By New York Times
Rana F. Sweis
They were among the final holdouts. Even as many of their neighbors fled the violence that engulfed Iraq after the American invasion, the three men stayed put, refusing to give up on their country or their centuries-old Christian community.
Rana F. Sweis
They were among the final holdouts. Even as many of their neighbors fled the violence that engulfed Iraq after the American invasion, the three men stayed put, refusing to give up on their country or their centuries-old Christian community.
Maythim
Najib, 37, stayed despite being kidnapped and stabbed 12 times in what
he believed was a random attack. Radwan Shamra, 35, continued to hope he
could survive the sectarian war between his Sunni and Shiite countrymen
even after losing two friends shot by an unknown gunman who left their
bodies sprawled in a Mosul street. And a 74-year-old too frightened to
give his name said he remained despite the trauma of spending three
anguished days in 2007 waiting to learn if his kidnapped 17-year-old son
was dead or alive.
Now all three men from Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, and its environs have fled with their families to Jordan, forced out by Islamic State fighters who left them little choice. After capturing the city in June, the Sunni militant group gave Christians a day to make up their minds: convert, pay a tax, or be killed.
Now all three men from Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, and its environs have fled with their families to Jordan, forced out by Islamic State fighters who left them little choice. After capturing the city in June, the Sunni militant group gave Christians a day to make up their minds: convert, pay a tax, or be killed.
It was “the last breath,” said Mr. Shamra, one of 4,000 Iraqi Christians from Mosul who have come to Jordan
in the past three months and one of more than 50 people sheltering in
St. Ephraim Syrian Orthodox Church in Amman. “We waited as long as
possible until we knew we would die if we remained.”
Their
flight is part of a larger exodus of Christians leaving those Arab
lands where religious intolerance is on the rise, a trend that has
caused concern among Christians outside the region — including the pope.
It has also captured the attention of King Abdullah II
of Jordan, a close American ally who has made the need for the
continued presence of multiple religions in the Middle East a major
talking point in recent years.
So when fighters from the Islamic State, also known as ISIS
or ISIL, stormed into Mosul, the Jordanian government threw open the
country to Iraq’s Christians despite rising tensions in Jordan over
waves of Syrian refugees whose presence has increasingly burdened
ill-prepared communities.
Hasan
Abu Hanieh, a Jordanian political analyst, said the government’s
decision was both humanitarian and strategic, at a time when Jordan is
edgy over Islamist militants on its borders and anxious to keep its
bonds with the West strong.
“The government can show the world that Jordan has a policy that seeks to protect minorities, unlike its neighbors,” he said.
The
Iraqi Christians also benefited from the fact that Jordan’s small
Christian community maintains good relations with its majority Sunni
neighbors and mobilized quickly to help the refugees, many of whom were
crammed into camps in the Kurdistan region of Iraq.
Also crucial was the intervention of Caritas, an international Christian charity that has spent years in Jordan serving displaced Palestinians,
poor Jordanians and others. The group worked to let Iraq’s Christians
know that Jordan was opening up to them. Payment for visas was waived,
and Caritas and Jordan’s churches said they would provide for refugees’
basic needs.
Refugees did, however, have to pay for their own flights on Royal Jordanian Airlines from Erbil, in Iraq, to Amman.
Refugees did, however, have to pay for their own flights on Royal Jordanian Airlines from Erbil, in Iraq, to Amman.
About
500 of the new and often traumatized Christian refugees now live in
community halls in seven churches in Amman and nearby Zarqa, trying hard
to make do in places with little privacy or even enough basic
necessities like toilets. Many of the other refugees are living several
families to an apartment or house, paying the rent with their own money
or with aid from Caritas.
Still,
they are relatively lucky, aid workers say. One of the lures to come
here was the promise of being able to more quickly obtain refugee status
that might allow them to leave the region.
At
the Mary, Mother of the Church in Amman, where dozens of the Christian
refugees reside, suitcases lay on top of each other to save space. Thin
mattresses with floral designs are spread across the floor and wet
garments hang from windows to dry. The children, still afraid of their
new surroundings, rarely wander off without their parents, even to play.
“I
ask them to tell me what they saw, how they feel now,” said Khalil
Jaar, a priest in the parish. “I try to give them hope by telling them
about the resilience of refugees in the past.”
Besides
providing shelter, the church feeds the refugees, doling out hearty
portions of rice and vegetables paid for by charities or from donations
from Jordanians.
Like the approximately 620,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan and more than 30,000 other Iraqi refugees,
the latest arrivals are not allowed to work — an attempt to ensure they
do not stay forever in a country that previously granted citizenship to
a large population of displaced Palestinians.
To while away the time, the men play backgammon, drink tea together or
help with chores at the church’s school. The women spend their time
mainly caring for their children and helping prepare meals.
Mostly,
they are haunted by the abrupt end to their lives in Iraq, and to a
Christian tradition that had survived in Mosul for more than 1,700
years.
Saif Jebrita, a photographer, said he knew it was time to leave when he went to open his shop days after ISIS
declared victory and found a notice from the militants demanding that
he abandon his profession. The group claims that images are against
Islam.
“It’s
the only thing I know how to do, and they wanted to destroy it,” he
said recently as his two young sons stood next to him, fidgeting with
broken toy dinosaurs.
At
St. Ephraim, the 74-year-old who was too anxious to give his name said
his greatest worry was the safety of his older son, who remains in
Erbil, in the Kurdistan region of Iraq. A younger son, the one who had
been kidnapped, is with him, having survived that earlier ordeal.
To
show what the family had been through, the elderly man carefully laid
out photos of his old home on one of the only flat surfaces he has, next
to the toothpaste and a small broken mirror. A neighbor sent the photos
after the family fled.
A
letter N for Nazrene, a term used for Christians in the Quran, is spray
painted twice on the stone wall surrounding the home, which also is now
marked Property of the Islamic State.
Mr.
Najib, the man who survived the stabbing, said his 8-year-old daughter
did not understand that there was nothing to go back to, and had been
crying a lot recently, asking to go home. He bemoaned the loss of
Mosul’s Christian community.
Under the Islamic State, “diversity is dead or at least dying,” he said.
Mr.
Jebrita, the photographer, shared his despair. “We are very much part
of the Arab culture, we are citizens of Iraq,” he said. “What do we go
back to? There is no home, and if this continues, there will be no
country.”