By The Catholic Register
Dennis Sadowski
Dennis Sadowski
Chaldean Christians in northern Iraq are determined to continue their 2,000-year-long mission despite the near-deadly blow inflicted by Islamic State forces and new challenges from nongovernment militias, said a priest ministering in the region.
"The situation is so complicated in Iraq, but our faith and 
principles are that Christian religious communities should be there. Our
 mission is to be there and not in another place," Chaldean Father 
Thabet Habib told Catholic News Service July 17.
"We have faith at this time. We feel the hope. That gives me a sense 
to be optimistic," the priest said after addressing a session during day
 two of the second Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom sponsored by
 the U.S. Department of State.
Father Habib recounted a story of determination on the part of 
Christian families who were forced to flee towns and villages on Iraq's 
Ninevah Plain just ahead of advancing Islamic State forces in August 
2014 to an audience of 300 at the United States Institute of Peace. The 
session was part of a daylong look at religious freedom in development 
and humanitarian assistance.
The villages of Karamless and Teleskof, where Father Habib serves as a
 parish priest, were virtually destroyed by the Islamic State. Residents
 in the communities, located about 15 miles east of Mosul, were 
sheltered and supported by the Archdiocese of Irbil.
After coalition forces liberated much of the Ninevah Plain region in 
November 2016, about 45% of residents have returned with more expected 
in the next year, the priest said.
"We found our churches burned and desecrated and our homes burned, 
looted and destroyed," he said. "My own family home was destroyed 
completely, but still count this as our home and we are determined to 
return and rebuild."
Father Habib stressed it was important to tell the story of 
destruction and suffering so that the story is not overlooked by the 
rest of the world. He also said that since being forced to flee to Irbil
 he better understands "clearly the important place of Christianity and 
minorities to the future of Iraq."
"In this belief, I am not alone," he said. "In fact, the Iraqi 
ambassador to the United States has said Iraq without minorities is not 
Iraq."
Despite such comments, Father Habib said, minority religious 
communities, including Yazidis in the region, continue to face threats 
from nongovernment militia. He called on the Iraqi government to clamp 
down on the militia in order to assure transition to democracy in the 
country.
"In this way, we can protect and keep the ancient cultures of Iraq," he said.
Father Habib also cautioned the representatives of humanitarian and 
development agencies present, including the U.S. Agency for 
International Development, which coordinated the day's events, that they
 must not solely determine how best to rebuild a community.
"There must be honest conversation and dialogue with the people to 
define priorities and not to have all needs made by the decision of the 
donor," he said. "After this honest consultation, there is the need for 
the donor to make decisions which show the good will, moral values and 
the good name of the donor country or agency.
"Promises which are never fulfilled or always delayed, this brings 
great harm, not help. On the other hand promises which are made with 
honest intention and are fulfilled with proper focus of the people, 
reflect what is the best in us all and fill us with hope for the 
future," Father Habib added.
He particularly cited aid from the U.S.-based Knights of Columbus and
 the government of Hungary as addressing specific needs that have helped
 Karamless and Teleskof "in a flexible way that has us restore our 
communities more quickly."
"We are optimistic that they will survive," Father Habib said. "In 
other towns where we were not able to move quickly, the towns have 
remained empty and other groups have tried to take control. The future 
of these towns is not so optimistic."
In a panel discussion that followed, U.S. diplomats assigned to posts
 in Iraq and USAID staff discussed the work to rebuild communities in 
northern Iraq, many of which are home to religious minorities.
Andrew Peek, deputy assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of 
Near Eastern Affairs at the U.S. Department of State, acknowledged to 
the gathering that security threats remain for some minority religious 
communities in northern Iraq.
He and others echoed Father Habib's call for the Iraqi government to 
deliver on promises to protect persecuted religious minorities.
"It is our view that security comes both up from the bottom and down 
from the top," he said in calling for Iraqi officials to ensure that 
local police forces "reflect" the communities they serve.
Carl Anderson, CEO of the Knights of Columbus, told the assembly that
 he also witnessed security concerns in northern Iraq's Christian 
communities during a visit earlier this year.
The Knights of Columbus' role in rebuilding portions of northern Iraq
 has continued since 2014 with the organization spending $25 million to 
help in the recovery of persecuted communities in Iraq and Syria. The 
Knights and In Defense of Christians released a report in 2016 
documenting hundreds of killings of religious minorities by the Islamic 
State group in the region. The report led then-Secretary of State John 
Kerry to determine that genocide was occurring at the hands of the 
insurgents.
Anderson pointed to the actions of one nongovernment militia, the 
Popular Mobilization Forces, or PMF, as particularly troublesome.
"Our organization and others, along with the United States and other 
countries, have spent millions of dollars to assist returnees by 
targeted communities to Ninevah. But this is being threatened by the 
unaccountable PMF forces, which the government of Iraq in Baghdad seems 
unwilling or unable to control. That must change," Anderson said.
"Reports of abuse by PMF forces is common and as a result minority 
communities fear to return and every day more slip away from Iraq," he 
added.
Later, Anderson told CNS the organization is "pushing diplomatic and 
public attention on" the need for greater security for returning 
religious minorities in northern Iraq. 
"We have to keep shining the light," he said.
"We have to keep shining the light," he said.