By Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
Kellie Van Gilder
Kellie Van Gilder
This May, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association will hold
the World Summit in Defense of Persecuted Christians, where hundreds of
church leaders, victims of persecution and others will meet to talk and
advocate change regarding the recent, unprecedented persecution of
Christians throughout the world. Leading up to the Summit, BillyGraham.org
will be sharing stories from Christ followers who have been persecuted
for their decision to follow Jesus. Join us now for a look into the life
of Iraqi Christians:
The steel barrel of the gun pressed into Father Douglas Al Bazi’s head. His captors pulled the trigger.
Click.
Another empty chamber. Another psychological brush with death during a
harrowing nine days of torture for the Iraqi Chaldean Catholic priest.
That was 2006, and while Fr. Bazi talks openly now about the brutal
kidnapping, there was a time when he was reluctant.
Who was he to complain?
In a country where nursing mothers pray their newborns will grow up,
be happy and die normally—that is not be shot and killed—he has seen his
fellow Iraqi Christians endure extreme persecution. Parents too often
outlive their children, and according to a 2016 estimate, just 7 percent
of the population celebrated a 55th birthday.
As far as Fr. Bazi is concerned, his story is not more important than
the one of his people. Plus, he never forgets he chose this life, or
maybe it chose him. He dreamed of being a pilot as a boy, a dream that
fondly takes him back to his childhood even today, but he felt such a
strong call to the ministry that he started attending seminary much to
his parents’ dismay. The call to serve God drowned out even the warnings
his teachers issued. This life, they cautioned him, wouldn’t just be
challenging. It would likely be a suicide mission.
“At the end of the day, with all that suffer, who am I to complain to
God?” Fr. Bazi asked in his soft-spoken, resolute way. “What should I
tell Him? ‘I’m suffering’? He will say, ‘Yeah, I sent My Son to you and
He suffered by your sin.’ What should I say, ‘They’re going to kill me?’
He’s going to say, ‘Yeah, they killed My Son, too.’ So we don’t have
right to complain at all. We have the only thing to be grateful.”
Fr. Bazi also firmly believes Christians have a responsibility to
show everyone, even those who practice evil against them, the true light
of Jesus.
“We have to not just pray for them, but to give them advice,” he
said. “We have to show them what is the right way. … I just want to
invite them to be human. Go back to the humanity you have in your
heart.”
‘Shadow of Death’
Iraq’s population numbers some 38.6 million people, and 230,000 of
them call themselves Christians. In its 2016 report, global watchdog
Open Doors stated these Christians are on the verge of extinction thanks
largely to radical Islamic movements, non-Christian leaders and
authorities. Non-Christian families also self-police. Some aren’t
hesitant to persecute or even kill relatives who start to follow Jesus.
“When I was in Baghdad, the city I’m in love with forever, day by
day, you can feel that Baghdad became city of shadow of death,” Fr. Bazi
said. “I know you feel the devil is standing every corner. People
change, people leave.”
Fr. Bazi worked for a church in the Iraq capitol of Baghdad about a
decade ago. There, his church was a routine target of persecution. He
heard the sound of rockets exploding around the building during service.
He survived a bombing and later, a shooting. Both happened at his
church. He still remembers the feeling of flying through the air from
the blast and the hot feeling after an AK-47 round pierced his leg.
But while Fr. Bazi survived such attacks, he has had friends who did
not. The religious persecution is so widespread, priests are encouraged
to exchange wills so their final wishes can be carried out in the event
of their death.
“We [priests] are not crazy people,” Fr. Bazi said. “We like our
life. We are not going to kill ourselves. But actually what’s pushing us
to go ahead is that love, that call from God.”
‘This Is Christianity’
In 2013, Fr. Bazi moved north to Erbil. In 2014, Islamic State
militants overtook Mosul, a city 50 miles west. Residents in Mosul were
given three choices: Leave. Convert. Die.
Reports state half a million people fled, and Fr. Bazi said his
church in Erbil received 17,000 families who hastily deployed east to
safety. His church greeted the displaced individuals, seeing them as
Iraqi relatives rather than refugees, and set up centers to provide them
with more than a temporary shelter. This became home for awhile.
“Being forced out, they lost everything, so when they arrived, they
were completely destroyed,” said Fr. Bazi, who likened the situation to
escaping a house fire. “They were completely lost. They were completely
confused. The only thing they were telling me was ‘Thanks God.’
