What Iraq's Christians Need
January 23, 07
http://www.christianitytoday.com
Two strategies to build up the church in the
war-weary nation.
A Christianity Today editorial
The war in
Iraq, soon to enter its fifth year, has become a
costly setback for Christianity in that troubled
land. Though Iraq has been associated with biblical
and Christian history for 5,000 years, the risk
remains high that the current short-term disaster
will become a long-term catastrophe.
At least two broad strategies
must be employed to prevent that. The first is
pursuit of religious freedom for Christians and
other religious minorities in Iraq. This is a
crucial missing link in peacemaking regionally and
internationally. Robust freedom to believe must not
be lost amid strategies for a military victory.
The consequences of ignoring this
priority are real. Last October 21, radical Muslim
insurgents burst into an Iraqi workplace in Baqouba,
northeast of Baghdad. There they confronted
14-year-old Ayad Tariq and asked for his identity
card. After noting his Christian affiliation and
questioning him, they declared him a "dirty
Christian sinner" and, according to media
reports, beheaded him on the spot.
Though tied in part to Pope
Benedict XVI's controversial comments about
Mohammed, this was no isolated incident. Since 2003,
church bombings, kidnappings of clergy, rape and
murder of Christians, and other violence has taken a
sickening toll. Women risk being attacked when they
do not wear the hijab head covering. In some urban
areas, 60 percent of churches have suspended worship
services.
"These churches are not just
laying low—they are being eradicated," said Nina
Shea, director of the Hudson Institute's Center for
Religious Freedom, in a recent congressional
testimony. "Violence against Christians and members
of the smallest minorities is conducted with
impunity." UN officials recently labeled the flight
of refugees from Iraq as a "steady, silent exodus."
Religious-freedom advocates
support several worthy initiatives to relieve the
suffering of everyday Iraqis. The Bush
administration and Iraqi leaders should:
• Stop discrimination in aid
grants by naming a special aid coordinator in Iraq
to insure that Christians and other minorities
receive a fair share of international assistance.
• Implement the creation of a
homeland for Christians in Iraq's Nineveh Plains to
be governed jointly by Christians and other minority
groups. (This is provided for under article 125 of
Iraq's new constitution.)
• Provide more comprehensive care
for the estimated 3 million Iraqi refugees and
internally displaced people. The United States
should follow through with its commitment to
resettle more refugees from Iraq. In 2006, only 202
were resettled, while a total of 20,000 had been
authorized.
• Remove religious affiliation
from identification cards. There could hardly be an
easier way to protect the lives of Christian
civilians, such as Ayad Tariq, than issuing new id
cards minus religious labels....
This means supporting Christian
ministries that help the Iraqi church sustain its
viability. Outside of Iraq, it means reaching out to
the millions of Iraqi Christians scattered
worldwide. There are tens of thousands in suburban
Detroit and San Diego alone, and smaller pockets
elsewhere. These sisters and brothers in Christ have
many needs we can address right now.
Someday, we pray, they will be
able to return to their homeland, where they will
once again bring Christ's healing presence to their
torn society.