Dominique Soguel
The risk of doing business in
Qaraqosh, also known as Al-Hamdaniya or Bakhdida, remains high even now
that the jihadists have been driven out of the area.
But the
prospect of Christians returning to Qaraqosh is better than for other
mixed areas or disputed territories, says Lawrence Janan, an off-duty
police officer, because this is the largest Christian city in Iraq,
located in the historic heartland of the Assyrian community.
"It's
hard for Christians to go back to Mosul City, but here, at least, we
were always a clear majority," he says, standing across from a bombed
church. "We have to come to our areas. This is our land. If we don't
watch over it, who will?"
That's the same logic that motivates a
cluster of businessmen who banded together to rebuild commercial areas
one cinder block at the time. The magnitude of the task ahead would make
an average man fold in despair.
Businessman
Louis Yousif surveys the remains of his three-story corner complex with
an acute sense of loss, but also a knack for nailing down
opportunities.
Restoring venues for marketing material, passport
photos, and decorations for special occasions such as weddings? Not a
priority.
A bakery? A no-brainer. That was the first order of
business. The oven stands ready to roll behind new window-paned walls. A
barber shop and fish grill are next. He knows people won't come back
unless a normal daily life is viable.
"We need help to create the
conditions for people to come back," he says, surging up the broken
slabs of concrete stairs to the rooftop of his complex, where you can
see the church and the full extent of the damage done to his building by
eight different projectiles.
He says the original construction of
the complex, which was inaugurated in 2012, had cost $3 million, and he
estimates repairs will be to the tune of $1 million.
"The
international community must stand with Iraqi Christians," Mr. Yousif
says, increasingly agitated. "We don't want money for our pockets. We
need help to rebuild."
Rebuilding safety
Rebuilding safety
Liquor store owner
Khudr Baham Anab restored his business in a flash, replacing layers of
soot with bright speckled tiles, and shattered shelves with a sturdy,
well-stocked display.
"This is the most dangerous business as we
are always targeted," says Mr. Anab. "If people see that I am here, that
I came back and opened a liquor store, regular citizens will be
reassured. They will think it is safe, although in reality it is not
safe."
Government-endorsed Shiite Arab forces guard the
checkpoints leading into the Christian haven. They have replaced the
white-scripted ebony banner of the Sunni militants with the red-scripted
black standard saluting the imam revered by Shiite Muslims, Hussein.
Kurdish
forces man the adjacent checkpoint on the road leading from Mosul to
Erbil. And Christian militias police the streets of Qaraqosh marking out
their turf with graffiti.
Qaraqosh is clearly at the center of
the broader Baghdad-versus-Kurdish dispute for territory and the
corresponding race to alter the demographic make-up of the Nineveh
Plains.
Those tensions have reached a combustible high in the wake
of a referendum for independence held last month by Iraqi Kurds despite
sharp opposition from the central government, regional neighbors, and
the broader international community.
A region of their own
A region of their own
Iraqi Christians would like a region of their own in their historic heartland.
"We
are stuck between the Kurdish Regional Government [KRG] and the central
government in Baghdad unable to make our own decisions," says Yousif, a
lawyer by training. "They call us a disputed area, but in reality there
are no Kurdish families here. That's why we were abandoned in the hands
of ISIS without a single shot being fired."
Iraqi Christians and
other religious minorities fault the Kurdish Peshmerga forces for
retreating to their ethnic strongholds and abandoning the mixed villages
of the Nineveh Plains as ISIS made its genocidal advance in 2014. That
criticism is tempered by the acknowledgement that they found relative
safety in Kurdish cities like Erbil over the two years that ISIS laid
waste to their town and its Christian monuments. The majority of those
who could leave the country altogether did so.
US-backed Iraqi
forces and their proxies retook Qaraqosh in 2016, but it wasn't until
they liberated Mosul City, 20 miles west-northwest, that residents began
to return in larger numbers. Even so, many men opt to keep their
families in Ainkawa, a pre-dominantly Assyrian Christian suburb of
Erbil. That decision reflects ongoing security concerns in their
contested hometown and the scale of the damage done by jihadists on a
looting and burning spree.
By most counts, fewer than half of the
residents of Qaraqosh, which had a pre-war population of 50,000, have
ventured back, but the numbers are growing every day.
"We are
Iraqi citizens, but the state has not granted us protection," says Falah
Baqus, a resident of Qaraqosh who decided to move back a few weeks ago
but almost regrets the decision, given the general lack of services and
uncleared debris on both major and minor roads. "It breaks my heart to
see my town littered like this, but if I do not come back, things will
never be restored."
Caught in the middle
Caught in the middle
Downstairs from
Yousif's rooftop perch, a handful of workers, including a Muslim
laborer, take a break to share lunch and talk shop in the shadows of the
gutted building.
Assyrian Christian Amir Toma is gearing up to
open a fruit stand, a modest venture reflecting his limited means after
two years of displacement. The interior is ready, but the shop is still
missing a front wall. "If I had more capital, I would take on a bigger
venture," he says, standing under a pristine red sign advertising his
business.
Mr. Toma used to be the manager of a marketing materials
print shop. He started selling fruits and vegetables in Erbil's Ainkawa
to support his family. Although he has decided to bring his new trade
back to his old neighborhood to contribute to the town's revival, the
rest of the family has stayed back because their home in Qaraqosh is
charcoal and local rent prices run high, reflecting the dearth of
supply.
Houses that are in good condition tend to be remote and in
isolated areas. When might makes right, he says, that's a risk he is
not willing to take.
"Security here is a mixed salad," he says
with a sigh. "Some forces support the KRG. Others Baghdad. Us poor
people are in the middle."