http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/31/no-cheer-for-iraqi-christians/

December 31, 2009, 6:38 pm 
No Cheer for Iraqi Christians
By SAM DAGHER
Eros Hoagland for The New York Times Iraqi Christians attend the last Sunday 
Mass before Christmas at St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church in Baghdad.

QARAQOSH, Iraq - It was another bad year for Iraq's dwindling Christian 
minority.

Although they were granted more representation in Parliament under the new 
election law that was finally approved in early December, they continued to be 
besieged on many fronts, especially in northern Iraq. In December, churches 
were bombed twice in Mosul, and Christians were still singled out for killings 
or kidnappings. And as the year drew to a close, new threats loomed, 
paradoxically this time from another minority group.

The depth of the crisis facing Iraq's Christians - and what little anyone, 
including the American military, can do - was on display here on Christmas Eve.


At the offices of a local television station, about 25 somber-looking women 
dressed in black sat patiently on plastic lawn chairs. In a room upstairs, 
about 50 rowdy and restless children tried to do the same. They were all 
members of Iraqi Christian families who escaped the violence and mayhem in 
Mosul over the past five years to the relative safety of this predominantly 
Christian town. They had gathered to wait for some holiday cheer from American 
soldiers bearing Christmas gifts.

Their stories were a catalog of grief and loss.

One woman was standing next to her husband when gunmen stormed into a dental 
clinic and riddled him with bullets in 2004. Another lost two of her brothers 
within several months in 2005. An elderly woman lost her son in February 2008 
when gunmen shot him and two others accompanying Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho, 
who was kidnapped and later found dead. Another woman lost both her husband and 
son within one week in September 2008 during a wave of attacks against 
Christians in Mosul that forced thousands to flee.

Even as the families waited, the bad news trickled in from Mosul: a cellphone 
text message from a relative announced the death of Basel Isho Yohanna, 23, 
shot at point-blank range in front of his home on Christmas Eve. It happened 
one day after a bomb placed in a handcart blew up in front of the Church of St. 
Thomas in old Mosul, a Syrian Catholic church, killing two people and damaging 
the ancient church. The old quarter is a warren of narrow alleyways, and I 
remember passing by this very same church last Christmas to reach another 
ancient church next to the last convent in Mosul, where I shared breakfast with 
its three remaining nuns.

That year, a wave of attacks against Christians in Mosul left 40 dead and 
displaced more than 12,000, according to the United Nations. Although many have 
since returned to Mosul, the attacks against Christians and their churches have 
continued.

At least three other Iraqi Christians besides Mr. Yohanna were murdered in 
Mosul this month. In one attack, the assailants asked their victim whether he 
was Christian before shooting him in his driveway, according to witnesses.

In Mosul, a Christian man was shot and seriously wounded on Wednesday, and a 
Christian female university student was kidnapped on Monday according to 
Ankawa.com, a Web site dedicated to news about Iraqi Christians.

A recent report by Human Rights Watch said that Christians and other minorities 
in Nineveh Province, which includes Mosul, faced "a full-blown human rights 
catastrophe."

Christians believe different things about who is behind the attacks. Some say 
it is Sunni Muslims. Others are convinced that Kurdish political parties are 
behind the violence in order to force them to leave Mosul altogether and settle 
in the Nineveh Plain, a territory claimed by the neighboring semiautonomous 
Kurdistan region and now under its de facto control.

Kurdish authorities have vehemently denied the allegations, arguing that they 
have provided safe havens for Christians both inside the Kurdistan region and 
in disputed territories like the Nineveh Plain. In fact, places like Qaraqosh 
are now virtual fortresses after a series of devastating bombings over the 
summer that singled out minorities in the area. A trench circles the town. 
Access is possible only through a handful of military checkpoints.

On Christmas Eve, the displaced Christian families in Qaraqosh wanted to forget 
about all of this as they waited for the American soldiers and gifts. The 
soldiers arrived late, but, protected by a helicopter, a convoy arrived, 
including one truck carrying three large boxes filled with soccer balls, winter 
coats, backpacks, flip-flops and bright yellow Crocs. This was the second stop 
after a gift handout to orphans inside the office of Mosul's mayor. 

As two soldiers started to unload the truck, the commander of troops in Mosul, 
Col. Charles E. Sexton, went in along with other soldiers including one dressed 
as Santa. News of the visiting American Santa spread through Qaraqosh. Parents 
and their children poured into the television station, clamoring for gifts.

Cpl. Jessica Blaine, from the Army's 346th Psychological Operations Company, 
based in Columbus, Ohio, started handing out Beanie Babies and backpacks 
emblazoned with "We all love Iraq."

On Christmas Day, long after the Americans were gone, residents of Qaraqosh 
woke to more bad news. This time it was not from Mosul but from neighboring 
Bartella, another predominantly Christian town that is also home to Shabaks, 
members of a minority ethnic group. Most Shabaks, though, are Shiite Muslims, 
who make up the majority in Iraq now.

Five people were wounded in clashes between a group of Shabaks and Christian 
guards outside a church over the removal of banners commemorating Ashura, a 
solemn Shiite religious occasion, and their replacement with Christmas ones.

In the southern predominantly Shiite city of Basra, Christians opted not to 
celebrate Christmas altogether in deference to Ashura. 

The situation got so serious in Bartella that a curfew was imposed for several 
hours, and both Nineveh's governor and the commander of Iraqi forces stationed 
in Mosul rushed over to calm tensions. Even Kurdish forces known as pesh merga 
went on high alert, fanning out on the highway near Bartella along with pickup 
trucks mounted with machine guns.

It is worth noting that the Kurds are boycotting the Arab-led provincial 
government in Mosul and that they have forcefully prevented the governor from 
entering areas in Nineveh under their control. Christians, Shabaks and other 
minorities have long complained about being victims of the Arab-Kurd struggle 
and of extremist groups like Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia who exploit this rift by 
attacking minorities. But the incident in Bartella pitted two minority groups 
against each other.

Imad Habib, a resident of Qaraqosh, said that nothing made sense anymore and 
that it was time to pack up and leave Iraq for good to join his two brothers 
and their families in the United States.

Related Posts
>From At War
  a.. A Christian Iraqi's First American Christmas
  b.. St. Elijah's Monastery
  c.. The Sounds of Christmas Mass in Baghdad
  d.. Embedding in Mosul: A Partial View of War
  e.. Iraqi Christians Face New Violence

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