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Author Topic: The Church in Iraq  (Read 14517 times)

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Offline poche

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The Church in Iraq
« Reply #45 on: October 10, 2014, 12:09:04 AM »
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  • The Catholic News Agency highlights the case of an Iraqi priest who has chosen to stay at his parish, just a few miles from the front lines of the Islamic State, rather than remaining safely in Rome.

    Father Ghazwan Yousif Baho divides his time between the parish in the town of Algosh and his teaching responsibilities at the Pontifical University Urbanianum in Rome. During a recent visit to Rome he was given the option of remaining there, but declined.

    "Sometimes I thought about leaving Iraq," Father Baho told CNA, but now I say, 'I don't leave my village anymore.'" He said that parishioners have been encouraged by his choice to be with them in danger.


    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=22883

    Offline poche

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    « Reply #46 on: October 16, 2014, 11:54:28 PM »
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  • Three months after a 4th-century Syriac Catholic monastery was taken over by forces of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, confirmation has been received that the monastery has been desecrated, according to a Fides news agency report.

    Islamic State forces have burned ancient manuscripts, removed crosses, and written graffiti on the walls of Mar Behnam Monastery, according to the report.

    “Anything can happen with the terrorists of the Islamic State,” said a former superior of the monastery. “They will destroy everything if not stopped.”

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=22940


    Offline poche

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    The Church in Iraq
    « Reply #47 on: October 22, 2014, 12:13:00 AM »
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  • The head of the Chaldean Catholic Church has announced that priests who have left their dioceses in Iraq face suspension.

    Patriarch Louis Raphael I Sako set a deadline of October 22 for priests who have left their posts to speak with their bishops and arrange either a return to their parishes or an approved transfer. The Chaldean Patriarch, who is struggling to maintain the Christian presence in Iraq, has said that priests are ordained to serve their people and are not free to leave in times of trouble.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=22992

    Offline poche

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    The Church in Iraq
    « Reply #48 on: October 22, 2014, 04:36:33 AM »
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  • The “ultimatum” has set the deadline for next Wednesday 22 October. By then, all Chaldean priests and monks who recently left their dioceses and monasteries and snuck off to some Western country or another without their superior’s consent, will have to speak to their bishops and heads of their communities about when and how they will return to base or about their potential transferal to other dioceses and communities. Failure to do so will result in their suspension from the priesthood and they will no longer be remunerated. The canonical measures announced last month by the Chaldean Catholic Patriarch of Babylon, Louis Raphael I Sako will be made official in an ad hoc decree approved by the permanent Synod of the Chaldean Church.

     

    The whole affair brings to light one of the most determining but less well known factors that is contributing to the extinction of thousand-year-old communities with age-old traditions in the Middle East. The apparent withering away of Christianity in ancient Mesopotamia is not only down to the Islamic State’s cut-throat jihadists, but also to priests and monks. They are the first to flee their birthplaces to “seek shelter” in the West and comfortably settle down as members of the flourishing diaspora communities. Patriarch Louis Raphael I is convinced about this. He has sent out numerous messages denouncing priests and monks who left their dioceses in the Middle East without permission. He branded these escapes as outright clerical desertion and even went as far as to publish a list of example “cases” on the Patriarchate’s website, revealing the names and surnames of the errant clerics in question. Dozens of priests and monks who were named and shamed by the Patriarch seized training sessions and trips abroad as an opportunity to request asylum in the US, Canada, Switzerland and Australia, never to return. Some of them even lied, presenting themselves as victims of Islamist threats. Now, some of them are busy arranging the escapes of their respective clans from Iraq caught in the midst of the jihadist offensive and newly-exploded sectarianism.

       

    The Primate of the Chaldean Church - Chaldeans being the most numerous of Iraq's Christians -  recalled that monks and priests have chosen to serve God and their brothers with their own lives. For this reason, they have “no justification for using the difficulties and uncertainties” of the situation in Iraq as an excuse to shirk their pastoral responsibilities and commitments linked to their vocation, when so many of their confreres “stay put in Iraq, consoling and supporting faithful” during this terrible time.

    The stories of these Chaldean priests and monks who take advantage of their positions to emigrate to wealthier and more comfortable ecclesial and worldly contexts show that pope Francis’ constant appeals to priests not to turn into holy officials or into “state clerics” extend outside the diocese of Rome too. But these cases also reveal the tensions and problems that exist in the relationship between the Eastern Churches and their respective diaspora communities which are often influential and have more resources, including financial. Bishops who head dioceses overseas welcome priests who leave for the West with open arms. In the warming messages he issued, the Patriarch names and shames members of the Episcopate who have taken in “errant clerics”, opening up golden career opportunities for them, thus violating the canonical laws in force and disrespecting the spirit of fair play toward their colleagues.

