By Catholic Herald
The Great Al-Tahira Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Bakhdida remains charred black inside, five years after the Islamic State plundered and set it aflame; however, in 2020 the Syriac Catholic cathedral will be restored as Iraq’s largest Christian community fights to rebuild and regain what was lost.
The Great Al-Tahira Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Bakhdida remains charred black inside, five years after the Islamic State plundered and set it aflame; however, in 2020 the Syriac Catholic cathedral will be restored as Iraq’s largest Christian community fights to rebuild and regain what was lost.
“It is a very significant church because it was built from the
donations of local people, agriculture workers,” Fr. Georges Jahola, a
parish priest from Bakhdida, told CNA.
Bakhdida, also known as Qaraqosh, is located 20 miles southeast of
Mosul. Fr Jahola said that the local Christians hope that in the future
their town will be referred to as as Bakhdida, the Aramaic and more
historic name of their town, rather than Qaraqosh, a Turkish name that
came from the Ottoman Empire.
The cathedral in Iraq’s Nineveh Plains was constructed from 1932-1948
as Catholic farmers donated each year from their harvest, the priest
explained. The Great Al-Tahira served a growing Christian community,
until the Islamic State turned the cathedral into an indoor shooting
range from 2014-2016.
After Bakhdida’s liberation from the Islamic State in 2016, Masses
resumed in the damaged cathedral as Christians returned to rebuild their
community. Aid to the Church in Need committed to completely restore
the cathedral’s fire-damaged interior in late 2019.
Christianity has been present in the Nineveh plain in Iraq – between Mosul and Iraqi Kurdistan – since the first century.
Rebuilding the 6,936 damaged homes in Bakhdida began in earnest in
May 2017, and since then more than half have been completed, Fr. Jahola
said.
The latest rebuilding statistics for Bakhdida divide the rebuilt
homes into three categories: completed destroyed, partially destroyed,
and partially damaged.
Of the 2,100 homes that were burnt and partially destroyed in
Bakhdida, 818 homes have been rebuilt and 1,282 remain in need of
repair. Thirty-two of the homes that were completely destroyed have been
totally rebuilt, while 30 such houses remain. A little over half of the
4,774 homes that were partially damaged by the Islamic State in the
city have been repaired.
“With the help of many NGOs we were able to rebuild many houses,” he
said, noting the contributions of Aid to the Church in Need, Samaritan’s
Purse, the Salt Foundation, SOS Chrétiens d’Orient, Malteser
International, Fraternity in Iraq, and others to Bakhdida.
The Hungarian government office for Aid of Persecuted Christians
announced in October a partnership with U.S. Agency for International
Development to contribute to the rebuilding of homes in Bakhdida and
Sinjar in northern Iraq.
“It is indeed the cradle of Christianity,” Tristan Azbej, Hungarian
State Secretary for the Aid of Persecuted Christians told CNA.
“What we have partnered for is that Hungary would provide donations
of local Syriac rite Orthodox Church to reconstruct close to 100 local
homes and USAID will provide donations and provision of reconstruction
of the market center for the local businesses of the town Qaraqosh
Baghdeda,” he said.
Fr. Jahola told CNA that Bakhdida needs news jobs. “Young people have
no work, so some of them go to Erbil or leave Iraq,” he said. “It isn’t
easy. Also because Iraq now is in an unstable political situation.”
At least 400 people have died since anti-government protests began across Iraq in October.
Among the Syriac Catholic, Syriac Orthodox, Chaldean, Armenian,
Assyrian, and Muslim commities in Bakhdida, there was one reconstruction
committee that has worked together to manage rebuilding, Jahola said.
The Al-Tahira Cathedral was one of four churches in Bakhdida to be
desecrated and burnt by the Islamic State: two Syriac Catholic churches
and two Syriac Orthodox.
Fr. Jahola is the parish priest of the Syriac Catholic Church of Mar
Behnam and Mart Sarah, a desecrated church that was renovated and
rededicated on the feast of the Assumption of Mary this year.
“I think it is very important to support this town because it is the
biggest symbol of Christianity in Iraq. Until now, we kept it as a
Christian city, but we do not know what the future will bring for us,”
he said.
An estimated 225,000 Christians remain in Iraq, according to In Defence of Christians.