By Aid to the Church in Need UK, October 4, 2011
by John Pontifex
Christians in one corner of Iraq have trebled in number over the past 15 years according to a leading bishop who is grappling with an influx of people escaping persecution and oppression.
The Christian population in Ankawa, a suburb of the Kurdish capital Erbil, has increased from just over 8,500 in the mid-1990s to more than 25,500 today.
Of those, up to 1,500 have arrived within the last year alone.
Many of them fled after the 31st October 2010 siege of the Syrian Catholic Cathedral in Baghdad, where 58 people were killed and more than 70 were injured in an attack during Sunday evening Mass.
Christians arriving in Ankawa have fled not only from the Iraqi capital but from all across the country – Mosul in the north, Kirkuk in the north-east, and even Basra, hundreds of miles away in the extreme south.
Giving this assessment of the displacement of Christians in Iraq, Archbishop Bashar Warda of Erbil told Aid to the Church in Need about the huge challenge of helping people arriving in Ankawa.
He added: “Many Christians arrive in Ankawa very poor. They need jobs, they need decent healthcare and they need good homes."
The archbishop said many were attracted by the relative safety of the Kurdish north and had come to Ankawa because of its high proportion of Christians.
Underlining the need to support Christians, Archbishop Warda said that this week alone a Catholic primary school had opened its doors for the first time.
Back in January, Archbishop Warda got local government support for a plan to secure two plots of land to build a 100-bed hospital and a university.
But the archbishop said there was still a huge amount of work ahead.
“The people demand a great deal from the Church. We are doing our best to help them.”
“They are our beloved people and it is our mission to help them but sometimes we feel the pressure is very great.”
Archbishop Warda said that many Christians arriving in Ankawa think of it as a stop-off en route to eventual emigration to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.
In the last decade, Christians in Iraq have plummeted from 800,000 to perhaps as few as 150,000 – many of them forced out by a series of killings, kidnappings, verbal and physical violence, and attacks on Christians businesses and homes – many of them acts of religious intolerance.
The archbishop stressed that the Church wanted to encourage Christians to stay in Iraq.
He said: “It is the wish of everyone that people will stay in our country. All our efforts and strategies are aimed at reducing the phenomenon of emigration.”
Describing the people as “very strong in their faith”, Archbishop Warda stressed the pastoral demands of coping with too few churches and a shortage of priests and catechists.
He said: “At present we only have three churches in the Ankawa area. Sometimes, the churches are so full, people are forced to stand outside.”
Now Archbishop Warda has plans for a new church in Ankawa.
He praised Aid to the Church in Need for prioritising pastoral help for Christians arriving in Ankawa.
The charity has given help including Mass stipends for priests, Christian education materials such as books and leaflets and support for church building projects.
When the Baghdad district of Dora fell victim to killings and kidnapping of Christians (2004-7), Aid to the Church in Need helped evacuate seminarians studying there to Ankawa where for a time they lived in metal shelters.
The charity has also provided scholarships for priests, and food hampers for Christian families in Kurdish northern Iraq provided by Sisters who travel around villages in a van.
Archbishop Warda, who was a special guest at the UK and Ireland launches of Aid to the Church in Need’s 2011 publication ‘Persecuted and Forgotten? on oppressed Christians, praised the charity, saying: “Thank God there are diligent people who listen and care for our people. The benefactors remind us that we are not forgotten. They deserve a big thank you for their wonderful work – thinking, praying and acting in support of us, all done in a caring manner.”
by John Pontifex
Christians in one corner of Iraq have trebled in number over the past 15 years according to a leading bishop who is grappling with an influx of people escaping persecution and oppression.
The Christian population in Ankawa, a suburb of the Kurdish capital Erbil, has increased from just over 8,500 in the mid-1990s to more than 25,500 today.
Of those, up to 1,500 have arrived within the last year alone.
Many of them fled after the 31st October 2010 siege of the Syrian Catholic Cathedral in Baghdad, where 58 people were killed and more than 70 were injured in an attack during Sunday evening Mass.
Christians arriving in Ankawa have fled not only from the Iraqi capital but from all across the country – Mosul in the north, Kirkuk in the north-east, and even Basra, hundreds of miles away in the extreme south.
Giving this assessment of the displacement of Christians in Iraq, Archbishop Bashar Warda of Erbil told Aid to the Church in Need about the huge challenge of helping people arriving in Ankawa.
He added: “Many Christians arrive in Ankawa very poor. They need jobs, they need decent healthcare and they need good homes."
The archbishop said many were attracted by the relative safety of the Kurdish north and had come to Ankawa because of its high proportion of Christians.
Underlining the need to support Christians, Archbishop Warda said that this week alone a Catholic primary school had opened its doors for the first time.
Back in January, Archbishop Warda got local government support for a plan to secure two plots of land to build a 100-bed hospital and a university.
But the archbishop said there was still a huge amount of work ahead.
“The people demand a great deal from the Church. We are doing our best to help them.”
“They are our beloved people and it is our mission to help them but sometimes we feel the pressure is very great.”
Archbishop Warda said that many Christians arriving in Ankawa think of it as a stop-off en route to eventual emigration to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.
In the last decade, Christians in Iraq have plummeted from 800,000 to perhaps as few as 150,000 – many of them forced out by a series of killings, kidnappings, verbal and physical violence, and attacks on Christians businesses and homes – many of them acts of religious intolerance.
The archbishop stressed that the Church wanted to encourage Christians to stay in Iraq.
He said: “It is the wish of everyone that people will stay in our country. All our efforts and strategies are aimed at reducing the phenomenon of emigration.”
Describing the people as “very strong in their faith”, Archbishop Warda stressed the pastoral demands of coping with too few churches and a shortage of priests and catechists.
He said: “At present we only have three churches in the Ankawa area. Sometimes, the churches are so full, people are forced to stand outside.”
Now Archbishop Warda has plans for a new church in Ankawa.
He praised Aid to the Church in Need for prioritising pastoral help for Christians arriving in Ankawa.
The charity has given help including Mass stipends for priests, Christian education materials such as books and leaflets and support for church building projects.
When the Baghdad district of Dora fell victim to killings and kidnapping of Christians (2004-7), Aid to the Church in Need helped evacuate seminarians studying there to Ankawa where for a time they lived in metal shelters.
The charity has also provided scholarships for priests, and food hampers for Christian families in Kurdish northern Iraq provided by Sisters who travel around villages in a van.
Archbishop Warda, who was a special guest at the UK and Ireland launches of Aid to the Church in Need’s 2011 publication ‘Persecuted and Forgotten? on oppressed Christians, praised the charity, saying: “Thank God there are diligent people who listen and care for our people. The benefactors remind us that we are not forgotten. They deserve a big thank you for their wonderful work – thinking, praying and acting in support of us, all done in a caring manner.”