By Baghdadhope
On January 2007 Babel College, the only faculty of
Christian Theology in Iraq and the major Chaldean
seminary of Saint Peter were transferred for
security reasons from Dora, a district south of
Baghdad, to Ankawa, in the northern region
controlled by the Kurdish Regional Government.
During the night between 25 and March 26 the
premises of the College and of the Seminary became a
combat outpost
of the U.S. army. In the months following both
Mgr.
Jacques Isaac, Rector of Babel College, and
Mgr.
Shleimun Warduni, Patriarch vicar of
Baghdad, denounced the employment of structures by
the United States. In May 2007 the issue even led to
an official note by the Chaldean Patriarchate
stating that the occupation of the premises had
occurred without notice or consent and that a
request had been
forwarded to US army to return to the Church what
was described as "a place of prayer and Peace
that must not be used for military purposes."
The question seemed dead. The American army remained
deaf to the calls of the Chaldean hierarchy so that
still on last November Mgr. Isaac talked about the
old headquarters of the College in Baghdad as
"inaccessible".
Since last March five units of the Multinational
Division based in Baghdad have occupied the Babel
College and the Chaldean seminary, and yesterday an
article
about the topic appeared on the web. In it it is
stated that:
"In 2006 the Coalition Forces have
been allowed from the Chaldean bishop in charge of
the property to use the College as a base .. That
year the seminar had been transferred out of the
country .. "
Three mistakes in one sentence:
1. The Seminar was not transferred in 2006 but in
early 2007
2. The Seminar was not transferred "outside the
country" but in the northern region of Iraq now and
then controlled by the Kurdish Regional Government.
3. No bishop has ever granted such permission.
Contacted by
Baghdadhope, infact, both
Mgr.Isaac and
Mgr.Warduni have categorically denied
having ever granted any type of permit to U.S.
forces to occupy the structures that, even if empty
on March 2007, were and remain the property of the
Patriarchate of Babylon of Chaldeans.