The residents of Qaraqosh, Iraq, can borrow books again from the 
reopened Christian library which was burnt and partially destroyed 
during the occupation of the town by Islamic State/Daesh.
Islamic State's invasion of the region forcefully displaced tens of thousands of Christian families. IS militants intentionally destroyed the villages and homes of thousands of Christians, as well as burning their churches and libraries.
Islamic State's invasion of the region forcefully displaced tens of thousands of Christian families. IS militants intentionally destroyed the villages and homes of thousands of Christians, as well as burning their churches and libraries.
When people returned to their hometown after its 
liberation, they found most of the library books burnt or stolen. First,
 with the help of church youth volunteers, dust and ashes were cleaned 
off the surviving books. People were eager to bring life back to the 
library and create a cultural and educational hub there.
Under the
 supervision of Fr Duraid of the Syriac Catholic Church in Qaraqosh and 
with the financial support of Open Doors' local partner organisation, 
the reconstruction of the library was completed within two months and it
 opened its doors to visitors again. Fr Duraid said: "It rose from the 
black ruins and demolition debris to a cultural centre. We dream that it
 will be a space where intellectuals, students, authors, poets and other
 readers from our village can meet or do research."
The library is
 part of the Christian centre for social and cultural activities in 
Qaraqosh. Seminars and art exhibitions are held at the centre, as well 
as Christian education and other church-related activities. The library 
has been named in honour of Fr Louis Qasab, widely known as a highly 
educated and loved priest from Qaraqosh.
According to a member of 
the church committee, Labib al Katib, the restored library will help to 
educate the younger generation: "I believe the library is very important
 for motivating people to read and become better educated. Despite huge 
destruction that still exists around us, people have already started to 
enquire about this library for their scientific research or studies. We 
worked hard to renovate it, to turn it into a centre where educated 
youth, authors, readers and students will get together."
The 
modern, spacious design of the library has a big and comfortable reading
 hall.  The books' categories include old manuscripts, religion, 
science, fiction, politics and children's literature, and there are 
Arabic, English, French and German sections - around 650 books in total.
  
"We still lack books on philosophy, psychology and religion, as
 well as modern literature, novels and popular books," Fr Duraid said. 
"We also need dictionaries and a bigger diversity of French and English 
books. Especially the latter, since we have a few families who came back
 from Europe to Qaraqosh after its liberation and their children got 
used to reading books written in English."
The next stage is to 
have access to the internet and digitalise the entire collection as well
 as to get online PDF books. The improved facilities will include 
computers and printers. The staff is planning to visit schools, promote 
the library and encourage teachers to hold reading competitions in order
 to motivate children and students to read more and make a full use of 
the library.
The town of Qaraqosh has the largest Christian 
population in the Nineveh Plains, Northern Iraq. According to local 
churches, over 5,100 Christian families have returned there since the 
restoration of the homes began.
Iraq is number 13 on the Open 
Doors' World Watch List, a ranking of 50 countries where it is most 
difficult to leave as a Christian.
Islamic extremism is still a 
problem in Iraq. Although the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) have 
lost territory in Iraq, their ideology remains. Many of the militants 
have simply blended back into the general population.
Many 
families who were forced to flee their homes by IS have been able to 
return to the Nineveh Plain and have begun to rebuild their lives and 
communities.