilizations dating to ancient 
Mesopotamia.

The latest to face the militants’ onslaught are the Assyrian Christians of 
northeastern Syria, one of the world’s oldest Christian communities, some 
speaking a modern version of Aramaic, the language of Jesus.

Assyrian leaders have counted 287 people taken captive, including 30 children 
and several dozen women, along with civilian men and fighters from Christian 
militias, said Dawoud Dawoud, an Assyrian political activist who had just 
toured the area, in the vicinity of the Syrian city of Qamishli. Thirty 
villages have been emptied, he said.

The Syriac Military Council, a local Assyrian militia, put the number of those 
taken at 350.

Reached in Qamishli, Adul Ahad Nissan, 48, an accountant and music composer who 
fled his village before the brunt of the fighting, said a close friend and his 
wife had been captured.

“I used to call them every other day. Now their mobile is off,” he said. “I 
tried and tried. It’s so painful not to see your friends again.”

Members of the Assyrian diaspora have called for international intervention, 
and on Thursday, warplanes of the United States-led coalition struck targets in 
the area, suggesting that the threat to a minority enclave had galvanized a 
reaction, as a similar threat did in the Kurdish Syrian city of Kobani last 
year.

The assault on the Assyrian communities comes amid battles for a key crossroads 
in the area. But to residents, it also seems to be part of the latest effort by 
the Islamic State militants to eradicate or subordinate anyone and anything 
that does not comport with their vision of Islamic rule — whether a minority 
sect that has survived centuries of conquerors and massacres or, as the world 
was reminded on Thursday, the archaeological traces of pre-Islamic antiquity.

An Islamic State video showed the militants smashing statues with sledgehammers 
inside the Mosul Museum, in northern Iraq, that showcases recent archaeological 
finds from the ancient Assyrian empire. The relics include items from the 
palace of King Sennacherib, who in the Byron poem “came down like the wolf on 
the fold” to destroy his enemies.

“A tragedy and catastrophic loss for Iraqi history and archaeology beyond 
comprehension,” Amr al-Azm, a Syrian anthropologist and historian, called the 
destruction on his Facebook page.

“These are some of the most wonderful examples of Assyrian art, and they’re 
part of the great history of Iraq, and of Mesopotamia,” he said in an 
interview. “The whole world has lost this.”

Islamic State militants seized the museum — which had not yet opened to the 
public — when they took over Mosul in June and have repeatedly threatened to 
destroy its collection.

In the video, put out by the Islamic State’s media office for Nineveh Province 
— named for an ancient Assyrian city — a man explains, “The monuments that you 
can see behind me are but statues and idols of people from previous centuries, 
which they used to worship instead of God.”

A message flashing on the screen read: “Those statues and idols weren’t there 
at the time of the Prophet nor his companions. They have been excavated by 
Satanists.”

The men, some bearded and in traditional Islamic dress, others clean-shaven in 
jeans and T-shirts, were filmed toppling and destroying artifacts. One is using 
a power tool to deface a winged lion much like a pair on display at the 
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

The Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has presented itself as a 
modern-day equivalent of the conquering invaders of Sennacherib’s day, or as 
Islamic zealots smashing relics out of religious conviction.

Yet in the past, the militants have veered between ideology and pragmatism in 
their relationship to antiquity — destroying historic mosques, tombs and 
artifacts that they consider forms of idolatry, but also selling more portable 
objects to fill their coffers.

The latest eye-catching destruction could have a more strategic aim, said Mr. 
Azm, who closely follows the Syrian conflict and opposes both the Islamic State 
and the government.

“It’s all a provocation,” he said, aimed at accelerating a planned effort, led 
by Iraqi forces and backed by United States warplanes, to take back Mosul, 
Iraq’s second-largest city.

“They want a fight with the West because that’s how they gain credibility and 
recruits,” Mr. Azm said. “They want boots on the ground. They want another 
Falluja,” a reference to the 2004 battle in which United States Marines, in the 
largest ground engagement since Vietnam, took that Iraqi city from Qaeda-linked 
insurgents whose organization would eventually give birth to the Islamic State.

The Islamic State has been all-inclusive in its violence against the modern 
diversity of Iraq and Syria. It considers Shiite Muslims apostates, and has 
destroyed Shiite shrines and massacred more than 1,000 Shiite Iraqi soldiers. 
It has demanded that Christians living in its territories pay the jizya, a tax 
on religious minorities dating to early Islamic rule.

Islamic State militants have also slaughtered fellow Sunni Muslims who reject 
their rule, killing hundreds of members of the Shueitat tribe in eastern Syria 
in one clash alone. They have also massacred and enslaved members of the Yazidi 
sect in Iraq.

The latest to face its wrath, the Assyrian Christians, consider themselves the 
descendants of the ancient Assyrians and have survived often bloody Arab, 
Mongolian and Ottoman conquests, living in modern times as a small minority 
community periodically under threat. Thousands fled northern Iraq last year as 
Islamic State militants swept into Nineveh Province.

Early in February, according to Assyrian groups inside and outside Syria, came 
a declaration from the Islamic State that Christians in a string of villages 
along the Khabur River in Syrian Hasaka Province would have to take down their 
crosses and pay the jizya, traditionally paid in gold.

That prompted some to flee, and others to take a more active part in fighting 
ISIS alongside Kurdish militias, helping take back some territory.

Islamic State militants hit back, hard, driving more than 1,000 Assyrian 
Christians from their homes, some crossing the Khabur River, a tributary of the 
Euphrates, in small boats by night.

Local Assyrian leaders are negotiating with the Islamic State through 
mediators, said Mr. Dawoud, the deputy president of the Assyrian Democratic 
Organization. The Assyrian International News Agency, a website sharing 
community news, said that Arab tribal leaders were mediating talks to exchange 
the prisoners for captured Islamic State fighters and that the Islamic State 
had agreed to free Christian civilians but not fighters.

Mr. Nissan, the accountant, described how he and others crammed into a truck, 
paying exorbitant rates, to escape. Earlier, he said, Nusra Front fighters and 
other Syrian insurgents had looted the village without harming anyone, but he 
feared ISIS more because “they consider us infidels.”

“I made a vow, when I return I want to kiss the soil of my village and pray in 
the church,” he said, adding that he had composed a song for the residents of 
Nineveh Province when they were displaced a few months ago.

“I called it ‘Greetings from Khabur to Nineveh,’ ” he said. “Now we’re facing 
the same scenario

 

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