By The Whig
Geoffrey Johnston
The holiday season is in full swing, with many Canadians enjoying the
carefree pleasures of Christmas office parties and concerts. Others are
looking forward to attending Christmas Eve church services, or getting
together with family and friends over a turkey dinner.
But halfway around the world, Christmas will be anything but carefree for Iraq's persecuted Christian communities.
Forced to flee their homes to escape the onslaught of well-armed
jihadists, displaced Christians live in a perpetual "crisis mode,"
according to Carl Hétu, national director of the Canadian branch of the
Catholic Near East Welfare Association (CNEWA), a papal agency that
provides humanitarian assistance and pastoral care.
Last summer, the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, launched a
military offensive, capturing large swaths of Iraq, using mass murder,
public beheadings and the enslavement of women and girls to subjugate
captured territories. Large parts of northern Iraq were cleansed of
Christians, Yazidis and other religious minorities.
"In August, it was total chaos," Hétu said when contacted in New York
City, where he was attending meetings at CNEWA's international
headquarters. Terrified Christians had no time to pack or gather the
necessities of life, fleeing with only the clothes on their backs.
Last month, Hétu told the House of Commons foreign affairs committee
that approximately 120,000 Christians have fled to the semi-autonomous
Iraqi province of Kurdistan. The Kurds have welcomed the desperate
Christians with open arms, despite struggling to defend Kurdistan
against the jihadist threat.
The current living conditions for the displaced Christian population
in Kurdistan are uncomfortable but not life-threatening, said Mark
Huckstep, who visited northern Iraq in November. He's a representative
of the United Kingdom-based Barnabas Fund, a Christian non-governmental
organization (NGO) that provides humanitarian assistance to Christians
in need.
However, the internally displaced persons (IDPs) that Huckstep saw
were "crammed" into churches, tents and portable cabins. And in a
telephone interview from the NGO's London office, he said that the
Christian IDPs are "food-dependent on other people to survive."
Relief efforts
Relief efforts
Various Christian denominations in Iraq have come together to care
for the displaced Christian population. "Every section of the church is
taking care of different things," Hétu said of the co-ordinated relief
efforts. Huckstep agrees with that assessment. "One of the most
heartening things about what I saw in Iraq was that the churches are
working together," he said.
For the last three months, CNEWA has been raising funds for relief
efforts. The papal agency works with partners on the ground, including
the Dominican Sisters, who have tremendous experience in delivering
humanitarian aid and services.
"It's much better than it was in August," Hétu said of the current
humanitarian situation in northern Iraq. However, IDPs with chronic
medical conditions are in need of medicine and medical care. That's why
the Dominican Sisters have organized medical stations, partly staffed by
displaced Christian physicians, to care for the sick.
Similarly, the Barnabas Fund, working with partner organizations, is
supplying food, blankets, warm clothes and other necessities of life to
the IDPs in Kurdistan. And the NGO has purchased a portable army camp,
once used by British forces in Afghanistan, and it will shelter up to
800 displaced Christians.
Disappearing Christians
Disappearing Christians
Iraq is home to the ancient Assyrian ethnic group that dates back
thousands of years. And the vast majority of Iraqi Christians are of
Assyrian ethnicity.
"The Assyrian Christians are members of various denominations such as
the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean (Roman Catholic), Syriac
(Catholic and Orthodox), Presbyterian, and Evangelical,"
Assyrian-American activist and author Rosie Malek-Yonan explained, via
email. "It is important to note that some Assyrians choose to identify
themselves solely by their ethnic name and others by their Christian
denomination."
For instance, many ethnic Assyrians prefer to identify themselves by
their religious denomination, Chaldean Catholic. According to CNEWA,
approximately 66% of Assyrian Christians belong to the Chaldean Catholic
Church.
"Since the onset of the 2003 Iraq War, the Assyrian identity, coupled
with an indestructible Christian faith, made them targets of hatred and
destruction," Malek-Yonan said.
According to Hétu, there were approximately one million Christians in
Iraq in 2003. Since that time, Christian communities have been targeted
by various Islamic extremists and criminal gangs. Many Christians have
been killed, and many more have fled to neighbouring Lebanon, Jordan and
Syria. "We calculated that there are about 200,000 Christians left in
Iraq," he said.
Were it not for the generosity and tolerance of the Kurds, the
majority of whom are Muslims, Iraq's ancient communities might not have
survived the recent rise of the genocidal Islamic State.
"The Kurdish government respects other religions, and the Christians
are not being discriminated against," Huckstep said. "Very different
from what happens down in Mosul where ISIS is reigning."
Despite facing great financial difficulties, Iraqi Kurdistan is doing
what it can to assist Christian IDPs. For example, "they donated land
for the Christian refugees to live on," Huckstep said.
Danger at Christmas
Danger at Christmas
Even in relatively secure Baghdad, Christians are feeling uneasy.
"They already have a plan of escape" in the event that the Islamic State
overruns the city, Hétu said.
Despite being afraid, Hétu believes that Iraqi Christians will celebrate Christmas. And others share that opinion.
"Despite the ongoing attacks, the Assyrians of Iraq have openly
celebrated Christmas and attended mass and I believe they will continue
to do so because their Christian faith is stronger than the fear Islamic
groups attempt to instil in them," Malek-Yonan declared. "This tenacity
and defiance is the reason Assyrians have survived for thousands of
years without a country."
Similarly, Huckstep said that all the Christian denominations will
celebrate Christmas in northern Iraq, "but with very little resources. I
don't think there will be feasting, or any presents."
Writer and lecturer K.A. Ellis isn't surprised that Iraq's persecuted
Christian communities will be celebrating Christmas. She believes that
persecuted Iraqis identify with the trials and tribulations of Jesus
Christ, while embracing the Christian theme of redemption, which offers
hope in a time of despair. Ellis is currently enrolled in the DPhil
program at Oxford Graduate School, where she is adjunct faculty,
teaching professional ethics.
"It is difficult for those who have not suffered this way to
understand, even more confounding for those who cause the suffering as
it is a contrary reaction than the one they desire or expect," Ellis
said, via email, of the Christians' resilience.
"Historically, the Christian church has been assumed to grow under
persecution," she said. "However, too much persecution, as is the case
in Iraq, can lead to entire populations being erased from a region."