     

    For the past twenty years at least, the diaspora communities have become breeding grounds for a “nationalist” and identitarian turning point (as was the case with the Assyrian Church, the Syriac Churches and the Coptic Church). The numerous “Chaldean” circles, movements and political groups that have sprouted up as part of  the Iraqi diaspora in the US have always condemned the “arabization”  of Chaldean communities in Iraq in the days of the Baathist regime. This “mimetic” choice guaranteed many Iraqi Christians a slightly greater, though still limited, freedom of action and margins for survival. Chaldean identitarian groups operating mostly in the US, have always taken a lobby-like approach to the way they manage their relations and connections with US political circles in manner and successfully so. After the fall of Saddam,  they attempted to obtain guarantees for Christians when Britain and the US were overseeing the country’s restructuring. Now, in light of the sectarian conflict that has been shaking the Middle East and with the various ethnic and religious cleansing operations which Islamic State jihadists have set in motion, the diaspora communities are gathering together what remains of Iraq’s Chaldean communities, offering logistical support amongst other things, to those who want to leave their birthplaces and join relatives who have immigrated abroad. In September, with the input of US administration officials, the San Diego (California)-based Chaldean Catholic Eparchy of Saint Peter the Apostle, compiled a list of tens of thousands of Chaldean Christians who wanted to leave Iraq. The lists were sent to the White House directly, by Bishop Sarhad Jammo, leader of the eparchy in charge of the pastoral care of Chaldeans in the American West.

    So, as they reclaim their role as guardians of their cultural identity and community customs, the diaspora communities are promoting the umpteenth migratory wave which could lead to the disappearance of Chaldean communities from many areas where they have been present for thousands of years. An exodus which many are resorting to as a means of escaping problems, violence and persecution. But the lands most of these people are being drawn toward, promise wellbeing and higher standards of living according to the globally imposed forms of Western consumerism.

    http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/world-news/detail/articolo/medio-oriente-middle-east-oriente-medio-37061/

    Offline poche

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    The Church in Iraq
    « Reply #49 on: October 22, 2014, 04:54:55 AM »
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  • Louis Raphael I warns: Our Church risks disappearing and not just because of the jihadists
    Gianni Valente
    Rome
    “There’s no future for us if the Lord does not help us.” There’s suffering and concern in Louis Raphaël I Sako’s words. The concern of a pastor who sees that his flock is in danger and the suffering of a child of the Chaldean Church who sees Christianity’s age-long history quickly heading towards oblivion. A history that has irrigated the lands between Mesopotamia’s two rivers for millennia. And it is not just the Islamic State’s bloodthirsty jihadists he is concerned about.

     

    What can be done to stop your people’s suffering? What is your task now?

    “The priority now is to offer comfort to those who are suffering and afraid, to help everyone and above all to encourage people to persevere and remain steadfast in their faith, without leaving their land. Staying put. Those who want to of course. We do not wish to force anyone. But it is our duty to direct people towards the path laid out in the Gospel. Those who leave must be aware that the West is not a promised land, let alone Paradise.”

     

    But many just want to run away.

    “We are being tested right now. Each of us is called to look into our hearts and we may discover that the Lord’s consolation is the only source of strength and the only treasure. It is the thing that is most dear to us. But many fall victim to this leaving frenzy. They don’t even stop to think about what is really going on in their lives. They seek a future. But for those who have the gift of faith, hope for a better future cannot just be about seeking a more comfortable life.”

     

    But one bishop in the United States is negotiating with the White House to try to arrange for tens of thousands of Chaldeans to move over to the US.

    He is also not experiencing first hand what we are experiencing. In America they put baskets with asylum request forms on church altars during mass. As if the migration of thousands of Iraqi Christians to the US was something to ask God’s blessing for. That’s a strange thing to do and only confuses people’s faith. Unfortunately, some members of the clergy turn into businessmen instead of remaining shepherds of souls. They think in business instead of evangelical terms, even in relation to faithful. To some they are just numbers who can help priests beef up numbers of Catholics in the areas over which they have jurisdiction. They have them transferred from one bleak situation to another, which may even be worse in the long run. Migrants are left to their own devices and are not offered adequate pastoral care.”

    What do you wish to say to those who want to leave?

    “I repeat: each Christian needs to look inside him or herself and ask themselves what future it is they are seeking. They need to try and feel God’s love in this situation. Ask themselves what the Lord is asking from them in that moment and maybe realize that we have a future here in this devastated and blessed land of ours. And that the whole country represents our mission.

     

    When Kurdish President Barzani came to meet us with Hollande, he said to us: you must be patient, you must stay. You must learn from us Kurds who have suffered but now have rights. Learning perseverance. This would also be good for us Christians.”

     

    Meanwhile, US-based Christian groups are looking for – and claim to have found – proselytes in refugee camps. Even non-Christians.

    “This is awful. It is immoral. They take advantage of a people’s difficulties and suffering. They also think in business terms, like religious managers hunting for clients.”

     

    Armed groups passing themselves off as “Christian militia” have been forming, in order to fight the Islamic State’s jihadists. What is your view on this?

    “To any politician, Christians included, who ask me, I always say: if some Christians want to help defend and fight for the liberation of land conquered by the jihadists, then they should join the Kurdish or the Iraqi national army. Creating “Christian militia” groups which identify themselves in ethnic-religious terms is not only illegal, but madness and pure ѕυιcιdє.

     

    The US have begun an armed intervention with the “coalition”. Something similar has already happened in Iraq.

