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Lambs To Slaughter: the Assyrians of Iraq

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  • Lambs To Slaughter: the Assyrians of Iraq

    Assyrian International News Agency
    Dec 22 2007

    Lambs To Slaughter: the Assyrians of Iraq


    When most Westerners think of Iraq, more than likely the images that
    come to mind are related to the U.S.-led war there, or perhaps the
    suffering of Iraqis trapped between warring Shiites and Sunnis, rival
    Muslim sects.

    That would be understandable. Such images have dominated the news
    since the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003.

    But there is a story beneath the daily images of patrolling U.S.
    troops or the gruesome results of roadside bombs and terrorist
    attacks on civilians. According to some, Iraqi Christians are facing
    annihilation at the hands of an increasingly militant Islam that
    demands submission -- or else.

    There are Christians in Iraq? Westerners might think Muslim nations
    like Iraq are practically devoid of Christians. But at one time there
    were 1.5 million believers in that country -- comprising 8% of the
    population.

    Peter BetBasoo, an Iraqi Assyrian and the director of the Assyrian
    International News Agency (AINA, www.aina.org), said his people --
    the Assyrians -- are ethnically distinct from the Arab and Kurdish
    populations of Iraq. They are, in fact, the only indigenous people
    there, having lived in that part of the Middle East for 7,000 years.

    The majority of Assyrians are Christians, and belong to three main
    denominations: the Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the
    East, the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Chaldean Church of Babylon.

    "This distinct identity of Assyrians, especially their Christian
    faith, sets them apart from the rest of the population," BetBasoo
    said.

    It has also made them the target of Muslim violence. In his report,
    Incipient Genocide: The Ethnic Cleansing of the Assyrians of Iraq,
    BetBasoo said, "A systematic campaign of persecution of [Christians]
    ... is unfolding."

    The result has been devastating, as thousands of Christians flee the
    country. The percentage of the Iraqi population that is Christian is
    now down to 3-4%, according to Archbishop Avak Asadourian, the
    primate of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Baghdad.

    According to an article on Frontpagemag.com, Asadourian told a World
    Council of Churches gathering of 130 international church officials
    in Amman, Jordan, that due to persecution the members of his own
    church had declined from about 650 members to about 125.

    Asadourian's estimates reflect U.S. government statistics. The yearly
    report of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
    (www.uscirf.gov), released in May 2007, said that since April, 2003,
    50% of Assyrian Christians have fled Iraq.

    Oppression, expulsion and flight Muslim anger towards Christians in
    Iraq always seems ready to explode. In one night, for example,
    Incipient Genocide said 500 shops owned by Assyrians in Dora, a
    primarily Assyrian neighborhood in Baghdad, were burned.

    Church buildings are not exempt from Muslim rage, either. Last June,
    St. Jacob Church in Dora was attacked, the Christians guarding the
    building were murdered, and the church was looted and then designated
    to be turned into a mosque.

    Meanwhile, in northern Iraq, which is home to Kurdish Muslims who
    have escaped the brunt of the war and the civil discord between
    Sunnis and Shiites, Assyrian Christians have also come under
    pressure.

    "Kurdish authorities denied foreign reconstruction assistance for
    Assyrian communities and used public works projects to divert water
    and other vital resources from Assyrian to Kurdish communities,"
    Betbasoo said. "Kurdish forces blockaded Assyrian villages."

    When Christians aren't being denied help, they're often being forced
    to pay extortion. Incipient Genocide related that in March 2007,
    al-Qaeda terrorists moved into Dora and began forcing Assyrian
    Christians to pay the jizya, the tax demanded by the Koran which all
    Christians and Jews must pay in exchange for being allowed to live
    and practice their faith in Islamic countries.

    Christian families were told by Muslims at their doors "to either pay
    money (jizya) to support the insurgents or convert to Islam, or leave
    the house within 24 hours or else be killed."

    As early as October 2004, BetBasoo said Muslims were distributing
    leaflets with the message: "Christians go; leave Iraq." He said,
    "Word was passed around in the mosques, telling Muslims not to buy
    anything from the Christians. Not only are they infidels, it was
    said, but also they would soon be leaving, so the Muslims would be
    able to take their homes and property for free."

