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Iraqi Christians Pray For The Surge

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  • Iraqi Christians Pray For The Surge

    IRAQI CHRISTIANS PRAY FOR THE SURGE
    By Mark D. Tooley

    FrontPage magazine.com, CA
    http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticl e.asp?ID=29291
    July 25 2007

    It must have been a huge disappointment. An Iraqi bishop addressing
    an anti-Israel ecumenical jamboree in Amman, Jordan declined to demand
    an immediate U.S. evacuation from Iraq.

    "Is it going to bring about peace or play into the hands of
    terrorists?" asked Archbishop Avak Asadourian, the Primate of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church (See of Etchmiadzin), who was responding to
    a question about U.S. church groups that are demanding an expeditious
    time-table for U.S. troops to quit Iraq.

    Asadourian spoke at the "Churches Together for Peace and Justice in the
    Middle East," organized by the Geneva-based World Council of Churches
    (WCC). Speaking to 130 church officials from the WCC's affiliates
    around the world, the Armenian Archbishop of Baghdad was representing
    the Council of Christian Church Leaders in the Iraqi capital.

    The focus of the WCC gathering was to organize church opposition to the
    Israeli "occupation." But the U.S. "occupation" of Iraq is of equal
    if not greater interest to left-wing prelates, many of whom prefer
    political protests to Christian ministry. Asadourian was probably
    attending the WCC event with hopes of gaining sympathy for Iraqi
    Christians. Good luck! WCC officials have never expressed tremendous
    interest in human rights in Iraq. Instead, they mainly see church
    leaders there as little more than potential props for denouncing the
    U.S., just as prelates in the West Bank are convenient mouthpieces
    for condemning Israeli policies.

    Asadourian called the calls for a U.S. military withdrawal time-table a
    "two-edged sword." He expressed hope that the U.S. military presence
    would "eventually" end but showed even more interest in U.S.-led
    security forces reducing the violence in Iraq. "The occupying powers
    have to enforce the Geneva conventions and guarantee the security of
    the country," the archbishop said. "If they were able to bring about
    security, a lot of problems would be solved."

    "Security is needed to make democracy viable," Asadourian said.

    "Democracy is not only a concept, but also a way of life. Today in
    Iraq, we need basic freedoms, like freedom from fear, freedom to
    work, to travel in order to satisfy basic needs. One of the tragic
    features of the current situation is the fact that they have stolen
    the nights of Baghdad from us." The archbishop complained that the
    U.S.-led invasion had been "bungled" but he declined to denounce it
    sweepingly as an exercise in imperialism, as many WCC-related clerics
    in the West have done.

    When asked how churches outside Iraq could help Iraqi Christians,
    Asadourian did not ask that they accelerate their antiwar protests.

    Instead, he suggested that they "advocate effectively with their
    governments, they should tell the occupying powers to fulfill their
    promises of a better life for Iraq. Promises of a bright future
    should now be substantiated. One key point in the story of the Good
    Samaritan is that he not only extended help, but his help was complete
    and effective."

    Do not expect Asadourian's audience of WCC Religious Left prelates
    to take his pleas very seriously. For most of them, the only solution
    for Iraq is a rapid route for the U.S. and British forces, come what
    may. These clerics are interested in neither "security" nor democracy
    for Iraqis. They primarily desire a strategic defeat for the U.S. and
    its allies.

    "I come from a wounded Iraq and a severely wounded Baghdad,"
    Asadourian told the WCC meeting. "The situation in my country is
    tragic. We were promised freedom, but what we need today is freedom
    to have electricity, clean water, to satisfy the basic needs of life,
    to live without fear of being abducted."

    Who is preventing Asadourian's flock and millions of other Iraqis from
    having unhindered democracy, electricity, clean water, and protection
    from kidnappers? Former Baathists, Islamic militias, and al-Qaeda
    affiliated insurgents. But the WCC and the Religious Left prefers not
    to criticize the actual agents of upheaval and destruction. Instead,
    the religious leftists reserve all their fire for the occupying forces
    that are attempting to create security and order out of chaos.

    "Every day terrorist attacks are targeting people who could be the
    cornerstone of a new Iraq: professionals, physicians, and engineers,"
    Asadourian told a WCC interviewer. "And this is resulting in an
    across-the-board brain drain, which is a shame since it takes decades
    to train qualified people." Note that the archbishop persistently
    referred to "terrorists" in Iraq, which the WCC and its allies never
    do. How surprising that the WCC even published the interview with
    Asadourian, and his harsh rhetoric against insurrectionists who simply
    oppose the Western imperialists!

    Asadourian referenced the recent murders of two Christian priests in
    Iraq and noted that 27 members of his church have died, while another
    23 have been kidnapped. The Christian population has dropped from
    7-8 percent of Iraq to 3-4 percent. Some Christians are also moving
    "north within the country," which is relatively safer, the archbishop
    said. He recounted that his own church has declined from 600-700
    worshipers to 100-150.

    Some have left Baghdad, some fear going out, while others just lack
    fuel for their cars.

    "My message to my flock is: do not be afraid, but be careful.

    Confront this dire situation with optimism, and pray and work for a
    better future," Asadourian concluded. "My message to churches outside
    Iraq, especially to those in the occupying countries, is: Help us to
    make life better for the Iraqi people, to alleviate its suffering,
    to keep their governments' promises for a better future in all walks
    of life, and ask for God's help in this humanitarian endeavor."

    For the WCC and the Religious Left, unable to set aside the archaic
    prism of Liberation Theology, the war in Iraq is a simple morality play
    involving Western colonizers versus oppressed Third World natives. But
    actual Iraqis, especially vulnerable Christians, are fighting for
    their lives and the life of their tender democracy.
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