    “All this looks to me like a dirty political game. Bombing these jihadists will not make them disappear, that’s for sure. Many innocent individuals risk being killed. Infrastructures are destroyed and will remain destroyed. The Americans have already done this: they destroyed the country and did not rebuild it. The most serious part of it all is that now everyone is saying the war is going to go on for years. This sends out two different and very dangerous messages simultaneously. The message to jihadists is: don’t worry, you have plenty of time to get organised, get more money together and enlist more paid militants. The message to the refugees is: this situation’s going to go on for years, the only future you have is away from here, away from your homes. It’s best if you leave if you can. If we are to really get rid of extremist groups once and for all, we have to work on education and training and come up with plans that show how false and monstrous this bloodthirsty ideology really is.”

    Meanwhile, some in the West have made stereotypical references to a clash of civilizations, portraying Muslims as enemies of the Western civilization.

    “The reality is that all the West is motivated by is money and power. For years, this entity that calls itself the Islamic State has been kept going with money and weapons that come from the West’s so-called “friends”. With their secret services they can find out anything they want about each and every one of us, whenever they want. How is it possible that they don’t know where weapons pass through or to whom they are selling oil to today? The US took action when two poor Americans were beheaded. But what about all those Syrians, Iraqis, Christians and Muslims they killed before then?”

     

    Is there anything in all of this that brings you some hope?

    “Last week in Baghdad, a group of priests, including myself, carried out spiritual exercises together. Our priests perform miracles despite the situation we find ourselves in: liturgies, catechism, social activities and charity initiatives, theatre… so many great things. Today we ask the Lord to console people, to give them patience and help them not to lose hope. This is the most important thing right now.”

    http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/inquiries-and-interviews/detail/articolo/iraq-iraq-irak-sako-36598/


    Offline poche

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    The Church in Iraq
    « Reply #50 on: January 25, 2015, 12:45:19 AM »
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  • The Chaldean Patriarch of Babylon has encouraged Iraqi Muslims to confront violent extremists, stressing the need to return to peaceful coexistence despite present threats in the country.

    “At this point, there is no other future for us than living together in peace, harmony and cooperation,” he said in a Jan. 17 talk delivered to the Iraqi Center for Diversity Management.

    Patriarch Louis Raphael I Sako has witnessed the emigration of around 1 million Iraqi Christians in the wake of the 2003 U.S. invasion. The withdrawal of U.S. forces and the rise of the Islamic State has further endangered the future of Christians in Iraq, while the Iraqi government struggles to regain control.

    The patriarch stressed that Iraq’s different religions and ethnicities are rooted in the country, and are not foreign. Many groups which are now seen as minorities were once majorities and contributed greatly both to Iraqi and Islamic culture, he said.

    “These communities are today marginalized, and have been dealt with harshly and in a brutal way,” he lamented.

    “This happened in many cities of Iraq, and finally in Mosul and the towns of the Nineveh Plain. No more Christians are actually there, not a single one. All this led them to seek emigration.”

    “Traditionally and historically, we have side by side with respect; we shared bread and salt, sweet and bitter, but today we wonder why this immoral and uncivilized phenomenon is happening?”

    The patriarch said the more than 1 billion Muslims in the world are not responsible for extremist thought and action.

    He said religious extremism and terrorism are serious forces for evil, but are not the only major threats. He especially faulted the mindset of the “takfiri,” the Muslim sects that groundlessly declare other Muslims and non-Muslims to be apostates.

    He also cautioned that these mindsets are “well exploited by some of the competing forces of power under the cover of religion.”

    Patriarch Sako called on Muslims to “take the initiative and lead a campaign of rejecting any sectarian discrimination.”

    “It is of utmost importance that religious authorities and political leaders address the culture of hatred and all forms of violence that destroy human life and violate human dignity. It is a difficult task indeed!” he said.

    “But it is not impossible if everyone cooperates in the promotion of a culture of peace and confidence. Everyone would overcome the fear of convergence and build bridges between citizens.”

    The patriarch suggested a “joint Islamic project” to dismantle violent ideologies. He praised the strengthening of “an open and enlightened Islamic opinion” through the “appropriate interpretation” of religious texts. This approach would be “closing the door to those who are influencing the mentality of young people to use violence in the name of religion.”

    He urged speech that builds up “humanitarian, national and spiritual solidarity among all human beings as children of the same homeland and humankind.” He endorsed the promotion of “a civilized culture of acceptance” that rejects “the eradication of others.”

    “However, it is necessary to acknowledge that this process will take time and will require healing the memory,” he said.

    Patriarch Sako also urged media networks to provide information that respects religions.

    “Media networks must not harm religious symbols and thus insult the religious followers. Let us all promote an open culture that dispels prejudices and strengthens confidence and brilliancy.”

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/leading-iraqi-christian-calls-on-muslims-to-confront-culture-of-hatred-14058/

    I wonder if any of the Iraqis are listening.

    Offline poche

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    « Reply #51 on: February 07, 2015, 12:45:56 AM »
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  • The Islamic State has blown up the Church of the Immaculate Virgin in Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, according to a report published by the Assyrian International News Agency.

    The church, also known as the ancient Tahira church, dates back to at least the seventh century.


