By The Christian Post
Samuel Smith
Iraqi Christian groups are responding after grants they were awarded last month from the U.S. Agency for International Development to help restore the Nineveh Plains and strengthen communities victimized by the Islamic State (IS) were criticized by media.
Samuel Smith
Iraqi Christian groups are responding after grants they were awarded last month from the U.S. Agency for International Development to help restore the Nineveh Plains and strengthen communities victimized by the Islamic State (IS) were criticized by media.
Representatives from
the Catholic University in Erbil (affiliated with the Chaldean Catholic
Church) and the Shlama Foundation, a small Ankawa-based Christian
nonprofit, are defending their organizations’ USAID grants after a
lengthy ProPublica article questioned their validity.
The article
in question was published Nov. 4 and titled “How Mike Pence’s Office
Meddled in Foreign Aid to Reroute Money to Favored Christian Groups.”
Experts cited in the article take issue with the role that Vice
President Pence’s office and political appointees played in ensuring
USAID funding goes to Iraq-based Christian organizations trying to
rebuild their communities.
Through interviews with 40 current and
former U.S. officials and aid professionals, the article aimed to “shed
new light on the success of Pence and his allies in influencing the
government’s long-standing process for awarding foreign aid.” Concern
was expressed by “career officials” that USAID could be in violation of
the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution for “favoring” Iraqi
Christian groups for grants in a predominantly Muslim country.
But
some religious freedom advocates say they feel that criticism of USAID
funding going to these groups is an attempt to turn America’s bipartisan desire to aid religious minority communities decimated by IS and on the verge of extinction into a “partisan” issue.
“It
is irrational, immoral and inconsistent with international human rights
theory and policy to argue that the United States should not be helping
Christians or a religious group targeted with religious genocide by
ISIS,” international human rights lawyer Nina Shea, a senior fellow with
the conservative think tank Hudson Institute, told The Christian Post.
“Their
conclusion is that the US should not be helping genocide, religious
genocide survivors because they are a religious group even though they
were targeted for religious reasons.”
New Partnerships Initiative
New Partnerships Initiative
Among other things, the ProPublica article called into question grants awarded to CUE and Shlama Foundation.
Both CUE and Shlama Foundation were announced last month as part of the first wave of grant recipients for the USAID’s New Partnerships Initiative. A combined total of $4 million was awarded between CUE, the Shlama Foundation and four other local organizations.
The Shlama Foundation will use the grant as it partners with solar companies to conduct solar training for engineers in the Nineveh Plains, who will conduct assessments and oversee the installation of solar systems in 100 homes, solar water pumps for 30 farms and solar street lights in public spaces.
The Shlama Foundation will use the grant as it partners with solar companies to conduct solar training for engineers in the Nineveh Plains, who will conduct assessments and oversee the installation of solar systems in 100 homes, solar water pumps for 30 farms and solar street lights in public spaces.
The grant comes as consistent electricity has been a struggle for many across Iraq.
CUE,
which was founded in 2015, received $700,000 to provide classes in
business language and computer software for widows, victims and former
captives of IS.
The ProPublica article reported a concern with the
fact that USAID political appointees were involved in the grant
approval process for the NPI grants. The article also made mention of
the fact that both CUE and Shlama Foundation had no prior experience
partnering with USAID.
But the NPI program was created
specifically to help small local organizations that have never partnered
with USAID. Through NPI, USAID will “direct awards to new and
underutilized local organizations.”
“NPI
is by design a capacity-building tool to help empower responsible local
aid providers who do not have prior experience with unique USAID
reporting systems,” CUE Vice-Chancellor Stephen Rasche told CP. “The
intention is that by empowering local entities that efficiencies can be
improved and the enormous overhead costs of US staffers can be reduced.”
The
NPI was launched as some organizations and human rights activists
became upset with USAID’s grant process that they felt was largely
“dysfunctional.”
Before the Trump administration came to power in
2017, USAID funding for Iraq was funneled through the United Nations.
But many advocates spoke out about how aid funding that was sent to the U.N. was not making its way to help thousands of displaced Christians.
Archbishop
Bashar Warda of Erbil, whose Kurdistan-based archdiocese sheltered and
fed thousands upon thousands of displaced Christians afraid they would
be persecuted at U.N. displacement camps, was on the forefront of speaking out about how little to no aid was going to help the displaced families his archdiocese was caring for.
However,
the ProPublica piece reports that some officials felt that Warda and
his allies downplayed the impact that U.N. projects were having on
Christian communities in Iraq.
Although the U.N. did fund some projects in predominantly Christian communities, critics contend
that the projects the U.N. funded in resettling Christian areas were
nothing more than cosmetic in nature and did little to substantially
benefit the beleaguered community.
In the predominantly Christian
town of Bartella, Shea said, U.N. projects did things like repair a
canopy on a municipal building and renovate the “mayor’s building.”
“I've
been in a meeting where a UN [representative] admitted to fowling up,”
one source with knowledge of the situation in Iraq who chose to remain
unnamed told CP. “I've been in meetings where the U.N. said we simply
will not do anything to help these communities because they do a better
job than we do.”
In October 2017, Pence announced
that President Donald Trump ordered the State Department to enable
USAID funding to go directly to faith-based organizations involved in
actively supporting Christians and other religious minorities persecuted
by the Islamic State.
