The future of the Iraqi
Christians in the midst of the Islamic terror
By Zaman Dawood
As a
Christian and Iraqi American, I am horrified,
heartbroken and frustrated at the cold-heartedness,
especially by Christians regarding the plight of the
Iraqi Christians. How many Iraqi Christians must die
and abandon their ancestral land and have their churches
bombed by the hands of Iraqi Muslims for the world to
interfere and stop this religious cleansing?
If the
Iraqi Christians are facing these atrocities right now
while the mighty U.S. army and the coalition forces are
in Iraq, one could not imagine (frankly I and thousands
of Iraqi Christians could imagine) what would happen to
the Iraqi Christians when the troops pull out of Iraq.
The
outcome will be total Sunnis and Shiites collaboration
to force Iraqi Christians out of their territories. It
could also be translated as extermination of a people
from their ancestral land.
“Already half of Baghdad ’s Christian communities have
fled the capital; Basra is almost emptied of an ancient
vibrant Christian presence; already, eight priests have
been kidnapped…nowhere is safe for Christians to be in
Iraq,” writes Bishop Sarhad Jammo, the Chaldean Catholic
Bishop of San Diego on the Diocese webpage.
According to AsiaNews.it, a Rome based agency, Iraqi
Christians are facing persecution from the Islamic
Shiites and Sunnis extremists who are forcing Christian
women to wear the veil and some extremists go further to
impose the “jisya” (religious taxation) on Christians.
These are some of the cruel and callous regulations the
7th century Islamic Sharia law imposes on people who
live under Islam.
On June
3, a Chaldean Catholic priest and three subdeacons were
gunned down by Muslim terrorists after they left the
church of the Holy Spirit in Mosel on Sunday, according
to a report by the Catholic News Service (CNS). They
were killed because they were Christians and that is
enough evidence for the Islamic terrorists to kill any
Christian in Iraq.
The
Iraqi Christians consider themselves to be the offspring
and the heirs of the two great ancient civilizations,
the Babylonian and the Assyrian. History testifies to
the contributions these people brought to humanity. The
Iraqi Christians were among the first people to adhere
to the message of the gospel and pioneer missionaries to
the outside world according to the Catholic tradition.
Throughout their existence the Iraqi Christians have
contributed to the greatness of Iraq in every aspect.
They translated Greek writings into Syriac and Arabic
and they were advisers to Muslim rulers. Today these
courageous people are fighting for their existence and
equality in the so-called “new-free Iraq ”, not by
weapons and terror, rather, by peace, love, and infinite
contribution to their country.
It is
sad to say that today many Iraqi Christians feel
nostalgic to the days of the dictator Saddam; at least
they were living under a secular ruler. Now, Iraqi
Christians have to live under the inhuman 7th century
Islamic Sharia law.
The
U.S. government supported the new Iraqi constitution
that clearly infringes the rights of non-Muslims. The
second article of the new Iraqi constitution says:
“Islam is the official religion of the State and it is a
fundamental source of legislation.” This unmistakably
demotes Iraqi Christians to the second citizen status
and puts them under the mercy of the inhuman Sharia law.
"The
whole reason we're in Iraq is to try to build a country
in which all the people of Iraq can lead a peaceful
life," the U.S. ambassador to the Vatican, Francis
Rooney said to the Catholic News Service. But the
Vatican disagrees.
Vatican
officials maintain that since the U.S. involvement in
Iraq in 2003, the Iraqi Christians have “faced
increasing violence and discrimination,” according to
the Catholic News Service. Any reasonable human would
agree, and Iraqi Christians would say the same thing the
Vatican says.
The
U.S. government did make a difference in Iraq when they
removed Saddam from power, but that success was
transient and perhaps, they did not realize they have
replaced Saddam with a bigger tyrant; Islamic
fundamentalism. After all I think the U.S. "did not
build a country in which all the people of Iraq can lead
a peaceful life," as the U.S. ambassador Rooney plainly
aforementioned. Instead, Iraq is a country where
criminals, terrorists, and religious discrimination roam
freely.
What
now? Since we cannot go back to fix what had happened,
we need to move forward (do not tell Muslim
fundamentalists this, they love going backward) to help
the Iraqi Christians by bringing their cause to the
world attention. It is time for the apathetic Christians
to wake up from their slumber and take action and to
come to the aid of their brothers and sisters in Iraq.
It is time to let the Iraqi Christians know they are not
alone and their lives are invaluable. "At this point,
impressions and attitudes of good-will cannot suffice,"
Bishop Sarhad alarms us of the calamity of the situation
in Iraq . It time to activate our faith and put it to
work and action as the Bible says "faith without work is
dead” (James 2).
I
suggest we should let the policy makers in Washington
D.C. know how outrageous we are about the devastating
situation the Iraqi Christians face in Iraq . We need to
send letters of concern to the United Nations, to ask
them to interfere to stop this religious cleansing. We
have to ask the Vatican to do more for the Iraqi
Christians, to interfere on their behalf and condemn
fundamental Islamic teachings. Finally, let us pray and
ask God to give the Iraqi Christians patience, courage
and to strengthen their immovable faith. Let us also
pray for their murderers, hoping that they will stop
their ideology of hatred and superiority.
Throughout history, humans have demonstrated
their goodness, love and tolerance and stood against
evil everywhere. I believe we will do the same for the
Iraqi Christians and we won’t let religious hatred
overcome us. The more we speak against evil and the more
spiritually united we are, the faster we will react to
find a solution for the plight of the Iraqi Christians.
If not, hundreds of people will die and thousands others
will lose their ancestral lands and become refugees for
the world to deal with.
By
Zaman Dawood
June
11, 2007 Santee Ca
Iraqi
Christian
SDSU
student