    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=23952

    Offline poche

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    « Reply #52 on: April 09, 2015, 12:47:58 AM »
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  • The Chaldean bishops held an extraordinary synod on February 7, 2015 at the patriarchal headquarters in Mansour, Baghdad. The synod was attended by the majority of bishops with the exception of few who could not attend for various reasons.
    The bishops carefully studied the agenda in an atmosphere of freedom and collectiveness and they issued the below communiqué. On this occasion Patriarch Louise Sako invited the Syriac Catholic Archbishop Ignatius III Younan who was visiting Baghdad together with a delegation of bishops for lunch .He also invited Bishop Giorgio Lingua, the current Apostolic Nuncio to Iraq and his assistant. During the meeting they marked their concerns and opinions regarding the future of Christians in Iraq and the region.


    The communiqué
    The Chaldean Church Fathers, in the wake of the ordination of the new archbishops Mar Emmanuel Chalita and Mar Basil Yeldo, held an extraordinary synod chaired by his beatitude Patriarch Mar Louis Sako at the Patriarchate headquarters in Mansour, Baghdad on 7 February 2015.



    The fathers discussed the matters of the Chaldean parish of St. Peter the Apostle in San Diego, USA. The bishops expressed their deep regret at the lack of responsiveness of Bishop Mar Sarhad Jammo, Bishop Mar Bawai Soro and some priests to the requirements of Church law and to the calls of the Patriarchate to promote unity, and enacting ecclesiastical laws, which had a negative reversal on the church and its believers. So that peace returns to the episcopacy and the believers return to it, the synod fathers unanimously took clear steps towards this sad situation for the good of the Chaldean church. The synod calls for all the faithful of the Diocese of St Peter to hold firm to their true faith and to be loyal to their Chaldean church and to rely on love and wisdom.


    2- Regarding Bishop Saad Sirop, the fathers expressed their pain regarding comments made in social media regarding Bishop Sirop’s resignation from Babylon College, his request for one year sabbatical leave, his travel without waiting for an answer, not attending the ordination of two brothers, and for not attending the extraordinary synod. Synod fathers re- affirmed, that resorting to the ecclesiastical laws, in the face of some of the difficulties, is the protection of all. The fathers appointed Dr. Samer Souresho as acting Dean of Babyl Pontifical College.


    The situation of the displaced families. The Synod Fathers expressed the solidarity of the Chaldean Church with the displaced families and will that it will stand strongly with our anxious, scared and perturb displaced nation with all its sects.It will employ all its capabilities to serve and lift their spirits, and to plant hope in their heart. The fathers praised the movements of the Patriarch and the bishops within and outside Iraq to embrace our afflicted children, to help and defend them. And thank all who extended their helping hand. On this occasion they demanded the central government and the Kurdistan Regional Government to allocate funds to support these displaced families who were robbed of their property and money by Daeesh (Isis).Additionally, to emphasis on the national forces, at home and abroad, to unite their efforts in order to liberate the occupied territories as soon as possible, with the exercise of the necessary pressure so that to offer protection for Christians and other Iraqis to return to their homes and live in safety and dignity. The fathers expressed their sorrow to what is happening in Syria and their solidarity with its people. They ask everyone to pray so that peace and stability returns to the region.


    4. With regard to the Chaldean Association, which the patriarch was determined to create, and because the fast-moving events was not able to set it up.But it’s formation remains necessary for the good of our people in all parts of the world. The Chaldean Association is a civil association concerned with the social and cultural affairs of the Chaldeans. It is an independent literary figure - and its activities do not interfere with the orientations of the faith and pastoral directions of the Church. The fathers have adopted the draft rules of procedure in the light of the proposals received as published below. The Patriarch has appointed Bishop Shlimoon Wardoni and Bishop Basil Yaldo to prepare for the founding conference.


    On the occasion of the commemoration of the massacres of our people in such a year, a century ago, which were dubbed “the sword - Safar Birlik”, it was necessary to remember our martyrs and parishes that were wiped. Therefore, the Synod Fathers decided to nominate the first Friday after Easter a day to celebrate this anniversary and that it will be called “Friday of martyrs and confessors in faith” instead of “Friday of the confessors”. This year the celebration will be on April 10.Masses will be held together with social and cultural activities throughout our parishes. A new book binder will be published to commemorates the history of the massacres and the most prominent victims of them such as Bishops Addai Sheer, Toma Udo,Jacob Oraham and others.


    6. Formation of the Patriarchate Court of Appeal to consider cases related to issues pertaining to the Chaldean clergy. Bishop Michel Qasarji has been elected to organise and supervise it
    In conclusion, everyone lifted their prayers to the Lord Almighty in order that a just peace dwells in Iraq and the region so that everyone can live in dignity and pride.

    http://saint-adday.com/permalink/7081.html


    Offline poche

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    « Reply #53 on: April 09, 2015, 12:49:10 AM »
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  • The Chaldean Catholic Patriarchate has issued a statement denouncing the “rebellion” of Bishop Sarhad Jammo, the head of the Chaldean Catholic Eparchy of Saint Peter the Apostle of San Diego, and of Bishop Bawai Soro, a bishop of the Assyrian Church of the East who was received into full communion with the Catholic Church and now ministers in the eparchy.

