By Crux
John L. Allen Jr and Ines San Martin
In the famous Bible story, the ancient city of Nineveh responded to Jonah’s preaching and repented. Today, however, Christians on the Nineveh Plains, a fabled swath of land that overlaps the dividing line between northern Iraq and Kurdistan, have found it’s not quite so easy to change peoples’ hearts and minds.
John L. Allen Jr and Ines San Martin
In the famous Bible story, the ancient city of Nineveh responded to Jonah’s preaching and repented. Today, however, Christians on the Nineveh Plains, a fabled swath of land that overlaps the dividing line between northern Iraq and Kurdistan, have found it’s not quite so easy to change peoples’ hearts and minds.
Ironically, in 2008 the Nineveh Plains actually was floated as a
possible safe haven for Christians from other areas of the country being
driven from their homes by what would eventually come to be recognized
as the Islamic State’s genocidal campaign.
In 2014, that genocide reached the plains. A cluster of villages that
had been traditionally Christian for two millennia was wiped out, while
tens of thousands of residents fled for their lives. Many headed for
the Christian enclave of Ankawa in nearby Erbil, which is today claimed
as the capital of an independent Kurdistan.
While in theory those fleeing Christians could have sought refuge in a
UN-sponsored camp, very few ever did, fearing that the jihadist hatred
that put them at risk at home wouldn’t have much difficulty penetrating
the porous confines of a Muslim-dominated refugee camp either. Thus,
they turned to the churches, turning courtyards, parks and streets in
Ankawa into vast informal settlements.
Some of those Christians decided to leave the region altogether, most
seeking new lives abroad in Australia, North America or Europe, but the
majority stuck it out - in part out of a rugged determination that
Christianity wouldn’t be wiped out of its historic homeland, in part
with hope that the Iraqi government with U.S. support would eventually
get the situation under control, and, in part too, for a simple lack of
better choices.
By mid-2017, great optimism was in the air and talk of quickly
rebuilding those Christian villages and resettling their residents
created an air of optimism. Then came the Kurdish independence
referendum, which badly frayed relations between Baghdad and Erbil and
created fear of a wider regional conflict, and the long-anticipated
return from exile slowed down.
Today things are once again moving forward, and Christians of this
historic cradle of the faith are beginning to make their way back. That
fact is all the more remarkable given that support for the rebuilding
effort from public sources such as the UN has been all but non-existent.
It’s been made possible almost entirely by private donors, many of them
Catholic, such as the papal foundation Aid to the Church in Need
supporting persecuted Christians around the world and the Knights of
Columbus.
(The Knights are a principal partner of Crux.)
From 2014 to 2017, Aid to the Church in Need alone has delivered $4
million in help for the Nineveh Plains, including 20 emergency aid
projects and 19 reconstruction efforts. Among other tangible signs of
that help, convents in the Christian villages of Bashiqa, Teleskuf and
Qaraqosh have been rebuilt.
Yet after all that’s happened, nobody is treating the goal of a
stable, secure future for Christianity on the Nineveh Plains as an
inevitability, or even an especially good bet right now. Experts on the
ground warn that a great deal is at stake in the choices being made
right now.
Stephen Rasche, a counselor to the Archdiocese of Erbil who serves as
coordinator of the reconstruction effort, acknowledged that if the
situation deteriorates, the reconstruction effort will become moot
because Christians won’t want to return.
Rasche knows well that conflict over the future of Kurdish-controlled
territories could still erupt anytime, and, although ISIS may be
reeling militarily at the moment, they’ve proven surprisingly good at
retreating and reloading, and no one believes the threat has been
completely snuffed out.
What happens over the next few months are critical, he said, perhaps
especially how a U.S. administration, which has voiced its concern for
persecuted Christians repeatedly, chooses to deploy its resources and
political influence.
A surprising share of the Christians of the Nineveh Plains have stuck
it out this far, Rasche said, and there remains real hope of getting
them home. Yet, he warned, nobody should expect their patience to be
infinite.
“If there’s another major conflict, that’s the end for the Christians
there. They won’t wait around to see this movie one more time,” Rasche
said.
Crux is visiting the Nineveh Plains this week, taking the
temperature of its embattled Christian community and the residual hope
that still percolates here that the future will somehow be different
than the proximate past - a hope that may seem either inspiring or
naïve, depending on how one sees it, but which, nevertheless, against
all odds, somehow endures.