“I learned a lot from my people. I was looking to my people, to what
happened to them with the eyes of, you know, feeling sorry. But they
were telling me, Father don’t feel sorry. You have to appreciate that we
are still alive. We can still thank God.”
Today, only a handful of temporary centers remain from the 26
originally established. Many of the people have been relocated, but
quite a few stay in contact with Fr. Bazi through Facebook. They don’t
thank him for what he and his church did; they tell him they miss his
smile.
“We were showing how we can support each other. Doesn’t matter if it
was plate of food, plate of medicine, but this is Christianity,” Fr.
Bazi said. “We can survive on just one condition—never give up. Never
give up. We will never give up.”
‘Alive for a Reason’
Fr. Bazi never cried out when his captors tortured him. He never
screamed, and he never pleaded for his life, even when negotiations
seemed to go south on the sixth day. That day, Fr. Bazi spoke a brief
word with the negotiating priest in Aramaic. The priest, a friend,
understood Fr. Bazi’s message and gave the captors permission to martyr
Fr. Bazi. That day, the captors started angrily breaking Fr. Bazi’s
bones with a hammer. They also used the tool to knock out his teeth. One
captor chillingly told him, “You have many teeth. And we have all the
night.”
His captors were annoyed and sometimes mystified by him, especially
when he refused water after it had been withheld during his first four
days of imprisonment. His parched body seared in the arid climate, but
Fr. Bazi drew from a deeper strength. His prayer life intensified into
short, deep bursts. He dreamed about his family and drinking water
during the little sleep he had.
At the same time, he was developing an odd relationship with his
captors. During the day, he was a spiritual adviser who answered their
questions. At night, he was a prisoner. They tortured him with the 24/7
AlQuran channel blasting in the background to give off the presence of
piety and to mask his screams that never came.
“The day came, they came with asking for forgiveness,” Fr. Bazi said.
Fr. Bazi didn’t expect to leave the prison alive. He only asked that
they let his people know he was dead. But on the ninth day, his captors
unloaded him after a ransom was paid. The entire episode, etched forever
in his mind, still feels like an out-of-body experience.
“I know how I’m still alive,” Fr. Bazi said. “And every day, I tell
God, ‘God you know better than me, and you know me better than me that
I’m not a good person, but I’m still alive for a reason. And You know
that reason, so I’m trying to do my best to let that reason be done for
You.”
‘Wake Up’
There is a hunger for Jesus in Iraq. Over the years, more than
230,000 Iraqis have visited the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association’s PeaceWithGod.net website—an interactive site that explains the Gospel—and indicated decisions for Jesus Christ.
Fr. Bazi also has seen the hunger in person, particularly within groups
appalled by the grotesque practices of their own religions. But Fr.
Bazi offers a deliberate word for anybody interested in making a change.
“Our door is open, but we are not looking for quantity,” Fr. Bazi
said. “We are looking for quality. We are not looking to have one number
plus; we are looking to have one human plus. So change yourself, and
your people, they will change.”
What is the cost of being a Christian in Iraq? Fr. Bazi took a deep breath and exhaled.
“It’s impossible, actually, but by God’s grace, it’s acceptable,” Fr.
Bazi said. “Without Christians in Iraq, I think Iraq is gone forever.
Christians in Iraq, they are the only example for forgiveness and
peace.”
Islam, this fast-spreading religion Fr. Bazi says does not work
anymore, doesn’t just threaten his people. He urges his Christian
brothers and sisters in America to “wake up and take action.”
However, Fr. Bazi is unflinching, even in the face of anticipated
persecution. He shares a story about sheep and wolves to highlight the
issue. Sheep aren’t as powerful or as intimidating as wolves, but they
are more valuable given their utility. Iraqi Christians, despite their
dwindling numbers, reflect that value.
“It’s enough that Jesus Himself said Lamb of God. He never said wolf
of God. So we are sons and daughters of that Lamb. We are not sons and
daughters of wolves.
“So we (Iraqi Christians) are still alive; we still have value even
if we are weak. So this is the story of my people. So if they want to
persecute us, the hour will come. But in the end, in the end we are
going to win the war. Win the battles? Yeah, we lose a lot of battles.
Never mind. But we are still sons and daughters of that Lamb of God.”