    The eparchy (Eastern Catholic diocese) ministers to Chaldean Catholics in the western United States.

    Referring to Chaldean priests who left Iraq without permission from their superiors, the patriarchate said that the eparchy “welcomed rebel priests against ecclesiastical laws” and refused to implement decisions made by a recent synod of the Chaldean Catholic Church.

    Bishop Sammo “has expelled from his diocese all the priests and faithful who wanted to remain faithful to Mother Church” and thus caused scandal, added the patriarchate, which stated that it has brought the matter before the Vatican’s Congregation for the Eastern Churches.

    “We will defend … the rights of our glorious patriarchate until the last breath,” the statement continued. “Before taking direct action against those at fault,” the patriarchate asked the two bishops, as well as the priests, to “apologize publicly” and “regularize their situation morally and legally.”

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=24558

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    « Reply #54 on: May 05, 2015, 12:13:52 AM »
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  •  “At night we often hear gunfire,” says Father Steven, a priest in Alqosh, Iraq.

    “But luckily we are quite a bit away from the fighting,” he adds. In fact, as the crow flies, the town of Alqosh is only 10 miles away from the front line, where the heavily armed Kurdish Peshmerga forces and ISIS fighters are facing off.

    When the weather is good, you can see the Christian towns on the Nineveh Plane that are now under ISIS control.

    “Back there is my village, Batnaya,” the Chaldean priest says, pointing in the direction of the once-Christian community. “I was the last to leave Batnaya. The jihadists arrived shortly thereafter.”

    Dozens of priests and religious have become homeless in the past year as a result of the ISIS offensive. They have not only lost their convents, churches and monasteries, but also schools and children’s homes – the entire infrastructure of an apostolate built up over many years.

    “We lost 23 of our monasteries and houses,” Sister Suhama tells international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need. The Dominican nun now lives in a development of terraced houses near Erbil, the capital of Kurdistan.

    “We were 26 nuns in Qaraqosh alone. We led a flourishing community life there. Some of our sisters are having trouble getting over the loss. At night they dream of soon being able to return.”

    A fellow nun cries quietly as she listens. Fourteen older sisters have died of sheer sorrow since they fled, the community says.

    The people need to feel that the Church remains close to them, Sister Suhama emphasizes.

    “It is our job to be with our people. I don’t believe it will happen, but should the day come on which the last Christian leaves Iraq, we priests and nuns will be the last to leave.”

    Many of the religious, priests and seminarians who have been forced to flee from ISIS receive support from Aid to the Church in Need. The charity offers Mass stipends for priests as well as direct emergency aid for housing and other essential provisions.

    Seminarians Martin and Randi are also among those who have lost their homes. The young men are now studying at the seminary in Erbil.

    “ISIS has strengthened our vocation,” Randi said with deep conviction. “It is fortunate that the people have survived. That shows me that God is a God of life and not of property and objects. God is taking care of us.”

    Martin agrees. The Chaldean from Karamlish, a town near Qaraqosh, is already a deacon. “I only want to be consecrated as a priest when I can celebrate the first Mass in my village. I realize that this may take months or longer.”

    Deacon Martin has consciously made the decision to remain in Iraq, even though his parents are in the U.S. and could easily bring him over: “My place is here. This is where I want to serve the people.”

    Randi also feels bound to stay put and serve the faithful: “Our flock may be even smaller in the future, (but) we Christians still have an important job to do here. We have to rebuild our country. Despite everything, we have to learn how to live with the Muslims again. We have to teach our children to respect and esteem the other.”

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/with-iraqi-christians-besieged-these-are-the-priest-and-nuns-who-choose-to-stay-76307/

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    « Reply #55 on: July 25, 2015, 01:13:52 AM »
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  • Speaking in Australia, an Iraqi prelate discussed his plans to open a Catholic university in October.

    The university will be located in Erbil, a city of 1.5 million that is capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan, an Australian diocesan newspaper reported.

    The founding of the university, said Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Bashar Warda of Erbil, is "a way of fighting back against Daesh [the Islamic State] and saying we [Christians] are not going to go away."

    The university "will embrace our Christian and Yazidi young men and women who were forcefully displaced from their areas and homes in the Plain of Nienveh in Mosul," he added. "The university will also open its doors wide for Muslims who would learn side by side with Christians and Yazedis with an aim to shape a new and promising future for Iraq and the region."



    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=25625


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    « Reply #56 on: November 12, 2015, 12:25:19 AM »
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  • Responding to the launched by the Patriarch Mar Raphael Louis Sako, yesterday evening the diocesan council of Baghdad organized a peaceful protest against the infamous article 26 of the Constitution, on the "Islamization of their children." The event was held in the local church of St. George and had a large turnout among the Chaldean community.

    The protest was attended by His Beatitude, the representatives of the Christian communities and the civil society organizations, representatives of media and a large group of citizens, Christians and Muslims.

    The protest organized by the Chaldean Church began with the national anthem, followed by the intervention of the patriarch.

