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MIDDLE EAST: IRAQI ARCHBISHOP CALLS ON WEST TO “OPEN EYES” TO CHRISTIANS’ MIDDLE EAST EXODUS

The World Watch Monitor reports on calls for the church in the West to open its eyes to the plight of Christians in the Middle East…

World Watch Monitor

The Archbishop of Baghdad, Louis Raphael I Sako, has called on the West to help put an end to the “mortal exodus” of Christians from the Middle East.

 PRINCE CHARLES CRITICISES “ORGANISED PERSECUTION” OF MIDDLE EAST CHRISTIANS

The Prince of Wales, heir to the British throne, has added his voice to those calling for an end to the persecution of Christians in the Middle East.

After a visit to the London cathedral of the Syriac Orthodox Church, Prince Charles said he was “deeply troubled” by the “growing difficulties” faced by Christians in the region.

“It seems to me that we cannot ignore the fact that Christians in the Middle East are, increasingly, being deliberately targeted by fundamentalist Islamist militants,” he said.

Noting Christianity’s roots in the region, the Prince observed that today the Middle East and North Africa have the lowest concentration of Christians in the world – just four per cent – and that this has “dropped dramatically over the last century and is falling still further”.

He said that the effect of this was that “we all lose something immensely and irreplaceably precious when such a rich tradition dating back 2,000 years begins to disappear”.

Echoing the recent words of Louis Raphael I Sako, the Archbishop of Baghdad, the Prince added that the decline of Christians in the region represents a “major blow to peace, as Christians are part of the fabric of society, often acting as bridge-builders between other communities”.

“For 20 years, I have tried to build bridges between Islam and Christianity and to dispel ignorance and misunderstanding. The point though, surely, is that we have now reached a crisis where the bridges are rapidly being deliberately destroyed by those with a vested interest in doing so – and this is achieved through intimidation, false accusation and organised persecution – including to Christian communities in the Middle East at the present time,” he said.

David Yakoub, from the beleaguered and once Christian-dominated Syrian town of Sadad, was reported to be close to tears as he pleaded with the Prince to “do something”.

Earlier in the day at the UK Coptic Orthodox Church Centre, Prince Charles spoke to Huda Nassar, Middle East director for the Awareness Foundation.

“(Prince Charles) said it was heart-breaking what was going on in Syria, and that he’s praying for peace,” Huda told World Watch Monitor.

Last week Huda’s brother, Nadim Nassar, the only Syrian Anglican priest, handed in to the UK Prime Minister a petition signed by over 300,000 people from 99 countries, on behalf of Syria’s Christians.

The petition, co-ordinated by Open Doors International (which works through partner churches in Syria and Egypt, amongst other countries, to bring aid relief and development) was one of a number submitted around the world on 10th December, including to the UN Secretary-General and the missions of the five permanent members of the Security Council.

Outside the US Embassy in London, Nassar called for an end to the violence in Syria.

Archbishop Sako, who is also Patriarch of Babylon, told a conference in Rome, ‘Christianity and Freedom: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives’, that the West must assist the Muslim nations of the Middle East in “modernising Islam’s approach to religious freedom” and “convince Muslim nations that their repression and persecution of their minority Christian communities is not only harming the Christians, but is harming the societies themselves”.

Archbishop Sako, a keynote speaker at the conference run by the Religious Freedom Project at Georgetown University, which recently hosted the UK’s Baroness Warsi, said the situation in Iraq over the past 10 years has gone from bad to worse, and that he can see similar situations unfolding in Egypt and Syria.

“In Iraq, after 10 years, we still don’t have security. There are daily attacks, explosions, kidnappings and murders. The same scenario is happening in Syria and in Egypt,” he said.

Archbishop Sako quoted the Coptic Catholic Patriarch, Ibrahim Isaac Sidrak, who said that in the past 18 months, more than 100 Egyptian churches have been attacked. In Syria, Archbishop Sako said 67 churches have been attacked and 45,000 Christians have left the country.

The Iraqi Archbishop pointed towards the rise of political Islam as one of the major opponents of the church in the Middle East, while he said the US-led invasion of Iraq has “destroyed the country”, being replaced by a period of sectarian violence.

He added that governments seem “generally incapable” of controlling the sectarian battles between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

“Suffering became an everyday struggle for all Iraqis, but especially for Christians,” he said. “Muslims are always strong enough with their tribes. They also have the advantage of living in a country ruled under Islamic orders. But Christians and other minority groups have been worn down by a worsening security situation.”

Since 2003, Archbishop Sako said more than 1000 Christians have been killed in Iraq (and others kidnapped and tortured), while 62 churches and monasteries have been attacked.

He added that less than half of Iraq’s 1.2 million Christians in 1987 remain – “and the numbers continue dropping”.

The United Nations Committee for Refugees recently stated that 850,000 Iraqi Christians have left since 2003.

Archbishop Sako said the West “does not understand” the difficulties and fears of Middle Eastern Christians.

“Religious radicalism is growing and becoming very aggressive,” he said. “Religious violence is on the increase across the Middle East, breaking up communities and destroying relations between peoples from different religious traditions. 

“This violence is damaging the very fabric of Middle Eastern societies. Islamist extremists want to take advantage of the current situation (that is, the anarchy in several regions) in order to empty the Christian presence in the Middle East, as if it were an obstacle for their plans.”

He called on the West to “open its eyes” to see the reality of the situations facing Christians in Iraq, Syria and Egypt.

The Archbishop echoed Pope Francis’s declaration that he “would not accept” a Middle East without Christians, which Archbishop Sako said would “fundamentally alter the contours of culture and society in nations such as Iraq, Syria, and Egypt” and “deal a severe blow to any hope of pluralism and democracy”. Christians are “an integral part of the national Arab tissue,” he said.

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