Iraq's
Persecuted Christians
Members
of one of Iraq's minority faiths face new repressions and discrimination
after the fall of Saddam's regime
By CHRISTOPHER ALLBRITTON/
BAGHDAD
Monday,
Sep. 20, 2004
When Keis Isitfan headed home from work one recent night, he
had reason to watch his back. As a laundry worker for the U.S.
embassy inside Baghdad's green zone, he risked being attacked
by insurgents targeting Iraqis who work for the U.S. But there
was another source of anxiety: Isitfan, 27, is a Christian and,
like others of his faith, is facing growing hostility from hard-line
Islamic groups who accuse
Christians of being sympathetic to the Western occupiers.
As Isitfan was
driving home on Sept. 7, his worst fears came true. After he
left the green zone, two cars pulled up alongside, and attackers
inside opened fire. Four bullets hit Isitfan, who died on the
street. His family, convinced Isitfan was killed for his faith,
plans to flee the country. "Christians in Iraq are weak,"
says his sister Layla, a translator for the U.S. embassy. "All
they can do is leave here, like we will do."
Between 10,000
and 30,000 of Iraq's 800,000 Christians have fled the country
since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, according to Christian
groups in Baghdad. Although Christians make up only about 3%
of Iraq's 25 million people, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
has said they account for about 20% of the refugees fleeing Iraq
for Syria. They are escaping a climate of violence and a surging
Islamic radicalism that have made the practice of their faith
a deadly enterprise.
The worst moment
came on Aug. 1 when Islamic insurgents - most likely connected
with terrorist leader Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, according to Iraqi
government officials - attacked five churches in Baghdad and
Mosul with car bombs, killing a dozen people. While Muslim authorities
in Iraq widely condemned those attacks, local Christians say
security has continued to deteriorate. Says Layla Isitfan: "If
I can't go to church because I'm scared, if I can't dress how
I want, if I can't drink because it's
against Islam, what kind of freedom is that?"
Like the larger
insurgency targeting U.S. troops and the new Iraqi government,
the campaign against Christians appears to be becoming more organized.
Sa'ad Jusif, a Chaldean-Assyrian Christian, was kidnapped on
Sept. 8, according to Dr. Munir Mardirosian, who heads a political
party for Armenian Catholics in Baghdad. His captors showed
him a list of 200 names, most of them Christian, and demanded
to know where they lived. When he refused, he was hung from the
ceiling and beaten with iron pipes. He was released only when
his family paid a $50,000 ransom on Sept. 13. He left the next
day for Jordan. Says Mardirosian: "If they opened the doors
to America or Australia, I can say there would not be one Christian
left in Iraq."
The violence
in Iraq threatens one of the world's oldest Christian communities,
dating back 2,000 years. The population includes Chaldean Assyrians
(Eastern-rite Catholics who recognize the Pope's authority);
Assyrians, who form an independent church; Syrian Catholics;
and Armenian Catholics. Under Saddam, Christians coexisted more
or less amicably with the Muslim majority. Easter services were
broadcast on state television, and Christians were allowed to
own and operate liquor stores.
Christians today
keep a low profile. While most of the anti-Christian violence
has been committed by a small group of Islamic extremists, Christians
say they are encountering rising anger among their Muslim neighbors.
Layla Isitfan says taxi drivers have insulted her when they realized
she was Christian, in some cases saying all Christians should
be shot and killed. At work, she wears a Muslim head scarf and
tells colleagues that she is Muslim. Raja Elias, a Syrian Catholic
in Baghdad, says that recently a neighbor began to dump garbage
on her front porch. When Elias complained, the neighbor said,
"You are a Christian, and I can put it inside your house
if I want to."
With so many
other problems to contend with, the new Iraqi government hasn't
done much to protect Christians. Businesses traditionally owned
by Christians, such as liquor stores and beauty salons, have
been regularly vandalized by Islamic fundamentalists who some
suspect may be loyal
to Shi'ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Elias, who ran a dental clinic
in central Baghdad before the war, recently asked the Health
Ministry to reopen it. But she was told to work in Sadr City,
the seething Shi'ite slum dominated by al-Sadr's men. So her
clinic remains shuttered. "I think they
will come for me sooner or later," she says.
For Iraqis like
Elias, the best option is to leave. Many Iraqi Christians say
their reversal of fortune has been especially disappointing given
the backing the Bush Administration receives from evangelical
Christians. "Why did the U.S. come here?" asks Mardirosian,
the Armenian-Catholic
leader. "To protect the Christians or allow others to kill
them?"
- With reporting
by Samantha Appleton/Baghdad
From the Sep. 27, 2004 issue
of TIME magazine
|