The Martyr of Mosul
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
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On April 1
– Palm Sunday – after bullets were fired into the Church of the
Holy Spirit in Mosul, Iraq, during mass, the pastor, Father Ragheed
Ganni, a Chaldean Catholic, e-mailed friends at the Asia Times:
"We empathize
with Christ, who entered Jerusalem in full knowledge that the
consequence of His love for mankind was the cross. Thus, while
bullets smashed our church windows, we offered our suffering as
a sign of love for Christ."
The attacks
continued. Father Ragheed wrote again: "Each day we wait for the
decisive attack, but we will not stop celebrating mass; we will
do it underground, where we are safer. I am encouraged in this decision
by the strength of my parishioners. This is war, real war, but we
hope to carry our cross to the very end with the help of Divine
Grace."
As the
bombings in Mosul and Baghdad rose during April and May, and priests
were kidnapped, Father Ragheed grew weary. In his last e-mail, May
28, he wrote, "We are on the verge of collapse."
A day before,
Pentecost Sunday, a bomb exploded in his church, and Father Ragheed
seemed dispirited: "In a sectarian and confessional Iraq, will there
be any space for Christians? We have no support, no group who fights
for our cause; we are abandoned in the midst of the disaster. Iraq
has already been divided. It will never be the same. What is the
future of our church?"
Though
tempted by despair, Father Ragheed did not give up hope.
"I may
be wrong, but I am certain about one thing – one single fact that
is always true: that the Holy Spirit will enlighten people so that
they will work for the good of humanity, in this world so full of
evil."
Following
mass on Trinity Sunday, a week after Pentecost Sunday, Father Ragheed
and three sub-deacons were seized, taken away and murdered. Their
killers placed vehicles loaded with explosives around the bodies
so no one would dare approach them.
The story
of "The Last Mass of Father Ragheed, a Martyr of the Chaldean Church,"
is related by Sandro Magister of www.Chiesa.
Father
Ragheed had completed his studies in Rome in 2003, Magister writes,
and returned full of hope. "That is where I belong, that is my place,"
he said of Iraq. "Saddam has fallen, we have elected a government,
we have voted for a constitution."
Since 2003,
an immense tragedy has befallen the Iraqi Christians. In 2000, Chaldeans,
Syro-Catholics, Syro-Orthodox, Assyrians from the East, Catholic
and Orthodox Armenians, and Greek-Melkites together numbered 1.5
million. Today, perhaps 500,000 remain. Hundreds of thousands have
found sanctuary in Syria and Jordan, tens of thousands in Egypt
and Lebanon. Among the refugees are many of Iraq's professionals
– doctors and teachers who could have helped build a better future
for all in Iraq.
The region
around Mosul and Nineveh, writes Magister, is the "cradle of Christianity
in Iraq. There are churches and monasteries that go back to the
earliest centuries. ... Aramaic, the language of Jesus, is used
in the liturgies."
As the
war has dragged on, life has become hellish for the remaining Christians.
Yet they have never resorted to bombings or assassinations.
Father
Ragheed is neither the first nor last of the Iraqi martyrs.
After Pope
Benedict gave his speech in Regensburg, Germany, touching on Islam,
Father Paulos Iskander was kidnapped and beheaded in retaliation
by the "Lions of Islam." Father Joseph Petros was murdered. A Catholic
nun told the Vatican news agency: "The imams preach in the mosques
that it is not a crime to kill Christians. It is a hunting of men."
In May,
St. George's Assyrian Church in the Dora neighborhood, a Christian
enclave of Baghdad, was burned down, destroying what had survived
a firebombing in 2004. The Assyrian International News Agency (AINA)
reports it was the 27th church destroyed by Muslim gangs since the
liberation of Iraq.
Now
the ancient practice of the jizya – the "head tax" Muslims have
traditionally imposed on Christians, Jews and religious minorities
– is being reinstituted. According to AINA, "Al-Qaida is demanding
that Christians pay 250,000 dinars (around $200) for the right to
remain in their own homes, a sum equivalent to an average month's
salary in Iraq."
All this,
and the news of Father Ragheed's murder, moved Benedict XVI to raise
the issue with President Bush.
For when
Bush left the Vatican, he told reporters: "He (the pope) is worrisome
about the Christians inside Iraq being mistreated by the Muslim
majority. ... He was concerned that the society that was evolving
would not tolerate the Christian religion."
For
the martyrdom of Christianity in its birth cradle, blame must fall
heavily upon the men who conceived this misbegotten war.
June
23, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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