By Crux
Inés San Martin
If you’re a Christian from one of the villages on the Nineveh Plains destroyed by ISIS which are now accessible and being rebuilt, you have a hard decision to make: you can either go home or move on. There are compelling arguments on either side, often pivoting on a tension between community identity and family safety and opportunity.
Inés San Martin
If you’re a Christian from one of the villages on the Nineveh Plains destroyed by ISIS which are now accessible and being rebuilt, you have a hard decision to make: you can either go home or move on. There are compelling arguments on either side, often pivoting on a tension between community identity and family safety and opportunity.
If you’re from one of the villages that’s not accessible and show no
signs of becoming so anytime soon, in effect the decision has been made
for you.
The Nineveh Plains, which overlaps the border between Iraq and
Kurdish-held territories, is a conglomerate of small villages, many of
them historically Christian: Teleskof, Batnaya, Bartella, Karamles,
Qaraqosh, and others.
With the help of private NGOs such as the papal organization Aid to
the Church in Need, the Knights of Columbus and the Hungarian
government, thousands of Christian families have been able to go home
after the region was liberated last October.
Yet a handful of villages hasn’t been so lucky.
Batnaya, which before ISIS was a bustling town with some 800
Christian families, is today entirely empty of Christians, and only 350
of its previous families even remain in the country. Though technically
free from ISIS, it’s located in a “no man’s land” of sorts, trapped on
the wrong side of a border between Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Shiite
militias backed by Iran.
An estimated 80 percent of houses in the village were wiped out by
ISIS, and pictures show an unimaginable level of destruction. Even if
Batnaya is at some point freed, there’s virtually nothing to go back to,
raising the question of why any of its former residents would ever want
to return.
Sulaya Oraha Eshaz, one of those former residents who today is living in nearby Teleskof, wonders the same thing.
“If we could, we’d leave for the United States not tomorrow but today,” he said, referring to himself and his large family.
Eshaz and his wife Aghata Marogy Eshaz have been married for 46 years
and have 12 children, the eldest of whom is 45 and the youngest 25.
They also have some “20 or 25 grandchildren,” Eshaz said, though he’s a
little vague on the precise number.
Some of his children are now in Germany, Sweden and the United
States, while three are living in other Iraqi cities and three are still
in the family home.
The children who’ve left for Europe and the U.S., he said, didn’t
leave for economic reasons nor escaping Islamic terrorists. All got out
before 2014, because they were tired of Iraq’s political instability and
“indirect oppression” perpetrated by the governments through schools
and universities.
An entrepreneur, teacher and farmer who was a wealthy man in Batnaya,
Eshaz insists he and his family would be an asset for a host country.
“I don’t want to go and cause the American government trouble,” Eshaz told Crux on Wednesday. “We are a very productive family, my children are educated, we can add to society.”
When ISIS came, Eshaz said, he lost several properties he owned in
Batnaya. He still clings to a laminated legal form issued by an ISIS
court, which blatantly states that his properties were stripped and
assigned to a Muslim business partner because he was a Christian.
“How do you expect us to live with people who take these verses from
the Quran to justify stealing the properties of Christians?” Eshaz said,
not hiding his frustration. The verse he referred to was imprinted at
the top of the court document, next to the ISIS flag: “I will judge
about properties based upon the word of God.”
“According to this verse they could take it all, and they did,” he said.
Even post-ISIS, Eshaz is no more confident in the Iraqi government to
deliver long-sought justice for Christians and other minorities. Ask if
he fears the government more than he fears a return by ISIS, he said
that it’s “50-50.”
“ISIS is temporary while the government is permanent, and the
conflict will continue,” he said. “ISIS was gone after three years. The
government’s oppression is still here.”
Eshaz claims that unless the government changes its ways,
Christianity will no longer be in the region 50 years from now, because
the “racism against Christians being taught at schools” will make
everything worse a few years from now.
“Yet if the law is based on humanitarian principles and not religion, people will stay,” he added.
Based on his experience, Eshaz voices a deeply-ingrained mistrust of Muslims.
He told the story that when his children arrived in Germany, they
were accused by their peers of being “racist” for warning against the
welcoming of Muslim immigrants. Yet his children wouldn’t budge:
“They’re Muslims, they have Islamic background.” Then ISIS attacked in
Germany, France and the United Kingdom, he said, and “they realized that
my children weren’t racist.”
In addition, he said, when he was able to go back to Batnaya he found
graffiti in German, French and English in the walls of what had been
their church saying “Christians leave,” and “all the crosses might fall”
- suggesting, he said, that the terrorists who left the warnings
actually trained in countries that once didn’t see them as a threat.
Father Araam Rameel Hannan from neighboring Alqosh is a big
supporter of the reconstruction of the Christian villages of the Nineveh
Plains. However, he acknowledges that if the situation for Christians
“continues as it is, many [more] will want to emigrate.”
“We’ve had problems for the past 100 years, they did not start with ISIS. They were more like ‘game-over,’” he told Crux
during a five-minute drive from Alqosh to Teleskof. Batnaya is five
minutes further down the same road from Teleskof, but it’s closed by the
border and those with a permit to go back to the town need some two
hours to get there.
Despite the fact that the area is slowly coming back to life, the
situation for many Christians is still precarious at best, and the
pressure from the international community will be key in guaranteeing
the survival of Christianity in the region where it was born. In the
meantime, Christians such as Eshaz aren’t waiting around to see how
things shake out.
“No human rights defenders care about Christians in Iraq,” Hannan
said. “We need the international community to care for us. The help of
Aid to the Church in Need or the Church in Rome is fundamental for our
survival and that of the Yazidis. But we not only need financial
support: If the Iraqi government knew that the world is paying attention
to our future, they too would protect us.”