By The Telegraph
Colin Freeman
With armed police outside and CCTV cameras within, St Joseph's Chaldean Catholic Church in Baghdad does its best to protect its worshippers from the dangers of modern-day Iraq.
Colin Freeman
With armed police outside and CCTV cameras within, St Joseph's Chaldean Catholic Church in Baghdad does its best to protect its worshippers from the dangers of modern-day Iraq.
But as the rows of empty pews
show, most of its congregation have opted for altogether safer sanctuary
abroad. Of the 5,000 families that the church once tended to, only 150
now remain after a mass migration in the last decade to Europe and
America.
"They feel there is no peace, law or justice here in
Baghdad, and that our country has become a land of militias," said
Father Nadheer Dako, St Joseph's parish priest, after a Sunday morning
service that drew just 25 people to a church built for 1,000.
Father
Dako has just returned to Baghdad after a six-year posting to the Holy
Family Roman Catholic Church in Ealing, west London, where many exiled
Iraqi Christians now live. His flock there is now 350 families strong -
more than twice what remains in Baghdad.
The shrinking parish at
St Joseph's - one of only a handful of churches now open in Iraq's
capital - is just the latest sign of the mass exodus of Iraq's Christian
population. In the lawlessness and sectarianism that has prevailed
since the fall of Saddam Hussein, nearly four fifths of the 1.5
million-strong community have left, and in recent years, church leaders
have warned that a time might come when none were left at all.
They had hoped that the defeat of the Islamic State in Mosul and gradual security improvements in Baghdad would have stemmed the tide. If St Joseph's is anything to go by, however, the mere prospect of a future free of car bombs and kidnap gangs is no longer enough to make people stay.
They had hoped that the defeat of the Islamic State in Mosul and gradual security improvements in Baghdad would have stemmed the tide. If St Joseph's is anything to go by, however, the mere prospect of a future free of car bombs and kidnap gangs is no longer enough to make people stay.
"It is true that people are no longer getting kidnapped as
much, and the Islamic State is gone," said Nasib Hana Jabril, 42, a St
Joseph's parishioner. "But the infrastructure of the country has been
ruined, and people want a better future, not so much for themselves but
for their children."
The exodus is less
pronounced in northern Iraq, where some have now returned to historic
Christian-majority towns like Qaraqosh, which was over-run by the
Islamic State in 2014. But while there is a determination to maintain a
foothold there - Qaraqosh was first settled by Christians in the 4th
century - there is more nervousness about Baghdad, where Christians are
now a tiny minority.
Quite aside from the capital's big city crime
problems, religiously-mixed Baghdad is still likely to be the first
flashpoint for any renewed sectarian violence, which saw several
churches attacked a decade ago. Unlike Iraq's Muslims, the country's
Christians also lack traditional tribal networks, which act as rallying
points for self-defence.
"We have no tribe here, so if things go
wrong, there is nobody here to help us," added Mr Jabril. Another
problem, though, is that for many families, a tipping point has simply
been reached where more of their relatives live outside of Iraq than
inside.
When regaled with tales of how much better life is in the
likes of Britain, Sweden or the US, it is hard not to feel tempted. It
is not just about fears of persecution, but more mundane concerns like
the absence of decent schools, according to Father Dako.
"Returning
here from London after six years, I've noticed how the quality of
education in Baghdad has gone down in nearly all the primary schools,"
he said. "The new generation just have very little hope of making a life
here anymore."
Exactly how many Christians still live in Baghdad
is not known, although in Father Dako's district of Karrada - one of
three main Christian neighbourhoods - there were originally 10,000
families.
The fear is they may now end up like the city's Jewish
community, which died out altogether after Ba'athist pogroms in 1969.
Calls by local bishops to tough it out and preserve the city's Christian
heritage have met with accusations of hypocrisy.
"A lot of the
bishops have sent their own families abroad," said Hana Samoul, 45,
whose nephew was kidnapped and murdered by a militia, and who hopes to
move to Detroit. "Why should they expect us to stay?"
One
parishioner who has heeded the bishops' call is Mahran Avedisian, an
engineer, who has decided to stay despite having siblings in Canada, the
US and Sweden. "I love my country, and if I left, the candle of our
religion would be going out," he said, after attending a recent Sunday
church service at St Joseph's.
He hopes that his four young
children - dressed in their Sunday best clothes - will grow up as part
of a new generation of Baghdad Christians.
But whether that prayer
will be answered, even Father Dako does not know. "Will there still be a
Christian community here in Baghdad in 2050?" he said. That is hard to say.