By Indipendent Catholic News
Liam Allmark, Head of Public Affairs at the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, joined a delegation of UK MPs from the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Kurdistan on a visit to the autonomous region in northern Iraq in May 2018.
Liam Allmark, Head of Public Affairs at the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, joined a delegation of UK MPs from the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Kurdistan on a visit to the autonomous region in northern Iraq in May 2018.
Attending as an observer at the invitation of the APPG, Liam has written this report.
Our Bishops do not align themselves to any political party. However, the Catholic community in England and Wales has a strong connection with the Christian community in Iraq and the Kurdistan Region, so it was a welcome opportunity to accompany British MPs on this visit and join in some of their conversations.
Christianity has ancient roots in this part of the world and, despite the enormous challenges their community has faced, Christians continue to play an active role in society today. We met Christian lawmakers in the Kurdistan Parliament; attended a packed Mass in St Joseph's Chaldean Cathedral; saw the Church's university and the site of its new hospital; held lively conversations with Christian students, and, of course, shared culinary delights in Ankawa - Erbil's Christian Quarter.
The Chaldean
Archbishop of Erbil, Bashar Warda describes his mission here "to help my
people not to survive but to thrive." We hope that anyone concerned
with the future of Iraq and the Kurdistan Region can get behind this
vision.
We know all too well how much Iraq's Christian community
has suffered in recent decades because of conflict and political
instability. As the leaders of churches in the Kurdistan Region stated
last year: "it is possible to say without any doubt that it is the
Christians who continue to be the biggest losers in all of these fights,
to which they have never been party and which, if continued, would
render our people more intent on emigration, leading to their being
wiped out from the surface of this land."
During this visit the
delegation received fresh insight into those challenges facing the
region's Christians, around 100,000 of whom fled to Erbil from their
homes on the Nineveh Plains, escaping the advance of Daesh in 2014.
Things
today are very different to my last visit a few years ago. Half of the
Christians who arrived in Erbil as internally displaced persons have
returned home and the Church's last Internally Displaced Persons (IDP)
camp is about to close. This is largely due to the phenomenal work of
the Nineveh Reconstruction Committee, a collaboration between the
Chaldean, Syriac Orthodox, and Syriac Catholic communities, which has so
far renovated more than 12,000 homes, with support from the
international community.
However there are still tens of thousands
of displaced Christians living in the Kurdistan Region who do not know
what the future holds. Thousands of homes on the Nineveh Plains, along
with vital infrastructure and farmland wrecked by Daesh forces, still
need to be restored. The huge costs are even harder to meet against the
backdrop of economic difficulties in Iraq.
Without opportunities
to return home or rebuild their lives, many Christians will follow the
thousands who have left for Europe or America. Iraq's Christian
community has already shrunk exponentially over the past decade. If it
continues to do so this will be to the detriment of the whole country.
We
hope that going forward the UK will increase its support for
reconstruction, job creation, and educational opportunities both in the
Kurdistan Region and more widely, which will help give a meaningful
future to this community that has experienced so much violence,
displacement and destruction of their livelihoods.
Another
critical issue is the security of people returning to the Nineveh
Plains. During the visit we heard how instability on the Nineveh Plains,
exacerbated in the aftermath of the referendum, has slowed down
reconstruction and left many people frightened to return. It was also
clear that Daesh remains a threat, despite losing control of territory.
When
fighting broke out between Iraqi and Kurdish forces following the
referendum, leaders of Churches in the Kurdistan Region said: "the
Plains of Nineveh should be maintained as a unified territory; it is
critical to not divide it into parts. Care should be made not to involve
the last remaining Christian land in political bargaining, as our
vulnerable community cannot withstand further schism and division in
addition to the ongoing political and sectarian fights. The Plain of
Nineveh is a great symbol for Christians in Iraq, the Kurdistan Region,
and the world."
As political negotiations continue, we hope that
friends of the region including our own politicians will work with both
the Kurdistan Regional Government and the Iraqi Government to protect
families returning to the Nineveh Plains, safeguard their land rights,
and give them a proper stake in decisions about their future.
Above
all, it is important that our parliamentarians and government,
politicians and diplomats continue to engage with Christians in Iraq and
the Kurdistan Region, promoting their position as citizens with
essential rights and responsibilities, while also engaging with the
local Church in England and Wales which continues to maintain close
contacts with the Church across the region.
As Cardinal Vincent
Nichols reflected following his own visit, the Christian community is
"an integral part of the country's societal fabric and essential for
creating a more stable future. The community's deep commitment to
forgiveness and reconciliation is especially important as Iraq strives
to emerge from decades of conflict."