    Addressing the gathering, Mar Sako stressed "freedom for everyone, including the freedom of religion" and "there cannot be a mandatory law on faith, which is a grace of God." The message of the religions, the common human values ​​and basic rights "guarantee the natural and legal freedom of persons". For this "the the Iraqi parliament's approval of the unified National Charter - by act of October 27, 2015 - is a coercion against Christian, Yazidi and Sabean children " below the age of 18, forced to "convert to Islam, when one of the parents decides to officially proclaim to be Muslim (Art. 26 / II). All this "is contrary to the values ​​of the citizens" continued the leader of the Chaldean Church, and is a factor that causes serious damage "to national unity and balance of the community, its religious pluralism and the principle of coexistence."

     In his speech, the Chaldean patriarch continued attacking a law that "contradicts the Koran" itself, which declares in many verses that "there can be no compulsion on the subject of religion." Indeed, it is "an affront to the many provisions of the Iraqi Constitution", including Article 3 which states that "Iraq is a multi-ethnic country" with different religions and cults. And yet, art. 37 / II that "the State shall guarantee the protection of the individual from political and religious coercion." And art. 42 that "everyone has freedom of thought, conscience and religion", which intersects with Article 18 of the Charter of Human Rights: "Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion - recalls March Sako - and this right includes freedom to change religion or belief and freedom of expression in teaching, practice, worship and in its observance, both in private and communal".

    Mar Sako thanked "our Muslim brothers" and "gentlemen" who "voted against the approval of Article 26" and the representatives of minorities "who walked out of Parliament" at the time of the vote. Moreover, he recalls the certificates of support and solidarity received by the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Iraq, who did not fail speak out against "against this unjust law".
     

    "Today - added the Chaldean patriarch - we reiterate our position of rejection of an identity card that divides, rather than unites the Iraqi people" and "asks that minor children be left their religion, leaving them free to choose according to their beliefs at the coming of age ". Because, he warns, "religion is a personal relationship between God and the human being." "We want to point out at the same time - he continues - that if Parliament approves this law, we will make our voice heard at the international level, including the denunciation of the Iraqi Parliament itself at the UN Council for Human Rights."

     "It is regrettable – Mar Sako concludes - that the Iraqi parliament is concerned with the question of the religion of the child, leaving aside other key issues: the liberation of the occupied areas by the Islamic State (there are also Christian factions fighting), fighting corruption, services and assistance to three million refugees with winter approaching, the fight against unemployment and the right to education of youth. "

    The leadership of the Chaldean Church continue to dream "a homeland for all, that it becomes a tent that can accommodate Christians, Yazidis, Sabeans, believers and nonbelievers, all Iraqis ... A stable and prosperous country, that can guarantee the dignity of its citizens . Long live Iraq. "

    http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Baghdad,-Christians-and-Muslims-take-to-streets-against-the-law-Islamization-children-35848.html

    Offline poche

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    « Reply #57 on: December 06, 2015, 11:59:07 PM »
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  • December 04, 2015 In a letter for the upcoming jubilee of mercy, the head of the Chaldean Catholic Church said that “for us Iraqi Christians, martyrdom is the charism of our church.“As a minority, we are faced with difficulties and sacrifices, but we are conscious that we are Christ’s witnesses, and this can entail becoming martyrs,” said Patriarch Louis Raphael I Sako. “We do not want to leave our homeland without a Christian presence. Iraq is our identity. We have a vocation; we must bear witness to the joy of the Gospel.” He added: In the circuмstances in which we live, we have to be more attentive to our suffering brothers and sisters, to displaced people, migrants, the poor, orphans and widows. We need to stand by them, be present and close to them, accompany them with all we have in terms of power and money, and give them a sign of hope. How beautiful it is to share what we have with others, with joy, as witnesses of our faith in Jesus Christ. How beautiful it is to show friendship, solidarity and support to our Muslim brothers and sisters. We must work with them to build a common life, in peace and in harmony. May our shared suffering becomes strength, so that the storm may pass! According to Vatican Radio, a highlight of the jubilee year for the Chaldean Catholic Church will be a pilgrimage to Ur of the Chaldees, the place from which Abraham sojourned

    - See more at: http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=26861#sthash.MxeoRMTR.dpuf

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    « Reply #58 on: December 24, 2015, 05:18:56 AM »
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  • New attacks have been launched against Christians and Christmas celebrations in northern Iraq by Daesh [Arabic acronym of the Islamic State, IS] and other extremist groups. AsiaNews sources in the north of the country report that Isis militants in Mosul have posted signs in the city ordering Muslims "not to celebrate" Christmas in any way with the Christians, because "they are heretics." While in Kirkuk, groups of Islamic extremists stormed two Christian cemeteries, desecrating and destroying several graves.

    Iraqi Christians have denounced these most recent attacks, threats and intimidation and say they will not stop them from celebrating the feast.

    The Chaldean Patriarchate also condemns the violence and intimidation of the Iraqi Christian community, and does so using the Koran and which states that Christians are not heretics and the Trinity is a theological expression of the revelation of the One God.

    The Muslim holy book, say the leaders of the Chaldean Church, describes Christ as the "carrier of the word of God." Christians are not polytheists or infidels and this is why the Koran says that "they are the closest to those who believe."

