Wiping Out the Christians of Syria and Iraq to Remap the Middle East: Prerequisite to a Clash of Civilizations?
Church destroyed
Historically, the Levant is the birthplace of
Christianity and the oldest Christian communities have
lived in it and the entire Fertile Crescent since the
start of Christian history. Early Christians called
themselves followers or people of "the Way"
before they adopted the term Christian; in Arabic their
antiquated name would be "Ahl Al-Deen". [1]
Traces of this original name are also available in the New
Testament of the Bible and can be read in John 14:5-7,
Acts 9:1-2, Acts 24:4 and 14. From the Fertile Crescent
these Christian communities spread across Africa, Asia,
and Europe. Since that time the ancient communities of
Christians, many of which still use the Syriac dialects of
Aramaic in their churches, have been an integral and
important part of the social fabrics of the pluralistic
societies of Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Turkey, and
Iran. Nevertheless, the Christians of the Levant and Iraq
are now in the cross-hairs.
Deceit and mischief has been at play. It is no coincidence
that Egyptian Christians were attacked at the same time as
the South Sudan Referendum, which was supposed to signal a
split between the Muslims in Khartoum and the Christians
and animists in Juba. Nor is it an accident that
Iraq’s Christians, one of the oldest Christian
communities in the world, began to face a modern exodus,
leaving their homes and ancestral homeland in Iraq in
2003. Mysterious groups targeted both them and Palestinian
refugees…
Coinciding with the exodus of Iraqi Christians, which
occurred under the watchful eyes of US and British
military forces, the neighborhoods in Baghdad became
sectarian as Shiite Muslims and Sunni Muslims were forced
by violence and death squads to form sectarian enclaves.
This is all tied to a US and Israeli project of redrawing
the map.
The Christian communities of the Levant and Iraq have long
distrusted the US government for its support of Israel,
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and fanatical militants with
anti-Christian leanings. Lebanon’s Christians have
also been weary of US support for Israeli expansion and
ideas about resettling Palestinians into Lebanon. There is
also a widely held belief that the US and Israel have been
involved in a policy to remove or "purge" the
Christians from Iraq and the Levant in some type of
Zionist-linked resettlement plan. Since the US-supported
anti-government fighters started targeting Christian
Syrians, there has been renewed talk about a Christian
exodus in the Middle East centering on Washington’s
war on Syria.
Silencing the Ancient Church Bells of Sham and
Shinar
Christian Arabs and both the Assyrian and Armenian ethnic
communities, which are overwhelming composed of
Christians, inside Lebanon and Syria have been in the
crosshairs. From Homs and Maaloula to Kessab,
Syria’s Christians have been under siege. Various
ecclesiastic councils or synods have expressed concerns as
have Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Bartholomew I,
the Vatican or Holy See, Russian Orthodox Patriarch of
Moscow Cyril (Kirill) I, Armenian Apostolic Catholicos
Aram I, the Maronite Greek Catholic Patriarchate in
Lebanon, Jerusalemite Greek Orthodox Archbishop Theodosios
(Attallah) Hanna of Sebastia, the Anglican See of
Canterbury, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Lebanese
President Michel Suleiman, the Free Patriotic Movement of
Lebanon’s Michel Aoun, the World Council of
Churches, and various interfaith bodies. Even US
celebrities Cherilyn Sarkisian (Cher) and Kimberly
Kardashian joined the chorus and voiced their concerns
about Syria’s Christians after the Turkish
government perfidiously helped Al-Nusra overrun the
predominately Armenian town of Kessab in Lattakia
Governate on March 24, 2014. [2]
Inside Syria, Maronite Greek Catholic Archbishop of
Damascus Samir Nassar, Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch
Gregory III Laham, Antiochian Greek Orthodox Patriarch
Ignatius IV, and Syriac Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius Zakka
I Iwas have all condemned the violence. The leaders of
Syria’s other faiths, Druze Sheikh Al-Aql Hamoud
Hennawi, Sunni Grand Mufti Ahmed Badreddin, and Ashari
Imam Mohammed Said Ramadan, have joined the Christian
leaders in their calls for peace and condemnations of
Washington’s war on Syria. These leaders have risked
their lives and the lives of their loved ones by taking
these positions. Sheikh Ramadan, who was also an ethnic
Kurd, was murdered while he was teaching in a mosque for
his backing of the Syrian government on March 21, 2013.
