By Catholic News Service
The new Chaldean Catholic archbishop of Mosul, Iraq, faces a challenge of rebuilding, but not just structurally. What is also needed, he said, is a rebuilding of minds, hearts, coexistence and peace.
The new Chaldean Catholic archbishop of Mosul, Iraq, faces a challenge of rebuilding, but not just structurally. What is also needed, he said, is a rebuilding of minds, hearts, coexistence and peace.
One of the most important challenges facing his new mission,
Archbishop Najib Mikhael Moussa told Catholic News Service, is “to give
hope to our families — all Christian families, not only Chaldeans — to
come back to Mosul.”
He also said it was “important to rebuild the bridge” of coexistence
between Christians and Muslims as well as with Yazidis and all
minorities “and to rebuild the confidence and also peace.”
“We have the same blood and the same tears. That’s why we should live
together, to rebuild our future together,” he said. “When we love each
other, the confidence and also the future will be rebuilt.”
“It’s very important to have good relationships among all the
citizens and at the same time to protect our Christian rights,” added
the archbishop, who was installed Jan. 25.
Rebuilding Mosul and the Ninevah Plain pertains not just to
reconstruction and infrastructure, he said. Education also needs to be
rebuilt, from the curriculum in the schools to the preaching in the
mosques.
Moussa noted that “the population for the last four years has been
influenced by ISIS” and “this kind of ideology is very dangerous for the
future.”
“That’s why we should start with the heart and the mind.”
“It’s not easy,” the archbishop acknowledged, but he stressed that
many Muslims in Mosul “are very helpful and understand that ISIS is not
the solution for the future and violence is not the solution for
humanity.”
Before Mosul fell to Islamic State militants in 2014, it had a
Christian population of around 35,000; now, “there are no more than
maybe 10 families” living there, Moussa said. Additionally, there are
around 50-80 Christians attending college or working in Mosul, but they
do not remain in the city at night.
“Most of the families can’t go back to Mosul because they have no
more houses,” he said. They also need jobs and want to give their
children a future.
However, he said: “Forgiveness is very important. God helps us. The Holy Spirit helps us.”
Although there are no exact figures, he estimates that around 300-350
families have returned to the nearby Ninevah Plain. That area had
Iraq’s largest concentration of Christians, but they, too, were uprooted
by IS in the summer of 2014.
For now, the archbishop is working from the nearby city of Karamlis.
He noted that his counterparts — the Syriac Catholic and Syriac Orthodox
archbishops — also hope to return their seats to Mosul. Moussa said the
archbishops are working together as well as with the Assyrian and other
Christian churches.
Moussa said he is hoping “for the help of the international community
to help Mosul rebuild” and “to help us, especially, to support these
families, to rebuild their future.”
Noting that Iraqi Christians feel “very near to the church around the
world,” Moussa told Catholic News Service, “God bless all the people
who try to help us with prayers and support.”