By Jamal al-Badrani
Bassam Hermiz has slashed prices to clear his stock of electrical appliances, close his shop and join many thousands of other Iraqi Christians abroad.
Once numbering some 750,000 in this mainly Muslim country of 30 million, Christians have been trapped in the crossfire of sectarian strife ignited after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's secular dictatorship in 2003.
Alarmed that their flock could face extinction, Iraqi Christian leaders appealed to the Vatican for help.
Pope Benedict, also worried about the shrinking Christian presence in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories, has called a synod of bishops for October 10-24 to discuss how churches can work together to preserve Christianity's oldest communities.
The special assembly will consider a Vatican document that decries "disregard for international law," human rights abuses and an exodus of Christians fleeing conflict in the Middle East.
The document, released in June, says Christian emigration is "particularly prevalent because of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the resulting instability in the Middle East."
Post-invasion bloodshed and chronic insecurity have spooked Iraqi Christians, many of whom feel they have no future here.
It also cites political instability in Lebanon and menacing conditions in Iraq, "where the war has unleashed evil forces."
"We decided to leave after we lost hope of living in peace in Iraq. It was not our choice," said Hermiz, the shopkeeper who is taking his family from the volatile northern city of Mosul to Holland, where his brother already lives.
He cast a dejected eye over the few remaining goods in his shop. His two-storey family home, replete with balconies and marble, also looks forlorn with most of the furniture sold.
Hundreds of thousands of Christians, described by Pope Benedict as Iraq's "most vulnerable religious minority" in an appeal for better security this year, have left since 2003.And more Christians are leaving, despite a plunge in overall violence in the past three years as bloodletting between majority Shi'ites and once dominant Sunni Muslims tapers off.Every now and then Christians still come under attack, especially in the northern province of Nineveh, considered the last urban stronghold of al Qaeda Islamist militants.
CHRISTIAN EXODUS
Perhaps only half of a Christian community rooted here for centuries remains, although no official figures exist.
And more Christians are leaving, despite a plunge in overall violence in the past three years as bloodletting between majority Shi'ites and once dominant Sunni Muslims tapers off.
Every now and then Christians still come under attack, especially in the northern province of Nineveh, considered the last urban stronghold of al Qaeda Islamist militants.
He said 1,050 families in the mainly Christian town had fled abroad in 2008 alone.
(Writing by Aseel Kami, editing by Michael Christie and Alistair Lyon)