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15 dicembre 2013

Iraqi Catholic leader asks West: 'If they kill us all, will you do something then?'

By National Catholic Reporter
by John L. Allen Jr.

Warning that a Middle East empty of Christians would be “just like the Taliban,” Iraq’s most senior Catholic leader pointedly called on the West to show greater concern for suffering Christians in the region.
“We feel forgotten and isolated,” said Patriarch Louis Raphael I Sako, head of Iraq’s Chaldean Catholic Church.
 “We sometimes wonder, if they kill us all, what would be the reaction of Christians in the West? Would they do something then?”
Sako made clear he’s not asking for a mobilization “to protect Christians,” but rather Western efforts to support “harmonious societies for all human beings”, based on “a civil state in which the only criterion is citizenship grounded in full equality under the law.”
Sako said that at the moment, the influence of Western nations in the region seems to be based primarily on self-interest.
“All they do is create problems, sell weapons and take oil,” he said, adding bluntly, “This is a sin.”
In terms of the Catholic response, Sako proposed that the church produce a new document directed specifically at Muslims to lay out the case for moving beyond tolerance to “religious freedom and full citizenship.”
Sako spoke Dec. 14 as part of a conference in Rome organized by the Religious Freedom Project at Georgetown University, part of the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs.
Sako, 65, became the Chaldean patriarch in January, succeeding Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly. The Chaldean church is one of 22 Eastern rite churches in communion with Rome, and represents the largest Catholic body in Iraq.
Sako pulled few punches in describing what he termed a “mortal exodus” of Christians from the Middle East today, which he said is fueled by sectarian conflict, rising Islamic extremism, and criminal gangs that often see Christians as convenient targets.
According to Sako, more than 1,000 Christians have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, while scores of others have been “kidnapped and tortured.” He said that 62 churches and monasteries have been attacked.
These realities, Sako said, are driving Christians away in growing numbers. He cited a recent estimate from the U.N. High Commission for Refugees that 850,000 Christians have left Iraq since 2003, by some estimates representing almost two-thirds of the country’s Christian population.
Sako warned that the same trends are currently gathering force in both Syria and Egypt, citing estimates that in the last 18 months some 100 churches in Egypt have been attacked, while 67 churches have been assaulted in Syria and more than 45,000 Christians have left the country.
In effect, Sako warned, what’s happening puts the survival of Syriac Christianity at risk, which he described as one of the great early traditions in the church alongside Hebrew, Latin and Greek.
Amid the violence, Sako said one tendency is to retreat into sectarian ghettoes, but that poses its own risks. He opposed calls to carve out an independent zone for Christians in northeastern Iraq, where the Assyrian population is concentrated.
“The Nineveh plain is largely surrounded by Arabs, and Christians would serve as a useful and undefended buffer zone between Arabs and Kurds,” Sako said.
Instead, he called for “working at the constitutional level to guarantee religious freedom and equal rights for believers of all faiths throughout the land.”
In part, Sako argued that building such societies is in the interests of the Muslim majority– because, he bluntly insisted, they need Christians.
“Christians are important to the Middle East because of their culture, high levels of education, skills, qualifications, openness, their spirit of cooperation and their institutions such as schools, hospitals, orphanages, homes for the aged and the poor, as well as their economic enterprises and small businesses,” he said.
Sako called the Christian presence in the Middle East “a guarantee of a better future for Muslims.”
In that context, Sako proposed that the Catholic church produce a new document “addressed only to Muslims,” laying out the case for religious freedom and a secular state in “language compatible with Islam.”
The idea, as Sako described it, would be to take the vision presented in Dignitatis Humanae, the document of the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) on religious freedom, and phrase it in Islamic concepts and categories.
“Such an undertaking can help the church look for a new and more comprehensible theological language in Arabic to help Christians and Muslims to understand our faith, and the importance of religious freedom to every person and every society,” he said.
Sako did not say whether he wants the document to come from the Vatican or from the local churches of the Middle East, although he appeared to suggest it should come from the highest level of authority possible.
“Dialogue is possible among Christians and Muslims, even with the fundamentalists,” he said. One key, he said, is for Christians to be “strong” in their views.
“Why are we afraid to claim our rights?” he said. “We can do things with the Islamists when we are very strong. I’m an Iraqi just like they are, so why am I a second-class citizen?”
Sako also called on Muslims to embrace “a new reading of their religion,” arguing that moderates ought to be more outspoken in challenging “sectarian and provocative” stances within Islam. As a case in point, Sako cited an Iraqi imam who recently told his followers that they shouldn’t even shake hands with non-Muslims.
Sako called such a stance “simply unacceptable”.
On the sensitive question of Muslim converts to Christianity, Sako appeared to counsel prudence.
“Personally, as a priest or a bishop, I have no right to refuse anyone who wants to be a Christian,” he said, “but the situation is dangerous.”
“We have to find ways to help these people live their faith in a situation in which there’s no freedom,” Sako said.
In turn, he said, the situation illustrates the need for reform at the “constitutional level” to protect the rights not only of converts but also of people living in religiously mixed marriages.