    Some residents in the Iraqi capital, interviewed by AsiaNews, invite Muslims to "follow  their faith" and "to leave us free to live and celebrate ours" as the Koran itself states, when it  prohibits "constructions" on the subject of faith and says: "I have my religion and you yours. "

    Meanwhile, the Christian MP Yonadam Kanna, president of the Rafeedain group, present the Parliamentary  Assembly a docuмent that shows that over 700 thousand Christians have left the country because of the conflict and violence in the last 30 years. This migration already started in the last years of the regime of Saddam Hussein and have significantly increased in recent years.

    The emergence of the Islamic State and the exodus of hundreds of thousands of people from Mosul and the Nineveh Plain in the summer of 2014 are the latest in a series of attacks, with the desecration of churches and places of worship, violence to individuals and groups, uprooting and dispossession of assets and property. From a population of more than 1.5 million in 2003 today, the community counts less than 500 thousand.

    http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Islamic-State-brand-Christmas-festivities-heretical.-In-Kirkuk-two-Christian-cemeteries-desecrated-36237.html

    The brave Christians of Iraq risk their lives to celebrate Christmas. this is not just whether to say Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays. Let us pray that We will be faithful in the time of trial.

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    « Reply #59 on: February 04, 2016, 01:53:33 AM »
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  • The international community is struggling to come up with a strategy to defeat the Islamic State (IS) — but on the ground in northern Iraq, a Roman Catholic priest has found his own way to fight the jihadists.

    Father Gabriel Tooma is not going after them with weapons. He is not involved with any of the several Christian militias that have taken it upon themselves, in Iraq and neighboring Syria, to defend their villages against IS onslaught. What he is doing, he says, is even more important to the Christian minority's fate in northern Iraq: He is rounding up ancient manuscripts and relics and hiding them in secure locations around Kurdistan, hoping to save them from the iconoclastic fury of the terror insurgency.

    "If Daesh burns down a church we can rebuild it, but the manuscripts are our history. They trace back our roots, they are part of our civilization," he said, using the Arabic acronym for the group. "If they get destroyed, then we are lost, and our culture will be forgotten."

    The 55-year old priest, a Jesuit-like Pope Francis, spoke during a meeting late last year at a monastery in al Qosh, in the Nineveh Plain.

    His words took on a new, urgent meaning on Wednesday, when news broke that IS fighters had done exactly what he had said. The extremist militants had razed the oldest Christian church in Iraq, the 1,400-year old St. Elijah Monastery in Mosul, about 30 miles (50 km

    In the face of this threat, Father Gabriel is trying to save what he can, including manuscripts dating back as far as the 11th Century. They are mainly liturgical books, but there are also Old Testament stories, books on medicine, and miniatures drawn by monks. "These books have an inestimable value," he said. He has been at work for four years on scanning and saving them in digital format, with the help of the Italian NGO Un Ponte Per and funds from the Italian Episcopal Conference.

    The manuscripts are delicate objects, handled carefully by an Italian art restorer, Irene Zanella, who trains Iraqis on how preserve ancient books from her base in Erbil, the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan. Zanella and her staff first dust the books with a soft brush, then each page is photographed, rather than scanned. "This technique avoids squashing the pages and preserves the pages and the ink," she said. Her work is part of a larger project to save the cultural heritage of Iraq, started in 2004 in Baghdad and then expanded throughout the country, as it plunged into a cινιℓ ωαr that often overlaps with religious and sectarian divisions.

    Iraq has a Shiite Muslim majority, now in power, and a Sunni minority that was in charge until the toppling of Saddam Hussein's regime. A small Christian minority, about three percent of the population, is made up mostly of Chaldean Catholics like Father Gabriel.

    Along with the Yazidis, who practice a pre-Islamic religion and are also targeted by IS, the Christian heritage is in grave danger in Iraq. But it has been for years, since well before IS began its campaign of cleansing from the territory it controls anybody who is not a Sunni Muslim in 2014.

    In 2006, a wave of terrorist attacks hit the Iraqi Christian community. At least three archbishops and dozens of priests were killed; hundreds of the faithful died in church bombings. As a result, the Jesuits ordered Father Gabriel, and eight other priests, to leave Baghdad immediately. "We left just one person behind to guard the monastery of St. Anthony, and I was told to go to al Qosh," he said.

    Father Gabriel was also told to take with him the most ancient and precious manuscripts, which had been in the monastery for centuries. But he was afraid the Iraqi Army would confiscate the books at checkpoints and try to sell them. So he decided to smuggle them: "We stored the manuscripts in boxes, covered by blankets. We hoped for the best." He traveled more than 300 miles (500 km) in a four-vehicle convoy, passing by his count through 63 checkpoints. "They never stopped us," he said. "We arrived safely in al Qosh."

    That adventurous move, it turned out, bought Father Gabriel and his books — and many Iraqi Christians — just a few years of safety.

    On August 6, 2014, IS launched a major operation in the Nineveh plain, taking most of it in just a few days. It encountered no resistance from the Iraqi security forces, which fled before the militants' advance. As the militants approached al Qosh, Christians there panicked.

