By World Watch Monitor
As many as 80% of Syria’s Christians have left their country since the start of the civil war in 2011, while 50% of Iraq’s Christians have been uprooted since 2006, according to a report produced by Christian charities Open Doors International, Served and Middle East Concern last year, which said the arrival of IS was only the “tipping point” of a trend already gathering pace as Christians experienced an “overall loss of hope for a safe and secure future”.
As many as 80% of Syria’s Christians have left their country since the start of the civil war in 2011, while 50% of Iraq’s Christians have been uprooted since 2006, according to a report produced by Christian charities Open Doors International, Served and Middle East Concern last year, which said the arrival of IS was only the “tipping point” of a trend already gathering pace as Christians experienced an “overall loss of hope for a safe and secure future”.
Lebanon
received the most refugees and in December 2016 the advocacy group ADF
International heard some of their stories, which they have shared with
World Watch Monitor. In the snippets below, the interviewees are
referred to by their initials alone, to preserve their safety.
“We
lived in Mosul [northern Iraq] until 2005 [when] bullets were shot into
our home. Between June and July, 2005, terrorists tried to kidnap our
son three times, but he was able to escape,” said S. H., a Christian
father of five, adding that after this he moved with his family,
including three disabled children, to Qaraqosh, 30km southeast of Mosul.
But
after Islamic State arrived there on 6 August 2014, the family was
forced to flee again. “They gave us three options: conversion, death or jizya
[a special tax for non-Muslims],” said S. H., adding that this time
they fled to Lebanon – because “it is Christian and Arab-speaking”.
Another
man, a 43-year-old father of two girls, identified by his first
initial, N., fled to Lebanon in February 2015 after IS gave him 24 hours
written notice to leave Baghdad, his job and his home, or he and his
family would be killed.
“My relatives – my cousin and his
grandparents – were killed by bombings at their home, because they
didn’t want to quit their job or convert. Colleagues of mine were
kidnapped. Some were freed for US$16,000, others were killed. They were
told they must deny Jesus or they would be killed,” he said.
It is not possible to know precisely how many people have been killed by IS but mass graves were found last week, some of which contained thousands of bodies.
‘Christians must not be alive’
For
70 years another Christian family, identified as S. and H.K., had
resided in the city of Hasakah, northeast Syria, where they had lived at
peace with their Muslim neighbours. All that changed with the arrival
of Islamic State.
“Our neighbours joined IS [and the group] used
[them] to communicate with us [that we had] three options: convert,
leave, or die. They burned our farm at night to kill us, but we were not
there. We escaped, going from village to village. We have two brothers,
but now we don’t know anything about them. We have had no contact since
we fled,” S. said.
A 71-year-old Catholic Christian, identified
as H. S. H., recalled how he and his brother fled Aleppo, Syria on 27
December 2013, to find refuge at his farm in Raqqa, only to find
themselves in further peril. “Our taxi driver was shot in the neck. My
brother and I were assaulted and then locked up in the chicken stag pen,
a dark room. We were locked up for three days. This was the last time I
saw my brother. Our captors wanted to know if we were the owners of the
farm. They stole my money. My neighbours later told me that this was
IS,” he said.
“We were fed dog food, and they told me that
Christians must not be alive. We were told: convert to Islam, or be
killed. They told me if I converted, they would give the farm back to
me. The jizya was also an option. But some of my neighbours, who were Armenian, were killed after paying jizya.”
He
said he was able to escape when the Syrian army attacked IS, with the
help of his Muslim neighbours, and that he fled to Lebanon as he had
heard the UN could help him. “I have waited three years. The UN has not
helped me directly. I had an interview at the French embassy; they told
me it would take 20 days to get back to me. It has been two months,” he
said.
At the time of the interview he lived with friends in Beirut
and had survived three heart attacks. “I do not want to go back to
Raqqa or Aleppo,” he said. “I have had too much trauma and could never
go back. I don’t want to remember what happened. It is too difficult.”
Psychological trauma
When IS entered the northern Iraqi town of Batnaya in August
2014, a Chaldean Christian family were unable to flee because of illness
in the family. Militants came to their house repeatedly, threatening to
rape and kill them if they would not convert or if they called on
anyone for help, according to 63-year-old G. H. G.
“After 22 days, IS took our whole family into El Sharkat prison in Mosul and stole everything we had,” he said.
“[They]
separated my 14-year-old son and me from my wife, daughter and our
handicapped child. I thought they would kill my son and me, and I did
not know what would happen to my family. After four days they took my
son and me to another prison, in Kirkuk, where we were for five days
until they released us. In the meantime, [my wife] had been released
from prison because of our handicapped child. She took our daughter and
our handicapped child to a church in Kirkuk. This is where we were
reunited.”
Fearing for their lives, they fled to Beirut, but he
said his daughter has psychological trauma and that they will never go
back: “We escaped death by a miracle … Next time we will not survive.”