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The Ongoing Violent Dispossession Of The Christians Of The Mideast

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  • The Ongoing Violent Dispossession Of The Christians Of The Mideast

    THE ONGOING VIOLENT DISPOSSESSION OF THE CHRISTIANS OF THE MIDEAST
    by Martin Barillas

    Energy Publisher
    http://www.energypublisher.com/article.asp?id=42907
    Nov 8 2010

    Members of the exile community of Iraqi Christians living in the
    Detroit area are planning to commemorate those killed in an Islamist
    terrorist attack on October 31 in Baghdad. "The March Against the
    Ethnic Cleansing of Iraq's' Indigenous Christians" is being organized
    on Facebook to show solidarity with those murdered during the Sunday
    Mass at Baghdad's Church of Our Lady of Salvation by a suicide squad
    of Islamist terrorists who occupied the worship space and took the
    congregation hostage. When Iraqi security forces burst into the church,
    the terrorists detonated explosive suicide vests and fragmentation
    bombs. Some reports suggest that upon entering the building, they
    immediately murdered the two priests leading the congregation. In all,
    some 57 people died that day.

    The Detroit MI metropolitan area has the highest number of people of
    Middle Eastern origin, both Muslim and Christian, of any such area in
    the United States. The March against Ethnic Cleansing on November 8
    is hoped to bring together likeminded Christians, Jews, and Muslims
    to repudiate ethnic and sectarian violence in the name of politics.

    Organizers hope to generate support for Christians persecuted in Iraq,
    as they are also in other Muslim-dominated countries in the Mideast
    and elsewhere such as Indonesia. The November 8 march is expected
    to take place in front of the McNamara Federal Building in downtown
    Detroit at noon, while other such rallies are expected in London,
    Toronto, as well as Chicago, New York City, Phoenix, and San Diego
    and elsewhere in the U.S.

    Two more Christians were killed on November 7 under as yet to be
    determined circumstances. Security at the Church of Our Lady of
    Deliverance has been stepped up, and Sunday services were held without
    incident even though blood still stains its interior walls. Members of
    the congregation wore black robes of mourning at the Sunday Mass and
    carried lighted candles in memory of the dead. The parish priest, Fr.
    Mukhlas Habash, said from the pulpit that Christians pray for the
    victims and their attackers, recalling Jesus' commandment "love your
    enemies." Rev. Habash referred to the dead as martyrs. According
    to eyewitnesses, one of the two priests murdered on October 31 told
    the terrorists, "Kill me, not this family with children," shielding
    them with his body before he was gunned down. "The future of Iraqi
    Christians - said the priest - is not in the hands of men, but in
    the hands of God," said Rev. Habash. Since June 2004, 66 churches
    have been rocked by bombs and thousands of people have died.

    Iraq is the home of one of the oldest Christian communities in the
    world, having been evangelized in the earliest days of the Christian
    era long before the emergence of Islam from the wastes of the Arabian
    Peninsula. There was also at one time a sizeable Jewish community
    in Iraq that had co-existed with Zoroastrian, Christian, and Muslim
    neighbors until the early 1940s when Jews were murdered and cast out
    by Iraqi allies of Nazi Germany. The Chaldean community long predates
    Arab supremacy, for instance, and can trace its roots to the Babylonian
    civilization of millennia ago. Some Christians still use Aramaic -
    the language used by Jesus - in their everyday lives.

    Long held in contempt by Muslim custom and sharia - Islamic religious
    laws which subjected them to humiliation and persecution - Christians,
    ironically, enjoyed some respite during the regime of Saddam Hussein.

    Indeed, one of their number was Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz whose
    fluent English and diplomatic acumen were obvious in the months
    preceding both of the wars with the U.S. and its allies. He has
    recently been tried for crimes against the Iraqi people and may face
    the death penalty. Iraqi Christians cite indifference on the part of
    the U.S. occupiers, and the West in general, to their plight. They
    complain that the Iraqi government does not provide protection either.

    Rev. David Jaeger, a Catholic priest who has long resided in Israel,
    averred that the Baghdad attack and other threats confirmed the fears
    of Christians in the midst of a exodus of Christians from the biblical
    lands that were raised in the recently Vatican synod of bishops from
    the Middle East. By contrast, the number of Christians living within
    the borders of the state of Israel is actually increasing. Said Rev.

    Jaeger, "As the terrorists themselves say, their purpose is to
    eliminate the Christian presence from those lands either by physically
    destroying Christians or by terrorizing them into renouncing the
    faith or fleeing."

    Of the persecution, Martin Manna of the Detroit-area Chaldean-American
    Chamber of Commerce said, "This is not as big an issue in the United
    States." Hoda Abdal, the mother of 32-year-old Rev. Thaier Saad Abdal
    - one of the two murdered priests - told her son in the U.S. via
    telephone, "I wished they had killed me. I could be in heaven with
    them." Abdal's other son, Raid Abda, 36, was also murdered by the
    suicide squad when he came to aid the priest.

    Members of the Islamic State of Iraq, al-Qaeda's front group in the
    country, threatened further assaults on Christians following the
    October 31 attack. That incident was the deadliest assault on Iraqi
    Christians in recent memory. Iraqi militants linked their threats to
    rumors that clergy of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox are holding hostage
    the wives of two Orthodox clerics. Supposedly, the women converted
    to Islam when they could not obtain divorce. The group is demanding
    the release of terrorists linked to al-Qaeda now held in Iraqi prisons.

    On November 2, as mourners went to mourn at the church where Christians
    were massacred two days before, terrorist attacks on Shiite Muslims
    claimed more lives as 13 attacks rocked Baghdad despite a network
    of police and army checkpoints and blast walls crisscrossing the
    capital. The butcher's bill in that string of incidents climbed to
    91 people by the following day.

    As Christians flee their ancestral lands in Iraq, Egypt, and elsewhere
    in Muslim-dominated countries, comparisons could be drawn not only
    to earlier persecutions of Christians, such as the Armenian Genocide
    perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire and ethnic cleansing of Greek
    Christians in Istanbul by modern Turks in the 1950s, but also to
    the collaboration of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem with Adolf Hitler
    in the years before and during the Second World War. As part of the
    murderous Nazi obsession with liquidating Jews and other enemies of
    Nazism, Germany set about finding a suitable ally in the Mideast who
    could add a modern twist to the age-old enmity of Islam for Jews.

    Prize-winning author Edwin Black, in his new book "The Farhud: Roots
    of the Arab Nazi Alliance in the Holocaust," recounts the close
    cooperation between one of the most respected leaders of the Muslim
    world, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, and Adolf Hitler to exterminate
    Jews in Iraq. In 1941, came the violent dispossession -'farhud' in
    Arabic - of the Jewish community of Iraq that had lived peaceably with
    Gentile neighbors for millennia. The Iraqi marauders, spurred by the
    Mufti's venom, spared neither women nor children in a coordinated
    spree of murder and rape thereby expunging an age-old presence of
    people supposedly revered by Islam as "People of the Book." Fuelled
    by Nazi hatred of Jews, despite Nazi racism that proclaimed Arab
    Semites as lower forms of human life, Arabs in Iraq and Palestine
    attacked Jews in mimicry of the ongoing pogroms in Europe. In fact,
    the Grand Mufti provided Muslim troops to the Nazis who saw action
    in Yugoslavia, committing some of the worst atrocities of the war in
    concentration camps were Serbian prisoners were held.




    From: A. Papazian
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