By Al Monitor
Wassim Bassem
Wassim Bassem
Christian leaders say Iraq's monasteries and churches could soon become mere relics unless something is done to curb the violence against Christians. During an Aug. 26 press conference, Syriac Catholic Patriarch of Antioch Mar Ignatius Joseph III Younan described Christians as "the most targeted and most vulnerable" minority in the region — and not just because of the Islamic State (IS).
This
comes as Iraqi Christians in general, and Armenians in particular,
prepare for the post-IS phase. Many of those who were driven from their
homes in the Ninevah Plains are deciding whether to return. On Aug. 9,
Iraqi Minister of Culture, Tourism and Antiquities Farid Rwandzi received Armenian leaders to discuss promoting their community’s cultural activity.
In June, the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Iraq, Archbishop Avak Asadourian,
and representatives of Armenian committees and groups visited some of
the liberated villages and towns of Ninevah, including Aghajanian, one
of the areas IS had occupied since 2014 after either killing or forcing
out its residents.
Now that IS is gone from the village, there's a possibility that
Christian areas in the plains could be included in the controversial
Kurdistan Regional Government independence referendum scheduled for Sept. 25. However, on Aug. 27, the Assyrian Democratic Movement,
which is Christian, called for steering the Ninevah Plains clear from
the conflicts and keeping the area out of the referendum.
Amid the long-term threat of violence, the Armenian population in
Iraq has significantly declined. The Armenian Embassy in Iraq estimates
about 13,000 Armenians remain in the country. Before US-led forces invaded Iraq in 2003, the Armenian population stood at about 25,000.
Since IS took over Mosul in 2004, “the number of Armenians has
completely receded in Mosul; not a single Armenian remains,” said Adnan Haider, the editor-in-chief of Bashtabya news agency, which regularly covers minority affairs.
As Armenians
came to Iraq centuries ago, some settled in the south and have had
dioceses in Basra since 1222. Their numbers reached 37,000, most of whom
settled in Baghdad in al-Batawin area and in the areas of Camp Sarah.
Muslim minority activist Mudrek Hussein,
the director of relations for the Armenian Relief and Development
Association in Basra, has witnessed firsthand how the rights of the
Armenian community in Basra have been quashed. Politicians "used legal
tricks" to turn a centuries-old Armenian club into a shopping center,
Hussein told Al-Monitor, adding, “The [Armenian] cemetery has shrunk to
about 5,000 square meters [1.2 acres], all of which is destroyed graves
now.”
However, though the Armenian presence is receding, it's still reflected in current symbols, most notably the Church of the Sacred Heart, the Church of the Virgin Mary and the Armenian Church
in Baghdad, which is more than 100 years old. Given Armenians' lengthy
history in the region, a Christian Armenian said, on condition of
anonymity, “Iraqis should no longer look down on Armenians as
strangers.”
Khajak Vartanian, the head of the administrative committee of the
Armenian community in Basra, told Al-Monitor recently by phone about
“the absence of projects reserved for Armenians by either the government
or the Christian endowment."
There are so few Armenians left, he said, that national ID cards
don't even include "Armenian" as an option anymore. “In the old Basra
area, for example, there is only one Armenian family left," he said.
Although Vartanian claimed Armenians "are not included in the
parliament quota like other minorities,” Christian parliament member and
rapporteur Imad Youkhana denied this.
“The Christian [parliament] quota includes Armenians as part of the
Christian community, and one should not look at this subject from a
national point of view only,” Youkhana told Al-Monitor.
“The Armenians are suffering under a lack of financial allocations to
manage their places of worship and fund their schools,” he said. “The
Committee on the Needs of Christians was officially formed and approved
by both the government and parliament, with the participation of
Asadourian, head of the Armenian community in Iraq, as well as Raad Kja
Jie, head of the Endowments of the Christian, Yazidi and Sabaean Mandaean Religions Diwan.”
Youkhana added, “The Iraqi parliament’s decision to recognize that
Christians in Iraq are being subjected to genocide also includes
Armenians. … Armenians have the right to promote their [culture] and as a
result of their [help], the Syriac language is being taught in Christian schools in Kirkuk.”
Abdul Rahman Alloizi, a parliament member representing Ninevah, told
Al-Monitor, “Armenians lived in Iraq in peace with the rest of Iraq's
sects, and the Iraqi constitution has approved the use of the Armenian
language as a mother tongue.” Alloizi added, “There is a current
opportunity for displaced Armenians to return to their areas,” which was
demonstrated in July, when a new church was built in Ankawa in northern Iraq.
Political and church leaders want to restore minorities' faith in the
state and the law so they can practice their religious rites freely.
Meanwhile, the constitutional protection for minorities must be applied
so they are equal partners, much like the sects that represent the
majority in the country. Only then, the leaders say, will displaced
minorities want to return, which will promote the sectarian and national
diversity that has characterized Iraq throughout history.