Anguished Iraqi Christians Flee to Syria
by
George
Baghdadi
DAMASCUS
George Lutfi's voice trembled with emotion as thought back
of Iraq and his family there. The 32-year-old deacon of the Chaldean
Solaqa Church in Baghdad fled to Syria last week after the bombings
at churches in Baghdad and Mosul that killed at least 11 people.
"I
can do nothing but cry and pray to God to save my family,"
he said. "It is really hard to imagine what might happen."
Lutfi, who left Damascus alone, is trying to bring his wife and
three children to Syria. He struggled with feelings of anger, fear
and uncertainty. And with guilt that he was safe in Syria while
his family may not be as safe in Baghdad.
Scared
of lawlessness and the crumbling secular atmosphere within Iraq,
thousands of Christians have fled to Syria. Saddam Hussein had enforced
secularism with often brutal purges of Islamic groups. Now Christians
fear the day might come when they are no longer welcome in Iraq.
"Iraq
is my country," Lutfi said. "It is my land. I drank from
the rivers of that country and my heart is in Iraq." But now
he does not want to return.
Khalil
Massouh, a refugee from Mosul says "the pressure comes from
Muslim extremists, not from the interim Iraqi government, which
has a Christian as minister of immigration and refugees."
The
bombings during mass last Sunday evening were the first significant
strike on Iraq's Christians, who make up about five percent of Iraq's
25 million people. A previously unknown group, the Committee of
Planning and Follow-up in Iraq claimed responsibility for the bombings,
and warned more attacks would follow.
Islamic
militants have asked Christian owners of liquor stores to close
down their businesses. They have also threatened Christians who
run beauty salons and shops selling fashionable clothes.
Hundreds
of Iraqi Christian families move to Syria and Jordan every day,
says Emanuel Khoshaba, a representative of the Iraqi Assyrian Democratic
Movement in Syria.
Khoshaba
says there are now 10,000 Iraqi Christians in Syria, and 90 percent
of them arrived after the Iraqi war began in March last year. Officials
could not confirm the estimates because Syrian and Jordanian immigration
forms do not ask a person's religion.
"I
had to flee to Syria to escape the threats," says Joseph Kaldo,
41. "This is the first step. I will apply this week to emigrate
to Canada, the United States or other Western countries."
John
Rabah who has also fled Iraq, cannot believe what is happening now.
"We have lived with them (Muslims) for generations, we socialize
and work with them on a daily basis," he says. "We sometimes
marry them, we both belong to the same nation, and we have always
enjoyed the calls to prayer by the muezzins. An integral part of
our culture reminds believers that there is only one God, the same
God we both worship in our own way. Can you tell me what is going
on?"
Senior
Muslim clerics and political leaders have united behind Iraq's Christian
community, condemning the attacks as a dangerous escalation of the
war and an assault on centuries of coexistence between Christians
and Muslims.
Syria's
grand mufti Sheikh Ahmed Kiftaru called the bombings "hideous
crimes" that "targeted Iraq's unity, stability and independence."
Muslim
militants have tried to paint the struggle within Iraq as a war
between "true believers and infidels." They have succeeded
at some places, but such groups have never succeeded in Syria. Christians
in Syria have never been persecuted, and have no fear they could
become a proxy target for those angry with the West.
Comprising
almost 12 percent of Syria's 17 million population, Christians have
adopted many Muslim traditions such as the greeting 'salaam aleikum'
('peace be upon you'). They also use Arabic names such as Sami,
Samir or Bassam.
Christians
within Iraq include the Chaldean-Assyrians who are the majority,
Armenians, Syrian Catholics and the Syrian Orthodox.
August
9, 2004
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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