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http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/PER170744.htm
Iraqi Christians
seek sanctuary in ancient homeland
12 Sep 2004 Source:
Reuters
By Tom Perry
BAGHDAD, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Saddam
Hussein uprooted Assyrian Christians from their ancient homeland
in northern Iraq. Now militants in Baghdad are forcing some to
flee again. "Some Muslims see us as infidels. We are targets.
They'll eat us alive," said one of dozens who are planning
to
move from Baghdad back to villages in the north as soon as possible.
Saddam moved the Assyrian Christians, as he did Shi'ites and
Kurds, to break down any opposition to his rule.
Fighting between Kurds and the Iraqi government in the north
also uprooted members of the sect. In the security vacuum that
emerged from Saddam's downfall, a sporadic wave of Islamist violence
has targeted Christians, putting them on the defensive again.
Synchronised bombings struck churches in Baghdad and Mosul last
month. Officials blamed al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Another
car bomb hit a Baghdad church on September 10.
Some Christians, like Iraqis of all faiths, have left for Syria
and Jordan to escape the violence. Others want to return to their
ancestral homeland in the north, where they have homes and villages
they want to rebuild. "I want to practise my religion. Since
they bombed the churches I haven't even driven past a church,
let alone prayed in one," said one Christian, who like others
was too scared of being targeted to give his name. He wants to
take his family to Sharanesh, one of more than 120 Christian
villages needing reconstruction in the north. "There's not
a single Muslim living there," he added. The village nestles
in a region where the ancient Assyrian civilisation was centred.
Iraq's Assyrian Christians claim descent from the ancient Assyrians,
whose capital Nineveh lies next to Mosul.Assyrians make up the
majority of Iraqi Christians, speak Syriac and see themselves
as a distinct ethnic group from Arabs and Kurds.
"When I move back to the village, there will be nobody living
around me except my relatives. It's better than living among
strangers," said another Christian, whose family was forced
from Sharanesh to Baghdad in 1986.
He has already put his factory up for sale and is ready to move
tomorrow. "We have lands. We'll farm them," he said.
ENEMY'S ASPIRATIONS
William Warda, information officer at the Assyrian Democratic
Movement, said the church attacks had made many Christians more
aware they were targets.
"The situation has become clear. Before, one Christian would
be killed here, two there," he said. "The church explosions
threw a lot of light on what is going on," he said. Prior
to the church bombs, which killed 11, violence against Christians
had mainly comprised attacks on alcohol sellers and hairdressing
salons.
"Many have preferred to go to more secure areas so they
can practise their religion with more freedom," Warda said.
The Ministry of Displacement and Migration does not know how
many have left Iraq, but says the figure is not significant.
Fear of attacks on Christians prompted one Baghdad television
worker to move his entire family to Syria in June. "The
government has not established itself. It is not strong enough
to protect the minorities," he said. He still works in Baghdad
to support his wife, two sons and daughter.
"I rarely visit my family, once every one or two months.
The conditions force you to protect your family," he added.
He will decide next June on whether to bring his family back
to Baghdad. Christian leaders say most Christians who have left
Iraq in recent months have only travelled to avoid summer heat
and frequent Baghdad power cuts. Most will come back after the
summer, they say.
"There may be some who have left, but not that many. Never
more than 100 families," said Yonadam Kanna, head of the
Assyrian Democratic Movement. "There were a lot of rumours
that people fled. Maybe that was the aspiration of our enemies.
"We are trying to encourage them to go back for their villages.
It's their homeland. They can invest in their lands and have
a good life there," he said, adding that finance was needed
for reconstruction of the settlements.
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