By Daily Sabah
With their hometown cleared of terrorist elements, the Chaldean Christian community in southeastern Turkey has returned to restore their local church.
With their hometown cleared of terrorist elements, the Chaldean Christian community in southeastern Turkey has returned to restore their local church.
Eight
Chaldean families were forced to leave their home in the 1990s due to
escalating terror in the region. Thanks to the Turkish government's
"Return to Village" program, the community recently returned to their
village, known as Cevizağacı (Walnut Tree) in the Beytüşşebap district
of Şırnak.
Turkey started the "Return to Village" program in the
early 2000s so people can return to areas that were once plagued by
terrorism but are now safe and secure.
The families, glad to be
back in their peaceful village, wanted to renovate the Mor Yuhanon
Church, where they had worshiped in the past but had been destroyed over
time. Angel funding came from a fellow villager named Celebi Yaramis,
who now lives in Europe and comes to visit his hometown once a year.
Yaramis offered the necessary financial support for the church's
reconstruction.
Metin Yaramis, a local leader in Cevizağacı, told
Anadolu Agency that back in the 1990s the village had as many as 45
households. "We came back to our village with peace and rebuilt our
houses," he said. In this village, whose residents follow the
centuries-old eastern Chaldean Christian faith and speak Kurdish as well
as Turkish, Metin Yaramis said they enjoy support from both neighboring
settlements and the state.
In the summertime, nearly 100 families
living in Europe come to visit the village, he said. "In winter, only
eight families live here." "Everyone here welcomed us restoring the
church," he stressed. "Our Muslim brothers are also helping to restore
the church. There's no distinction here."
Zarife Yaramis, a former
resident of Cevizağacı now living in Belgium, said she is happy to see
the village alive again. "I'm glad to be in my village, my kids also
love it here. I have very nice neighbors." Aydın Yaramis, a teenager
living in the village, said: "Before the church, we said our prayers at
home," adding that he would love to see a school in the village.
"There's peace here, like never before. Soon it may be a better place
than Europe," he added.
Cemil Acar, from a neighboring village,
said he and the residents of Cevizağacı enjoy a good relationship. "Now
they'll have a place where they can worship in peace. We're pleased with
them and may Allah be pleased as well."