Patriarch Ignatius IV had his brother kidnapped in Aleppo
whereas Grand Mufti Hassoun had his twenty-two year-old
son murdered on his way to university in Idlib. Despite
the threats, all these figures have spoken against the
insurgency as a cancerous threat to coexistence in Syrian
society and the broader region. Melkite Patriarch Gregory
III Laham has very vocally said that his country is being
attacked by bandits and terrorists under the fiction of a
revolution that seek to destroy the Christians and all
Syria. [3]
The Christian communities of Syria, which constitute at
least 10% of the Syrian population, have been
systematically targeted; their churches have been attached
and desecrated; their priests, monks, and nuns murdered;
and generally discriminated against by the anti-government
forces that the US, UK, France, Israel, Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Turkey, and their allies support. The objectives of
establishing this exodus are reflected by the
anti-government chants: "Alawites to the ground and
Christians to Lebanon!" What this chant means is that
Syria is no longer a place where either Alawis or
Christians can live.
America’s Foot Soldiers and the Rape of
Christians in Syria and Iraq
Fides News Agency, the official news agency of the Vatican
and the Roman Catholic Church, has reported that the
so-called religious leaders of the anti-government
fighters declared it lawful for the anti-government
fighters to rape "any non-Sunni Syrian woman"
that they desired; the declarations of these corrupt
pastors have been used to justify the rape, humiliation,
torture, and murder of women and girls in towns and
territory captured by groups like the so-called Free
Syrian Army, Jabhat Al-Nusra, and the so-called Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant/Al-Dawlah Al-Islamiyah fi
Al-Iraq wa Al-Sham (ISIL/DAISH). [4]
Here is the account given to the Fides News Agency by two
priests about what was done to one fifteen year-old Syrian
Christian girl in Homs Governate after the anti-government
fighters took control of it:
The commander of the battalion "Jabhat
al-Nusra" in Qusair took Mariam, married and raped
her. Then he repudiated her. The next day the young woman
was forced to marry another Islamic militant. He also
raped her and then repudiated her. The same trend was
repeated for 15 days, and Mariam was raped by 15 different
men. This psychologically destabilized her and made her
insane. Mariam, became mentally unstable and was
eventually killed. These atrocities are not told by any
"International Commission" say to Fides two
Greek-Catholic priests, Fr. Issam and Fr. Elias who have
just returned to town. [5]
These same US-supported multinational insurgent groups
have begun to do this to Iraqi Christians too. "On
June 12, [2014,] only two day after capturing Mosul and
other territories in Iraq, the Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria issued a decree ordering the people to send their
unmarried women to ‘jihad by sex’" and
made a decree ordering that unmarried women sexually be
offered to their fighters for fornication. [6] The
following account, which was confirmed by the Iraqi High
Commission for Human Rights and reported by the Assyrian
International News Agency, deals with Mosul after its
takeover by the insurrectionary forces entering Iraq from
Syria on June 25, 2014:
A Christian father who watched his wife and daughter
get brutally raped by members of the militant group,
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) because he
couldn’t pay them a poll tax in Mosul, Iraq, killed
himself under the weight of the trauma this past weekend.
[7]
The molestation and rape of Christian women and girls as
sex objects has not been limited to Christians alone.
Syrian women and girls, regardless of their faiths, that
have been captured by the anti-government forces are being
raped and molested. Muslims, Christians, and Druze are all
equally at risk. These perverted acts are being encouraged
by corrupt clerics issuing legal opinions and decrees
(fatwas) that support rape and womanizing.
