By America magazine (The Jesuit Review)
Kevin Clarke
January 3, 2020
Following the news reports last night that eventually confirmed that a U.S. drone strike on Jan. 2 had killed Qasem Soleimani, leader of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force, and associates including Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy head of the Iran-backed Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces, I found myself hoping that someone in the Trump administration was remembering the perilous status of the Christian remnant in northern Iraq.
Kevin Clarke
January 3, 2020
Following the news reports last night that eventually confirmed that a U.S. drone strike on Jan. 2 had killed Qasem Soleimani, leader of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force, and associates including Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy head of the Iran-backed Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces, I found myself hoping that someone in the Trump administration was remembering the perilous status of the Christian remnant in northern Iraq.
Christians in
Nineveh province have just begun over the last year or so to trickle
back to communities that had been devastated first by ISIS then by the
Iraqi and U.S. coalition forces that drove ISIS—if not out of the
country, then at least back underground. The forces which helped defeat
ISIS over two years of fighting included the same Shiite militia that
had been targeted by the Trump administration over the last week.
While
the United States prepares itself for reprisals, I wonder if any
attention is being paid to the vulnerability of the region’s remnant
Christians.
Some of these militias were built locally from volunteers who emerged from Nineveh’s Christian and Shabak communities (the
Shabak are an ethno-religious group, primarily Shiite, long resident in
northern Iraq); some militias came north to Nineveh to fight ISIS from
Shiite strongholds in the south of Iraq. They had been at first welcomed
because they often took the lead in the combat that finally suppressed
the ISIS extremists by the end of 2017.
The militias, known as popular mobilization forces (P.M.F.),
helped liberate Christian villages and towns, then remained to become a
new, at times menacing presence in Nineveh. Some halfhearted efforts
have been made to remove them or contain their power, but the militias
remain out of the control of the central government in Baghdad. Many of
the militias are clearly following orders issued in Tehran.
When I visited the region in October 2018,
meeting with Assyrian, Syriac Catholic and Orthodox leaders and average
Christians, many told me how tired they were of being treated as
second-class citizens in their own country, even in Kurdistan, where
thousands found refuge from the ISIS rampage. Frequently blamed for acts
from embargos to air strikes conducted by Western powers, they worried
about the lingering threat from the “shaved beards,” members of ISIS who
melted back into the local Sunni population, often literally after
shaving off the beards required by their extremist interpretation of
Islamic law.
Christians
have just begun to trickle back to communities that had been devastated
first by ISIS then by the Iraqi and U.S. coalition forces that drove
out ISIS.
But
they were also deeply concerned about the rising power and presence of
the Shiite militias, especially in towns that formally were
predominantly Christian but were rapidly transitioning to Shiite Muslim
control. Many communities are uneasily shared with Shabak moving in from
the countryside and with members of the P.M.F. and their families,
apparently settling into Nineveh permanently. Some of these militia
groups are now being directly targeted by the United States. How will
they retaliate?
While the United States prepares itself for reprisals, it is an open question if any measures are being taken to respond to the vulnerability of the region’s remnant Christians. Iraq’s Christian community has been devastated by decades of conflict between Iraq and Western powers, beginning with the ground and air campaigns of the 1990s, ordered by George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, and accelerating in the aftermath of George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq in 2003. Once nearly 10 percent of Iraq’s population, Christians were counted in the millions; now they can be counted in the thousands.
While the United States prepares itself for reprisals, it is an open question if any measures are being taken to respond to the vulnerability of the region’s remnant Christians. Iraq’s Christian community has been devastated by decades of conflict between Iraq and Western powers, beginning with the ground and air campaigns of the 1990s, ordered by George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, and accelerating in the aftermath of George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq in 2003. Once nearly 10 percent of Iraq’s population, Christians were counted in the millions; now they can be counted in the thousands.
When I was in Iraq a little over a year ago, a Jesuit priest joined a
conversation about how to restore Nineveh’s Christians. “We can’t just
rebuild houses,” he told me in the city of Erbil. “We have to rebuild
community,” he said, expressing a hope to restore normalcy between the
Christians and Shabak Shiites who had once been neighbors.
At the
end of 2019, that delicate process had been underway and the imperiled
Christian minority was just starting to get back on its feet in Nineveh.
But an expanded conflict in Iraq between Iran and the United States
could provoke reprisals from their Sunni and Shiite neighbors that will
ultimately put an end to Christianity in Iraq. Let us hope someone in
Washington is working on a contingency plan to prevent that, as the
United States seems on a course to a new and undeclared war in the
Middle East.