    "As soon as we heard they were coming, I thought everything was lost. So I encouraged everybody from the village to flee. We knew what happened to the Yazidis and didn't want to meet the same fate," said Father Gabriel, referring to the religious minority's near-extermination by the Islamic State just a few months earlier. "I took the most important manuscripts with me and hoped for the best."

    But al Qosh was spared. The IS advance stopped a few kilometers away. Father Gabriel went back to retrieve what he had left behind —1,000 manuscripts, which he scattered in remote locations in Kurdistan, the autonomous region of Iraq. "I will not say where they are, it's not safe. Just I and another priest know where they are," he said, smoking a thin cigarette, a habit he picked up in Italy, where he lived for almost ten years while in training for the priesthood. The waves of violence he experienced since Saddam's fall, he said, made him extremely wary of strangers.

    Al Qosh, under the gaze of an eighth-century monastery built on the mountain overlooking the town, is the last remaining Christian village in the whole plain of Nineveh, but its situation is precarious. The front line in the battle with IS is just six miles (10 km) away, and Mosul, the largest Iraqi city occupied by the extremists, is 28 miles (50 km).

    The 7,000 people of al Qosh are protected by both the Kurdish peshmerga army and a militia of Assyrian Christians, but their de facto leader is the local priest — Father Gabriel himself, who also manages a school and the local orphanage.

    It is he who decides who can and can not live in the town. Yazidis on the run from IS are welcome, he said, and so are other refugees, but on one condition: They must not be Muslim. The Christian mandate to help one's neighbor does not extend to Muslims in al Qosh. "They can go to many other villages around here, where there are no Christians," Father Gabriel said. "Al Qosh is the last place in the area where we can live our faith in peace. And many of them are also ISIS [an alternative acronym for IS] collaborators. I don't want them here."

    He does, in fact, see himself as a sort of religious warrior, fighting to save Iraqi Christians with a righteous zeal. "There was a Christian boy who lost his parents in Baghdad, and the local mosque wanted to raise him," he said. "I couldn't allow that." So he organized a convoy to get him and bring him to al Qosh, he said, so that the boy would not be raised as a Muslim. The other 34 children at the orphanage have similar stories. Most of them lost their parents in the conflict; in some cases, families lost everything and left them with the priest, so they could eat and have a roof on their head.

    He is not the only Christian religious figure in the area with such harsh views of Muslims. "I can tell you Islam doesn't have peaceful messages," said Friar Najeeb Michaeel, a 50-year old Dominican monk in Erbil, who fled the IS advance on the town of Qaraqosh, about 18 miles (30 km) from Mosul. His views of Islam may have been shaped by the 1996 killing in Algeria by Islamist militants of the priest who he said had ordained him, French Archbishop Pierre Claverie.

    He, too, is involved in saving ancient manuscripts, which he began working to preserve at his first post in a monastery in Mosul in the 1980s. In 2007, he got death threats from groups affiliated with al Qaeda in Iraq, and moved to Qaraqosh, with some of the ancient books.

    On August 7, 2014, he had to escape again. IS was coming. "It was 5.30am when I saw Daesh coming with their cars and the black flags waving. They were trying to cut in front of us to kill men and kidnap women. I gave everybody the last rites, I thought it was finished for us," he recalled. Instead, the people fleeing Qaraqosh found a checkpoint on the road to Kurdistan open, and got through — but had to leave their vehicles behind.

    "Thousands of people were trying to flee. We had several manuscripts in the cars with us. So I asked everybody, young and old, to carry at least ten at a time to the other side of the border. We had to make several trips, but we made it." Qaraqosh remains in IS hands.

    Now his collection includes over 5,000 manuscripts and scrolls, he said, but he was also able to save paintings, statues and relics. Like Father Gabriel, he keeps them hidden in a secret place. "What they try to destroy we protect. This is how we can really defeat IS," he said.

    In Erbil, protected by the Kurdish peshmerga, he bought a building with the help of American Benedictine monks and private donations. About 60 families from Qaraqosh live there, but most of them are trying to leave the country and head for Europe.

    "The situation is very hard. Most of these families were middle class, they had everything they needed, but now they have nothing and they can't really accept this," he said, describing a massive exodus of Christian families trying to get to Europe.

    According to Emily Fuentes, coordinator for Open Doors, an American NGO focusing on persecuted Christians around the world, the Iraqi Christian community has shrunk to 200,000, compared to a million people in 2003.

    "The numbers are diminishing daily. More and more people are trying to leave," she said. Most of the remaining community found shelter in Kurdistan, but adapting to life there its very difficult. "It is a completely different culture, the language is different. Technically they are still [in Iraq], but it almost feels like a different country."

    Even Father Gabriel doubts there will ever be peace for Iraq's Christians. "I have no idea what will happen to us. The future is gloomy. Take what happened in Paris, those terrorist attacks. I am afraid to say this is just the start," he said, in a phone conversation after VICE News visited him in al Qosh. But he is hanging on to hope: "We will continue to oppose terrorism, in our own way."

    https://news.vice.com/article/on-the-run-from-the-islamic-state-we-spoke-to-iraqi-christians-trying-to-save-their-heritage