    Sometimes poorer Christians were allowed to pay a different price if
    they did not have enough money to pay the jizya. BetBasoo said one
    representative from a nearby mosque said families who could not pay
    "were told to send one family member to the mosque on Friday to
    announce their conversion to Islam. Families who refused to do this
    were told they must leave their homes immediately and not take any of
    their belongings with them because 'your properties belong to the
    mosque.'"

    This spring Mar Addai II, the Patriarch for the Ancient Assyrian
    Church of the East complained to AINA, "Only the families that agree
    to give a daughter or sister in marriage to a Muslim can remain,
    which means that the entire nuclear family will progressively become
    Muslim."

    This oppression is taking its toll on the Christian community in
    Iraq. In May the Reverend Temathaus Eisha, pastor of the Church of
    St. Shimoni in Dora, confirmed to AINA that Christian Assyrians are,
    in fact, being displaced from their homes in the district. He said
    that the majority of Assyrians have abandoned these areas, and that
    churches and a number of monasteries had also been deserted.

    Killing of Christians While the persecution of Christians has not
    turned into a killing spree involving thousands, some of the murders
    are horrific and appear to be meant to serve as a warning. For
    example, in one incident in October 2006, a 14-year-old boy in the
    al-Basra neighborhood of Mosul was actually crucified.

    "There is no greater symbol of life and hope for Christians than the
    cross and crucifixion of Jesus Christ," BetBasoo said. "This very
    symbolism was inverted and used to terrorize the [Christian]
    residents" of that city.

    The boy's family certainly got the message. "The family intended to
    leave Iraq as soon as possible," he said. "So effective was the
    terror effect of the crucifixion that even the victim's family could
    not properly grieve for its son. The Assyrian community in al-Basra
    was terrified."

    Also that same month in the city of Baquba, another 14-year-old
    Christian Assyrian named Ayad Tariq, was decapitated at his work
    place. A co-worker witnessed the incident after hiding himself when a
    group of masked Muslim insurgents approached.

    The Muslims asked the boy for his identification. BetBasoo relayed
    what happened: "[T]he insurgents questioned Ayad after seeing that
    his ID stated 'Christian,' asking if he was truly a 'Christian
    sinner.' Ayad replied, 'Yes, I am Christian but I am not a sinner.'
    The insurgents quickly said this is a 'dirty Christian sinner!' Then
    they proceeded to each hold one limb, shouting 'Allahu akbar! Allahu
    akbar!' ["God is great! God is great!"] while beheading the boy."

    Another murder that month, as explained by Incipient Genocide, was
    also particularly gruesome. The report said, "An Assyrian toddler was
    kidnapped in Baghdad. The mother, a Christian, could not pay the
    ransom and the young child was returned to her, beheaded, roasted and
    served on a mound of rice."

    Genocide under cover of war These grisly murders reveal a savage
    hatred for Christians that must seem alien to believers in the West,
    who consider it persecution when they aren't allowed to sing
    Christmas carols at a public school. But for the Assyrian Christians
    living in Iraq, extortion, expulsion or even death are a daily threat
    to the lives of family and friends.

    It is true that the persecution of Assyrians is occurring during what
    is arguably a Sunni-Shiite civil war in Iraq. But BetBasoo said he
    did not believe that Assyrians are random victims of this civil war;
    rather they are being "targeted specifically because of their ethnic,
    religious, cultural and linguistic differences."

    In other words, BetBasoo said the Assyrians are facing, literally, an
    "incipient genocide."

    According to the U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
    the Crime of Genocide, "genocide" is defined as specific crimes
    "committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
    ethnical, racial or religious group."

    While the use of words like genocide may be controversial, Doug
    Bandow, vice president for policy of Citizen Outreach, agreed that
    the word is appropriate.

    In an article for The American Spectator, Bandow argued that
    "Christianity is disappearing from Iraq. A distinct ethnic, language,
    and religious community is being driven out."

    He said, "Although the violence appears to be more anarchic than
    concerted, it has had the same effect as an organized campaign to
    destroy Iraq's Assyrians. Virtually every member of the community is
    under siege."

    By Ed Vitagliano
    www.afajournal.org, October, 2007 issue.
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