Chaldean Patriarch
on Iraqi Refugees in Lebanon
Millions of Iraqis have fled
their homeland to escape
violence, terrorism,
extortion and death, said
the patriarch of the
Chaldean Catholic Church at
a Mass in St. Raphael
Chaldean Cathedral in Beirut
Oct. 21.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (CNS)- Chaldean
Cardinal-designate Emmanuel-Karim Delly
of Baghdad, Iraq, thanked the people of
Lebanon for their hospitality and called
for more help for Iraqi refugees there.
Millions of Iraqis have fled their
homeland to escape violence, terrorism,
extortion and death, said the patriarch
of the Chaldean Catholic Church at a
Mass in St. Raphael Chaldean Cathedral
in Beirut Oct. 21.
He appealed to Lebanese authorities to
ease the burden weighing on the lives of
the tens of thousands of Iraqi refugees
in Lebanon, many of whom are Christian.
He expressed gratitude toward the
Lebanese who have welcomed Iraqis
seeking refuge "while they wait for the
storm to pass" in their homeland.
Cardinal-designate Delly noted that
Iraqi refugees face numerous
difficulties, particularly regarding
their employment, legal status and
ability to obtain work permits.
Although they receive emergency aid,
notably from Caritas Lebanon and the
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees,
they need more help for medical
treatment and education for their
children, he said. Caritas Lebanon is
the local agency of the Caritas
Internationalis confederation of
Catholic relief, development and social
services organizations.
He said the refugees live in "extremely
poor conditions."
"They are packed in small spaces for
which they pay high rents even though
their refugee status qualifies them for
better treatment, especially from the
police," Cardinal-designate Delly said.
Cardinal-designate Delly has stood out
as the voice of the suffering of all
Iraqis during the ongoing war in his
country. He had retired as an auxiliary
bishop of Baghdad when he was elected
patriarch in 2003, just months after the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Meanwhile, at the Mass Chaldean Bishop
Michel Kassarji of Beirut called
attention to the "intolerable treatment
of Chaldean Christians by extremist
groups in Iraq, forcing the Christians
to convert, or kidnapping them or
killing them, not to mention violence
against women, the elderly and children,
the killing of priests and destruction
of churches."
"Is this the Iraq that we know?" Bishop
Kassarji asked.
"Surely, what is happening in Iraq today
is inhumane and contrary to all
religious beliefs and traditions," he
said.
The bishop noted that "there are people
in Iraq that want to stay in their
homeland, who refuse that their lives be
at the mercy of others ... who plead for
the Iraqis to come back to their
senses."
- - -
By Doreen Abi Raad
10/23/2007
Catholic News Service