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Dec 22,
2006
Half of Iraq's Christians Have Fled, Says Prelate
Church Aiding 35,000 Refugees in Syria
BAGHDAD, Iraq, DEC. 21, 2006 (Zenit.org).-
The violence in Iraq has prompted half of the country's
Christians to emigrate, says an official of the Chaldean
patriarchate of Baghdad.
Auxiliary Bishop Andraos Abouna
explained to the international charity Aid to the Church in Need
(ACN) the work that ecclesial leaders are carrying out to
shelter the more than 35,000 Christians who have sought refuge
in Syria.
The Church is helping to provide shelter, food and medical
support for these and other refugees. Benedict XVI appealed for
aid for these refugees last Sunday.
ACN has offered emergency aid to Christians desperate to flee
the religious conflict and the dire poverty engulfing Iraq.
The charity is working closely with Bishop Antoine Audo of
Aleppo, Syria, who launched a humanitarian aid program for
refugees, especially in the capital, Damascus. The project
includes food parcels and funding for emergency hospital
operations.
Bishop Abouna said: "There is a big need to help the people and
we are doing whatever we can. We are very grateful to Aid to the
Church in Need for all its help."
The 63-year-old bishop underlined the increasing dangers for
Christians still in Iraq. He said the refugees in Syria had
reported how Christians and others had received death threats
and how women, including girls, were being forced to wear the
veil in keeping with Islamic law.
Up to a dozen churches, monasteries and other church buildings
in the Al Dora district of Baghdad have been forced to close,
Bishop Abouna said.
Islamists bent on ethnic cleansing have flushed Christians out
of Al Dora, formerly known as "the Vatican of Iraq," he
reported.
"Of course the people are frightened," the prelate added. "But
there is something stronger than the fear -- it is their faith."
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