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Christian enclave ties future to
life outside Iraq
8, 12, 05
ANKAWA, Iraq (Reuters) - It looks much like any other Iraqi town,
until you notice the number of shops selling alcohol, the young
women walking the streets at night in jeans and tight T-shirts,
and the church spires.
Ankawa, a town of about 15,000 people just outside the capital
of the northern Kurdish region, is almost entirely populated
by Christians and has become a bastion of that declining -- some
say dying -- community in mainly Muslim Iraq.
Legend says Ankawa was founded in the 2nd century by Saint
Thomas the Apostle. It is one of the oldest Christian settlements
in Iraq, a land that has deep roots for several Christian denominations,
including Chaldeans and Assyrians.
In the early 1990s, Iraq's Christian community was estimated
at more than one million with large populations in Baghdad, Basra
and the northern city of Mosul.
But since 1991, and particularly over the past 2 1/2 years,
the community has fallen into disarray. Christians are fearful
religious violence after churches were bombed and Muslim militants
targeted Christian-owned alcohol shops.
Many Christians have sought refuge abroad.
Father Youssef Sabri, a priest at St Joseph's Chaldean church,
maintains broad connections across the Christian community in
Iraq and says the numbers may now have dwindled to 600,000 or
less out of a total population of around 27 million.
Far away from most of the bombs that plague the country, Ankawa
has emerged as a refuge for Christians seeking to escape violence.
It has also become a jumping off point for those looking to flee
Iraq.
SWEDISH HONEYMOON
Around 250 families have come to Ankawa from Baghdad, Mosul,
Samarra and other towns in the past year, according to Sabri,
while hundreds more have left, moving to Sweden, Australia, Canada,
Britain and the United States.
"People here say, 'Rather Ankawa than Baghdad',"
said Father Tariq Choucha, another Chaldean priest in the town.
"But what they really want is a visa to go abroad and stay
there."
In Ankawa, Iraqis who have fled the violence of Baghdad can
relax and plan the next stage of their journey, knowing that
at least they will not have to take the dangerous road to Baghdad's
airport.
As well as alcohol stores, Ankawa has several restaurants,
an ice-cream parlor, an Internet cafe and antiques shops. There
are two churches and three chapels.
Foreign security companies in the area have set up bases in
the town, finding the lifestyle more relaxed than conservative
Arbil, the region's capital. Young men and women can walk the
streets together, and their dress is as relaxed as in Europe.
Because of the possibility of attack, and the presence of
foreigners, security is tight but there have been no problems.
"It is a good community. We even get Arabs coming to
visit," said Paulus Danha, 52, who owns an alcohol shop.
Business is strong thanks to demand from the security companies
and international non-governmental organizations, he said.
Paulus Danha, 52, the owner of
a liquor store, stands in his shop in Ankawa
The town has also become richer thanks to remittances from
abroad. There are 3,000 people from Ankawa living in Sweden,
more than 2,000 in Australia and a similar number in Canada,
according to Sabri.
Most of those who have left are young men, leaving behind
a disproportionate number of young women. But rather than weakening
the community, Sabri says it has worked out well.
"Now we see the young men coming back to find wives,"
he said, introducing a 26-year-old Iraqi now living in Stockholm
and his bride-to-be, a trainee doctor from Ankawa.
While anxious about Iraq's wider Christian community, Sabri,
who lived in the United States for 13 years and returned to Iraq
after the war in 2003, sees some reason to hope.
"It's good for the young people for now if they are abroad
and secure, but eventually I think they will come back,"
he said. "The community is strong and Ankawa is where their
hearts are."
Ankawa is one of several Assyrian towns
in northern Iraq located a short distance from Nineveh still
populated predominantly by the Christian Assyrians who have been
called Nestorians, Chaldeans, and Jacobites, names which describe
their various religious affiliations. |
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