By Episcopal News Service
Lynette Wilson
At a cost of $5 each, chicks are helping Iraq’s Christian chicken farmers rebuild their livelihoods in the Nineveh Plains, a region historically home to Jesus’ followers dating back to his time on Earth.
Lynette Wilson
At a cost of $5 each, chicks are helping Iraq’s Christian chicken farmers rebuild their livelihoods in the Nineveh Plains, a region historically home to Jesus’ followers dating back to his time on Earth.
With the cooperation of the farmers, Stand With Iraqi Christians and the nonpartisan, ecumenical International Christian Concern,
 the first of two chicken farms are up and running as part of an 
economic revitalization program aimed at reestablishing farmers in this 
area of Iraq known as “Chicken City” prior to its occupation and 
destruction by ISIS, or the Islamic State.
“The SWIC initiative in chicken farming speaks to the need for 
sustainable economic development in a region devastated by violent 
conflict. The local commercial infrastructure, being destroyed during 
the fight to reclaim territory from ISIS, needs to be restored to its 
former levels for job creation and food production,” said the Rev. 
Robert D. Edmunds, The Episcopal Church’s Middle East partnership 
officer, in a press release. “This is a far-reaching effort to start to reclaim hope for a prosperous future for the people of the Nineveh Plain.”
A U.S.-led coalition invaded
 Iraq in 2003 overthrowing Saddam Hussein’s government and initiating an
 eight-year war. A dictator, Hussein ruled the country for a quarter 
century and was convicted of crimes against humanity and hanged in 2006.
Throughout the Iraq War, insurgents targeted and terrorized Iraqi Christians,
 whose numbers fell from 1.4 million at the start of the war to less 
than 250,000 today. When the United States completed its troop 
withdrawal in 2011, the then-fledgling Islamic State, began to take 
hold.
Still, some Christians have chosen to remain, including chicken farmers in the Nineveh Plains.
“In Iraq, 80 percent of Christians from some of the oldest Christian 
communities on earth were driven from their ancient communities by ISIS.
 Yet, those who remain are extraordinarily courageous, resilient, 
faithful, and are desperately in need our friendship and help,” said the
 Rev. Christopher Bishop, founder and president of Stand With Iraqi 
Christians and rector of St. Martin’s Episcopal Church in Radnor, Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia suburb.
“The Western Church and societies must understand that without our 
assistance, the impending loss of these communities would constitute a 
humanitarian, political, cultural and economic catastrophic for Iraq, 
and an irreparable wound to the world-wide body of Christ,” Bishop said 
in an email to Episcopal News Service.
Before ISIS’s invasion, the northern Iraq city of Qaraqosh, located about 20 miles southeast of Mosul, was home to Iraq’s largest Christian community and had some 100 poultry farms. ISIS killed or displaced the city’s residents and destroyed their farms.
Before ISIS’s invasion, the northern Iraq city of Qaraqosh, located about 20 miles southeast of Mosul, was home to Iraq’s largest Christian community and had some 100 poultry farms. ISIS killed or displaced the city’s residents and destroyed their farms.
Today, however, as conditions improve, chicken farmers are returning 
to the area. Stand With Iraqi Christians and International Christian 
Concern plan to help farmers establish two more farms in July and 
another four by October. Each farm creates or supports 134 jobs, 
including farm laborers, chicken sellers, hatchery workers, butchers, 
grocers, feed sellers, veterinarians and truck drivers, and generates 
$48,000 in income during each growing period, according to Stand With 
Iraqi Christians.
“They’re chicken farmers, they know what they are doing; they’ve been
 raising chickens for a long time, and what they want is to reestablish 
their chicken businesses. What they lack is the startup capital to 
reestablish the infrastructure,” said Buck Blanchard, a Stand With Iraqi
 Christians board member and the missioner for outreach and mission for 
the Episcopal Church in Colorado, in a telephone interview with ENS.
“Once they get their chicken farms back up and running, they’re 
capable of running a successful business and supporting their families,”
 he said.
Blanchard visited Iraq with Bishop in October 2018. Bishop launched 
Stand With Iraqi Christians in 2015 as a grassroots mission to address 
Iraqi Christians’ struggles; through friendship and material aid, it 
supports the right of Christians and their communities in Iraq to 
survive and thrive.
A former filmmaker, Bishop documented his first trip to Iraq in a 36-minute video, “Where is Our Place?”
The Anglican Church in Iraq is one of 14 Christian communities under the Anglican Diocese of Cyprus and the Gulf. Regarding Stand With Iraqi Christians’ economic revitalization efforts in the region, the Rt. Rev. Michael Lewis, the diocese’s bishop, said: “I think what you are doing is fantastic. So, the primary thing is ‘thanks.’ Another thing I’d like to add is tell your friends, get more involved, spread in your state, spread across the country.”
The Episcopal Church’s 79th General Convention adopted a resolution
 in support of Iraq’s Christians. In part, it resolved “that the General
 Convention encourages The Episcopal Church, working in partnership with
 the Anglican Diocese of Cyprus and the Gulf, to provide prayers, 
friendship, and material support as determined by the needs and 
aspirations of Iraq’s Christians, as an expression of our love and 
recognition of their religious, cultural, and humanitarian inclusion in 
the sacred Body of Christ.”
Bishop, on Stand With Iraqi Christians’ behalf, drafted the initial resolution.
“The presiding bishop’s staff and the Global Partnership Team at The 
Episcopal Church have been immensely helpful in raising up Iraq as a 
long neglected and extremely time-sensitive focus of The Episcopal 
Global Mission commitments,” Bishop said in an email to ENS. “As 
Anglicans, Episcopalians are both free of the long-standing religious 
tensions and conflicts roiling Iraq and are known world-wide as honest 
and effective mission partners. As Americans, we have a special 
responsibility to extend the hand of friendship and support. We are 
uniquely equipped, and have a unique opportunity, to make the crucial 
difference in walking with our sisters and brothers in Iraq out of a 
crucifixion into a resurrection story.”