By The Catholic Leader
Peter Budgen
Brisbane priest Fr Gerry Hefferan has visited some of the towns devastated by ISIS in the Nineveh Plains of northern Iraq and been struck by the “incredible resilience” of families rebuilding their lives there.
Peter Budgen
Brisbane priest Fr Gerry Hefferan has visited some of the towns devastated by ISIS in the Nineveh Plains of northern Iraq and been struck by the “incredible resilience” of families rebuilding their lives there.
“I remember the courage and perseverance of returning
families and their hospitality,” Fr Hefferan told parishioners at the
Parish of St Joseph and St Anthony, Bracken Ridge, in Brisbane’s
northern outskirts, recently on the first weekend after his return from a
10-day solidarity visit to Kurdistan and the Nineveh Plains.
Fr Hefferan has a special interest in the people there
because his parish is home to many Catholics from Iraq, as well as from
Syria, who were forced to leave their homelands in the wake of ISIS’
brutal raids through the region.
He also visited the region in 2009 in the time of Al Qaida
and in 2013, and he – with the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference,
Brisbane archdiocese and Australian Catholic University and some
religious orders – has been involved in projects supporting the people
there throughout that time.
Archbishop Bashar Warda of Erbil, in Kurdistan, northern
Iraq, invited Fr Hefferan to make the recent visit when Catholics there
would be celebrating the Exaltation of the Cross, a special feast for
them.
Fr Hefferan could see first-hand the progress of Church
projects and programs in Kurdistan and meet the people organising them,
and then visit people in some of the towns devastated by ISIS in the
Nineveh Plains.
“They have rebuilt some of their houses in some towns of
the Nineveh Plains. They were so welcoming,” Fr Hefferan told his
parishioners.
“I joined in a few meals, as is their custom of hospitality. They shared some of their stories.
They want to know that people outside Iraq care about them and their efforts to rebuild their lives.”
“They need to feel connected, as do we all.”
Painting a picture of what it was like for people
returning to rebuild their lives post-ISIS, Fr Hefferan said ISIS had
destroyed everything – houses, churches, banks, schools, shops,
factories, businesses, pastoral industries, crops, playgrounds, water
pipes and electricity.
“Their poultry and sheep and other animals were
slaughtered – their food crops, fruit trees, vineyards devastated –
(they were) homeless, jobless,” he said.
“I was taken on tours of three towns devastated by ISIS (– Telskof, Karemles and Qaraqosh).
“I remember the courage and perseverance of returning families and their hospitality.”
Fr Hefferan was struck by “the incredible challenges
they’ve got – to build from scratch – and the sense of community that
they have, doing it together”.
“One of the beautiful things (in the towns in the Nineveh
Plains) was to be able to share a meal with them in their own house that
they’ve renovated,” he said.
“They were just so proud to share hospitality and show
what they had done. And they’d have photos showing what it used to be
like.”
In the face of the devastation left by ISIS, the major concern in most communities he visited was employment.
Fr Hefferan said small businesses – like fruit and
vegetable shops, petrol stations, clothes shops – were slowly returning
to the towns he visited.
“Even some restaurants (are appearing) …,” he said. “In Qaraqosh, I saw cafes …
“Some were talking about how they were going to get their
farms and pastoral properties and vineyards and those things going
again.
“It was just good to see a lot of activity in the main street of Qaraqosh with the small businesses there.
“And you never forget what it looks like because as you
look at the houses, some people are not going back and they don’t want
to rebuild their houses at this time so they’re just going to be left in
shambles.
“So you can have a street of several beautiful houses that
a lot of work had gone into and others that were just a mess, and
that’s the reality of it.”
A parish in Karemles offered encouragement in a simple way.
“One of the signs of hope that I found was at the
presbytery vestibule (in Karemles), just outside, they have a map of
every house and building in the town and they have it colour-coded to
show which are now repaired, which are to be repaired or undergoing
repair at the moment, and then which others they haven’t heard from and
will have to stay the way they are at the time,” Fr Hefferan said.
“So on that map, Father told me, there are about 400 houses now repaired in that town.
“The parish priest was explaining it to me that 330 families had returned …
“They’re still waiting for another 150
families to return and originally the town was 820 families, so that
gives an idea of how many have come back, how many are still to return
and how many won’t be coming back.”
Fr Hefferan said one of the emotional
traumas for the people was the desecration of the cemeteries where their
loved ones were buried.
“They could talk about the hardships but then there would be tears sometimes when they were talking about that,” he said.
ACU Chaldean Scholarships have helped train Catholics in key areas for the rebuilding, including in health and education.
Married medical couple and recent ACU
graduates Doctors Saveen Oghana and Ban Isaqi are busy planning the
medical side of a new Catholic hospital, due to open in Erbil early next
year.
Fr Hefferan visited them in Erbil, as
well as Daughters of Jesus’ Sacred Heart Sister Samar Mikha and Fr
Denkha Joola, who had also had scholarships to study at ACU – Sr Samar
in Brisbane and Fr Denkha in Sydney.
Sr Samar is the principal of the recently
opened Al Bashra primary school in Erbil, and her school includes local
students from Ankawa and displaced students from Mosul.
Fr Denkha has returned to the cathedral parish in Erbil as he prepares for a new role soon to be announced.
The Chaldean Archdiocese of Erbil has begun the selection process for a new round of ACU scholarships.
Pondering the spirit of the people who
have returned to the Nineveh Plains to rebuild, Fr Hefferan said “I
think they’re realistic”.
“They know the big challenges ahead but
they’re willing to have a go – not certain of the future, but the spirit
to rebuild is there,” he said.
Fr Hefferan returned with the message
that the people of Iraq wanted “to be connected, to be thought of” by
people elsewhere in the world.
“It’s very important that they want to
know people are thinking about them, that they haven’t forgotten them,
and to look at modern ways of being connected, just to show that
(they’re not forgotten),” he said.
In telling people in his parish about the people he
visited in Iraq, Fr Hefferan said, “May we pray to God for strength for
them and those still returning – and for the families our parish has
welcomed here from Iraq and Syria.”