By America Magazine (The Jesuit Review)
October 4, 2018
Kevin Clarke
Many of the children in this kindergarten in Qaraqosh, Iraq, were infants when Daesh stormed this Christian city in the early morning hours of Aug. 7, 2014. They are lucky that way at least; they will never remember the night of terror their parents and other family members experienced as they fled the city. Hundreds of families, more than 200,000 from villages across the Nineveh Plains, escaped in those frantic hours—some just minutes ahead of Daesh, as everyone in this city near the border with Iraqi Kurdistan calls the Islamic militants known as ISIS in the West. They fled packed in cars and trucks; less fortunate ones fled on foot.
October 4, 2018
Kevin Clarke
Many of the children in this kindergarten in Qaraqosh, Iraq, were infants when Daesh stormed this Christian city in the early morning hours of Aug. 7, 2014. They are lucky that way at least; they will never remember the night of terror their parents and other family members experienced as they fled the city. Hundreds of families, more than 200,000 from villages across the Nineveh Plains, escaped in those frantic hours—some just minutes ahead of Daesh, as everyone in this city near the border with Iraqi Kurdistan calls the Islamic militants known as ISIS in the West. They fled packed in cars and trucks; less fortunate ones fled on foot.
Now, 17 months after the first of Qaraqosh’s
wary residents returned to their old homes and a city in near ruin, the
stores in the city center are open for business and families are out in
the welcome cool of the early evening. They are shopping, heading to
restaurants, arguing with friends or just enjoying a stroll. They must
take care to avoid the construction debris all over the streets and
sidewalks of the Iraqi city.
There are so many signs of life in
this community, like these schoolchildren. Qaraqosh is clearly breathing
again, just as clearly as its many smoke-blackened homes, demolished
shops and defaced churches attest that much more work lies ahead.
The kindergarten is sponsored by the Jesuit Refugee Service,
which selected a site for the school near a low-income family apartment
complex that is supported by the Syriac Catholic Church. J.R.S.-Iraq hopes to give the children of these poor families a decent start in life and a walkable location to begin their education.
The
24 apartments in this modest complex that had been badly damaged by
Daesh and the two units that had been completely obliterated by an Iraqi
or U.S. missile strike have been restored. Bullet holes that pockmarked
outer walls have been plastered over; exteriors have been brightly
painted. The holes that Daesh blasted through adjoining apartment walls
so they could move through the complex without being observed by
sentinels flying above them have been repaired.
Now scores of the
complex’s former residents, mostly Syriac and Chaldean Catholics, are
back in their old homes. Among them is Nahla Behnam Azo. She has
returned to her restored apartment and is overjoyed to be home with
neighbors that she loves. But her happiness is not complete. She has
returned just with her son; her husband died last year after diabetes
forced the amputation of both his legs. Though he may never be counted
as a war casualty, she is convinced that the walking he did on his bad
legs during the family’s flight to Erbil contributed to his death.
When
many fled Qaraqosh in 2014, they believed they were experiencing a
one-or two-week annoyance, not beginning an odyssey of suffering that
would keep them from returning for more than three years. Some will
never see their homes in Qaraqosh again at all because they have gone to
Europe, the United States or Australia, or have found good jobs in
Erbil or Dohuk—gifts that cannot be ignored in these bleak economic
times in Iraq.
Shaheed Saad Bakoos is not just the 25-year-old
supervisor of the J.R.S. school and its 43 endearing students; she is
also a child of Qaraqosh herself and excited to be home. She and her
family, like hundreds of others, returned to homes that had been
seriously damaged, if not ruined, by Daesh. Some homeowners only endured
looted buildings or had to clean up after Daesh militants spent months
squatting in their homes. Others lost properties that were burned by
fires set by the fleeing militants or completely flattened by air
strikes as Daesh was driven out of the city in October 2016.
Shaheed says her family home had been stripped to the beams and
burned by Daesh but has been nearly restored over the last year with the
assistance of the local church. A two-year plan to rebuild the city is in its 17th month and has restored about 38 percent of the damaged homes. But Father George Jahola, president of the Church Supreme Board for the Reconstruction of Baghdeda
(the city’s Assyrian name), worries that progress can remain on track
only if more funding is secured. He is eager to persuade more former
residents to return from the north, where they have taken refuge, with
offers of help to rebuild and restore their lives in Qaraqosh.
Of
course, however much assistance he offers, many who have left will never
be convinced to return. And many of the families who have made the
difficult decision to rebuild, Shaheed knows, remain anxious about being
back in Qaraqosh, worried that Daesh may one day strike again.
“But not me,” she says brightly. “As long as my family is with me, I am not scared.”
An added bonus: she loves her new job. “The children are so happy, they always make me smile,” she says.
Thinking of them, she says, “I can sleep through the night.”