Iraqi Christians
gathered in Baghdad this weekend to mark Easter but celebrations were
tempered by fears Islamic State would eradicate their shrinking
community, even as the army launched a U.S.-backed offensive to retake
Mosul, their ancestral homeland. In
mid-2014, Christians in Mosul were forced to flee when Islamic State
seized the northern city and began destroying centuries-old religious
sites, ending a presence that once numbered in the tens of thousands and
dates back to Christianity's earliest years. U.S.-backed
Iraqi forces launched an offensive against Islamic State last week
touted as the beginning of a broader campaign to clear areas around
Mosul, though progress has been slow. "We
are threatened with extinction. This is a harsh word but every day we
are being depleted. Our people are traveling, migrating," said Father
Muyessir al-Mukhalisi, a priest at Saint George's Chaldean Church in
east Baghdad. Like millions of
other Iraqis forced to leave home by the jihadist group's seizure of a
third of the country, members of the Christian minority have moved from
northern towns and villages to the capital or other cities, and many
have joined the masses fleeing to Europe. Their numbers have fallen to a few hundred thousand from about 1.5 million before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Around
250 worshippers packed the pews for a Good Friday mass at the Catholic
church fortified with concrete blast walls, concertina wire and armed
policemen. Boys reenacted the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ and the congregation sang hymns alternating
between Arabic and a variant of the ancient Aramaic language spoken by
Jesus. The church provides food and
money to 45 families displaced from Mosul by the ultra-hardline Sunni
Muslim militants, who issued an ultimatum to Christians in 2014: pay a
tax, convert to Islam, or die by the sword. The jihadists then stripped
hundreds of Christian families of their possessions as they fled. Huda Meti Saeed,
30, who attended weekend services with her husband and three young
children, said her family left Mosul two years ago. An uncle living
there was kidnapped and killed around the same time. "We cannot return. Our neighbors came and took our house. They wanted to take us hostage and take all our valuables," she said. The
family does not plan to emigrate but even if the militants are soon
expelled, Saeed said she ruled out taking her family back to Mosul, the
largest city in the north where Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims, Christians
and Yazidis once coexisted. "Very few people are thinking about returning to Mosul," she said. TURN THE OTHER CHEEK Bishop
Basilio Yaldo preached against retribution on Friday, telling
worshippers that Jesus's message of forgiveness had never been more
relevant than it is today in Iraq. Some
Christians fight with the security forces while others have taken up
arms and formed militias to defend their lands against Islamic State on
the plains of Nineveh near Mosul, but the cleric's message seemed to
resonate with attendees. "Since we
were young, we were raised that there should be love and tolerance,"
Reem Paulis Saada, a 27-year-old church volunteer, said after the mass.
"I will not seek revenge. What would I gain from revenge? It will come
back to hurt me." Saada, a pharmacist
who devotes much of her free time to the church, added that although
she was not hopeful about the future in Iraq, as one of the last members
of her family still living in the country she felt bound to stay. Christianity
in Iraq dates back to the first century, when it was said the Apostles
Thomas and Thaddeus brought the Gospel to the fertile flood plains of
the rivers Tigris and Euphrates. The
country is traditionally home to many different Eastern Rite churches,
both Catholic and Orthodox, and their presence was once a sign of Iraq's
ethnic and religious diversity. But
now Christians say they are often denied freedom of expression in the
predominantly Muslim country, and like many Iraqis, lack security, basic
services and economic opportunity. "The
issue is: what comes after the liberation of Mosul?" said Mukhalisi,
the priest, suggesting the Baghdad government needed to do more to
protect Christians in areas under its control. "Thinking only about
liberating Mosul does not provide relief to Christians."
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