Baghdad (AsiaNews) – “In Iraq
Christians are dying, the Church is disappearing under
continued persecution, threats and violence carried out
by extremists who are leaving us no choice: conversion
or exile”. This is the urgent appeal sent to AsiaNews
by msgr. Louis Sako, Chaldean Archbishop of Kirkuk,
while reports arrive of car bombs and the death of
Christians in the Kurdish area, until now untouched by
the confessional violence.
The bishop who is president of Iraq’s
Council of Catholic Churches’ Committee for inter
religious dialogue , signed a declaration regarding the
“tragic situation of Baghdadis Christians”, denouncing
militant groups which under the threat of armed violence
ask Christians to convert immediately to Islam or to
consign their property and leave the country. The same
thing happens in Mosul, but with a different “choice”:
pay a monetary tribute to the Jihad if they want to
avoid their death.
The Iraqi Christian community, at
home and abroad, has long urged the local Church to take
a stand against the forced evacuation, rape, kidnap,
paying a ransom, blackmail, scarring and killing they
suffer and the complete lack of protection from the
local government and coalition forces. And in the last
two days, as the controversial plan to install a secure
zone for Christians in the Niniveh plain begins to take
shape, the terrorists have begun targeting the zoned
area. “It’s almost a political gesture – observes msgr
Sako – as if to say: “we can hit anywhere, nowhere is
safe”.
The confessional based attacks are no
longer just restricted to Baghdad and Mosul, but now
target small centres in the North. Yesterday a group of
fundamentalists executed 23 yazidi on the road linking
Mosul to Ba’ashika, a majority Christian village: they
stopped a bus and after having made Arabs and Christians
alight they killed the faithful of this ancient
religion, based on the strong Good-Evil dualism. Today
a car bomb close to a school in Tell-el-skop, a
Christian village, and 9 people died including 2
children; 60 were wounded. A convent of Dominican nuns,
which is nearby, was badly damaged in the blast.
“We can no longer be silent
–explains Msgr. Sako by phone to AsiaNews – we have to
remind the world of the importance of the Christian
presence in Iraq, for the good of Iraq”. “Christians are
one of the oldest constituents of the Iraqi people –he
explains in his statement– Since the beginning they have
incorporated with its other constituents like the Arabs,
Kurds, Turkmen, Sabea, and Yazedis; playing a pioneering
role in the building of the civilization of Iraq. In
addition they defended their adherence to the soil and
integrity of Iraq courageously and together with their
Moslems brothers. Everybody witnesses their loyalty,
honesty, wisdom and their desire to live in peace and
brotherhood with others. Christians have long lived with
Moslems whether Sunnis or Shias in mutual respect and
shared the good and the bad days together with them.
They have been part of the Islamic culture for the last
14 centuries, by large without problems. Today they want
to continue this existence in the spirit of love and
under the charter of human rights”.
However in the current situation
Christians are targeted as chief conspirators to be
exploited or eliminated. They cannot openly profess
their faith, the veil is imposed on the women and the
crosses are taken down from their churches, threats of
kidnappings and extortion weigh heavily over all of
them. Msgr Sako lists the violence to which they are
submitted on a daily basis: “now a days Christians are
suffering in certain areas and cities in Iraq from
forced evacuation, rape, kidnap, blackmail, scarring and
killing. This unfamiliar behaviour contradicts the Iraqi
humanitarian and Islamic morals. Let everybody realize
that emptying Iraq of Christians will be disastrous not
only for the Christians but for all Iraqis!... Forcing
Christians to leave their homes indicates deterioration
in the concept of conviviality and furthermore it
destroys the cultural, civil and religious mosaic of
which Iraq is considered to be the very cradle”.
The appeal signed by Msgr. Sako urges
all of the political, religious and cultural communities
of Iraq to remain united, because “there is no salvation
without our unity. Let the outsider whoever is he,
leave and stay away so that the danger of death and the
risk of division disappear and vanish and thus
permitting life to return to what it once was; a river
which flowed in harmony, a river of brotherhood and
close unity”.