But in 2018, local Iraqi groups like CUE,
the Shlama Foundation and even the Yazidi NGO Yazda had their USAID
grant applications rejected. Instead, USAID awarded grants to larger
organizations based outside of Iraq that had previously partnered with
USAID. Such groups include Catholic Relief Services, Heartland Alliance
International and the International Organization for Migration.
Rasche said that all proposals put forward by local Iraqi groups applicants were rejected.
“All
of this was directly contrary to the stated policy of the VP and the
advertised intention of the [funding],” Rasche, who also serves as
Warda’s spokesperson, said. “There was a strong feeling by applicants
that the process had been managed in a way which was highly misleading,
even dishonest, to the applicants.”
“None of this was published in
[ProPublica’s] piece,” Rasche added. “But instead they simply described
us as having been previously ‘rejected’, indicating a lack of
capability which we think is wholly unfair and not at all reflective of
the grossly mismanaged reality of the [USAID] process.”
In July 2018, Warda spoke out again saying that many displaced Iraqi Christians were “worse off now than we were two years ago.”
“We
were, again, just frustrated that we had wasted our limited time and
resources believing that help might actually come this time,” Rasche
explained. “Instead we found ourselves once more as collateral damage in
the continuing dysfunction and broken nature of Washington politics,
and our disappointment at the time was with USAID as an entity, not any
particular person.”
A Shlama Foundation spokesperson told CP that
Shlama Foundation was not considered large enough to qualify for a 2018
USAID grant.
“The
only aid that the affected people were aware of was coming from the
local organizations,” the Shlama Foundation spokesperson stated. “The
recent specialized grant released to support local organizations more
directly has increased awareness of USAID among local communities
drastically.”
Are these groups qualified to receive USAID grants?
The organizations detest any notion that they are unqualified to receive USAID funding.
The
Shlama Foundation has already completed 185 solar projects in the area,
five recent water restoration projects and one large irrigation
expansion to date.
“Shlama has also rebuilt seven homes, six
businesses and two road construction projects along with a host of
humanitarian efforts throughout the Nineveh Plains,” a Shlama
spokesperson stated.
As for CUE, the unnamed source told CP that the university is a “perfectly functional place.”
“It’s
worked with the Diocese of Erbil, which I've worked with quite closely
over the years,” the source said. “And the fact of the matter is that
the Church, particularly the Archdiocese of Erbil, ran the entire
refugee operation for the Christian refugees [in Kurdistan]. The point
is that the church was taking care of people at a higher level than the
U.N. was [but on a smaller scale]. And you're gonna tell me they're not
qualified to run a $700,000 grant?”
Is there an Establishment Clause issue?
Experts
cited in the ProPublica article voiced concern that the
administration’s focus on providing aid to Christian groups in a
predominantly Muslim nation could be a violation of the Establishment
Clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits the U.S. from
establishing an official religion.
Murad Ismael, head of the
Yazidi humanitarian organization Yazda, asserted that the Trump
administration is helping Yazidis, another religious minority decimated
by IS in Iraq, as much as it is Christians.
“I
think this current administration has supported Yazidis, both
diplomatically and with aid, more than anybody else,” Ismael told CP.
“We are not Christians and we have been supported. So I think helping
the religious minorities who have suffered significantly is really
important for American values that people need this help and people
appreciate it too.”
Although Yazda has not received an award
through the USAID's NPI initiative, Yazda is a USAID subgrantee
receiving funds through IOM and Heartland Alliance. Yazda is using the
grant money to support a number of schools and aims to provide grants to
launch over 200 small businesses for the Yazidi population in Sinjar.
“The
funding in Sinjar mostly comes from USAID and from Germans,” Ismael
added. “There are other organizations, of course, that are helping, but
USAID and Germany are providing a good amount of funding for Sinjar.”
As
a human rights lawyer, Shea doesn’t buy the argument that targeting
Christians and other religious minority communities for aid in a
predominantly Muslim country violates the Establishment Clause.
“[T]heir
entire [Christian] community was being targeted with genocide to be
eradicated and was perilously close to eradication,” Shea said. “Between
80 and 90 percent of that community in Iraq is now gone. The Christian
community was forced to flee for their lives. This happened since 2003.”
Shea
also argues that there is a long tradition in the U.S. of providing aid
to persecuted religious minority communities worldwide.
“[T]he
U.S. Holocaust Museum itself was paid for by U.S. government funds,
which is basically a memorial to the victims of the Jewish Holocaust,”
she noted. “Our aid programs, our government funding programs are
replete with examples of us helping people who have a religious
identity, and who were targeted for religious reasons.”
Shea
pointed out that there was much bipartisan support for measures passed
by federal lawmakers in recent years that not only called Islamic
State’s reign of terror against Christians, Yazidis and other religious
groups a “genocide” but also called for the U.S. to provide support to religious minorities persecuted by IS.
“It
passed both the House and the Senate unanimously,” the unnamed source
with knowledge of the situation in Iraq explained. “It didn’t lose a
vote anywhere. That doesn’t happen in Washington. It has happened on two
things: H.Con.Res 75 — this is genocide — and H.R. 390 — we should do something about it.”