By Crux
Claire Giangravè
A Chaldean archbishop kidnapped in Iraq by Al Qaeda militants in 2006
 said that members of his religious minority, who were nearly 
annihilated by Muslim extremists, have found a safer haven in the United
 States and Canada compared to an increasingly more populist and 
anti-immigrant Europe.
 
“The United States has been more helpful, because they gave economic 
help and dioceses to Chaldean Catholics,” Archbishop Saad Sirop Hanna, 
the Apostolic Visitor for Chaldeans Residing in Europe, told Crux in an interview.
He added that also in Canada members of his community have been warmly welcomed.
“The Europeans are always more worried,” he continued, pointing to 
what he perceives as a worrying rise in populists and anti-immigration 
sentiment on the continent.
The archbishop, who is also a visiting researcher at the Medieval 
Institute of the University of Notre Dame, said that although he left 
Baghdad in 2016, he hears reports that the American government has been 
giving economic aid for the reconstruction of Christian areas in Iraq.
He also acknowledged that there have been several meetings between 
members of the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump and Iraqi 
bishops.
“I see that [Trump] is interested in religious minorities, and that his decisions also have a religious interest,” Hanna said.
The archbishop made his remarks during the presentation of his book Abducted in Iraq: A priest in Baghdad,
 which took place at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome March 
21. The book tells his account of the 28 days that he spent as a captive
 of Al Qaeda militants.
Hanna was abducted on August 15, 2006, after he had celebrated Mass 
for the Feast of the Assumption in Dora in southern Baghdad, known as 
the “triangle of death” because of the Shiite, Sunni and terrorist 
forces that clashed there.
When he was kidnapped, Hanna was kept blindfolded for most of the time and his captors forcefully tried to convert him to Islam.
“In captivity, I learned by talking to people how beautiful it is to 
listen, because I could only recognize people by their voice,” he said 
at the book presentation.
Despite his experience, the archbishop encouraged people not to look 
at the Muslim extremists as “evil,” and said that in the book he 
recounts his relationship with a guard in whom he found “great 
goodness.”
He said that Islam today, which is struggling with its identity, can 
draw great benefits if Christianity expresses itself with truth and 
respect for its historic reality.
“Ignorance is in control of what is happening in the Arab world,” 
Hanna said. “The majority of people don’t know the Koran. They are under
 the influence of a strong opinion which impoverishes them to a behavior
 where they are not asked to think. Perhaps we should reflect on how 
these people can begin to see our faith in a different way.”
Father Kevin Flannery, professor of philosophy at the Gregorian and 
once a teacher to Hanna, said that his former student “lived through an 
incredibly brutal experience,” but nonetheless his book contains 
“nuggets of wisdom,” which while they may appear simple at first, “if 
one stops to think about it, their insight becomes evident.”
The book wants to explore not only Hanna’s experience as a “priest, a
 Christian and an Iraqi,” but also the profound changes that have 
impacted Iraq in the past 40 years and its effect on the religious 
minorities living there.
“It’s a book that by drawing from my personal history wishes to show 
what many of these Christians in Iraq have suffered, have done and have 
endured,” Hanna said.
He added that his experience is hardly comparable to “many of my 
brothers and sisters who have lived moments that were much more 
difficult,” and added that for him picking up the dead bodies of 
Christians killed for their faith was much more difficult and harrowing 
than being kidnapped.
“We live under the pressure of the integralism and fundamentalism 
that has invaded every sector of Iraqi society,” Hanna said. There has 
been “a change that creates discomfort, persecution and 
misunderstandings targeted toward the Christian community.”
According to recent reports, the Christian population in Iraq, which 
was approximately between 1.4 and 2 million in the 1990s, has declined 
to about 100,000 people in 2017 due to targeted persecution by Islamic 
State militants starting as early as 2011 as well as immigration.
“Immigration is a worrying phenomenon that questions the future of 
the Eastern Catholic churches,” said Slovak Archbishop Cyril Vasil’, 
Secretary of the Congregation for Eastern Churches.
“Immigration is like a blood transfusion, which, if it doesn’t weaken
 the original body, can enrich new places,” he added during the book 
presentation.
“But sometimes it can become a hemorrhage that weakens the places of 
origin and leads to an impoverishment of the body,” Cyril said.
He compared immigration to the ice which used to be brought down from
 the top of the mountains to be stored during the summer. According to 
Cyril, the Christian community in Iraq has managed to survive, “hidden 
in the ice house,” until now, when the ice has been smashed and thrown 
on the ground.
“What chance do these Christians have to survive?” he asked.
Hanna said that while immigration poses a significant challenge to 
Christian realities in Iraq, the “broken ice is also a large mirror,” 
which no matter where it’s placed, “will reflect the image that we wish 
to show of our Church.”
“We are becoming a religion of diaspora,” the archbishop continued, 
and “the faith during the diasporas is the most difficult.” He added 
that some of the most beautiful passages of the Bible, such as the first
 11 chapters of Genesis, were written during the diaspora in Babylon.
“I believe that the Church in diaspora produces beautiful things,” 
Hanna said. “Perhaps even us as Chaldeans have to work hard on ourselves
 and look at the future with hope and the determination that we must do 
something.”