These twisted legal opinions and decrees being issued
include calls for foreign women to become concubines to
the anti-government fighters in Syria in what is
disgracefully called a "sexual holy struggle"
(jihad al-nikah). The Tunisian government was even
prompted to react in mid-2013 to these calls for sexual
offering, because they were exploiting young Tunisian
girls. [8] Tunisian Minister of Religious Affairs
Noureddine Al-Khadimi condemned the corrupt and ignorant
clerics and individuals behind the calls, insisting that
they had nothing to do with Muslim teachings:
The minister’s statements came after the spread
of an anonymous "sexual jihad" fatwa on the
Internet calling on young women to support opposition
fighters in Syria by providing sexual services. According
to media reports and mujahideen who returned to Tunisia
after participating in jihad in Syria, 13 Tunisian girls
headed to the battlefield in response to the "sexual
jihad" fatwa. [9]
"After the sexual liaisons they have [in Syria] in
the name of ‘jihad al-nikah’ — (sexual
holy war, in Arabic) — [these girls] come home
pregnant", Tunisian Interior Minister Lotfi bin
Jeddou testified to Tunisian legislators months after
Al-Khadimi’s condemnations, explaining that the
misguided girls could have over a hundred partners. [10]
Targeting Bishops, Priests, Monks, and Nuns:
Besieging the People of "The Way"
Since the start of the fighting, Christian spiritual
figures have been targeted in one way or another. There
are the cases of Greek Orthodox Archbishop Sayedna Paul
(Boulos) Yazigi and Syriac Orthodox Metropolitan Mar
Gregorios John Abraham (Yohanna Ibrahim), which were
kidnapped near the Turkish border, on April 22, 2013.
Their driver, a Christian priest himself, was killed
instantly for protecting the two Christian metropolitans
by refusing to let them leave their car. A fourth person
in the car, Fouad Eliya, managed to remain free (and
explain what happened). [11]
The Turkish government is directly involved in the
kidnapping of the two Orthodox Christian bishops. The
Turkish newswire Dogan News Agency (Dogan Haber
Ajansı) reported on July 23, 2013 that the murders
or, using the report’s words, "assassins"
of the two Syrian bishops were arrested in Konya. [12] The
arrest happened to be of anti-Russian fighters from the
North Caucasus, which corresponded to Foud Eliya’s
account that Boulos Yazigi and Yohanna Ibrahim were taken
by North Caucasian militants dressed like Taliban fighters
from Afghanistan. [13]
Grand Mufti Hassoun revealed that Turkish-trained Chechen
fighters were dispatched by Ankara to kidnap Sayedna
Boulos Yazigi and Mar Gregorios, because of two important
reasons. According to Sheikh Hassoun, the first reason is
that Metropolitan Gregorios was asked by Syriac Orthodox
Patriarch Ignatius Zakka I Iwas to head a church committee
to begin the process of reclaiming the vast holdings of
the Syriac Orthodox Church that the Turkish government had
confiscated during its persecution of Syriac Orthodox
Christians. [14]
In a meeting between Prime Minister Erdogan and Mar
Gregorios, the Turkish government asked that the Syriac
Orthodox Church of Antioch establish a eparchy (an
ecclesiastical province or administrative division of the
church with a metropolitan) in Turkey and to even relocate
its patriarchate from Damascus to Hatay (Antioch), but
Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim refused and said that the
patriarchate of the Syriac Orthodox Church will never
change locations, that Syriac Orthodox Christians
recognized the Levant as one unified land, and that a
bishop would be assigned to Turkey when the Syriac
Orthodox Church’s properties were returned by the
Turkish government, which angered Turkish officials. [15]
The other reason that the Orthodox Christian cleric was
targeted was that he was reconciling anti-government
fighters peacefully with the Syrian government in Aleppo
Governate, which upset Turkey and its allies. [16]
Other cases include those of: Father (Abouna) Fadi Jamal
Haddad, a Antiochian Greek Orthodox priest acting as a
mediator in Qatana during the fighting, who was tortured
and shot in the head after he tried to mediate the release
of a doctor that was being ransomed for money; Father
(Abouna) Francois Al-Mourad, a Catholic priest of the
Franciscan Order, who was shot for preventing fellow
Christians and Syrians from being hurt by the
anti-government fighters; and Father Frans van der Lugt, a
Dutch priest of the Jesuit Order working in Homs. When
Abouna Fadi went to pay the insurgents for the doctor they
had abducted, they kidnapped him too; they would later
kill the Christian priests and leave him on the side of
the highway, "horribly tortured and [with] his eyes
gouged out", where his body would be found on
September 25, 2012. [17]
According to the Franciscan Order’s representatives
in Syria, the insurgents "broke into the convent,
looted it and destroyed everything. When Fr.
Franҫois tried to defend the nuns and other people,
the gunmen shot him dead" on June 23, 2013. [18]
The insurgents murdered Father Frans van der Lugt on April
7, 2014.This an account of the circumstances behind his
murder:
Wael Salibi, 26, recalled how when the Christian area
in Homs was taken over by rebels, 66,000 of the faithful
"left their home, and just few of them stayed there.
He was the only priest, he stayed in his
church."
"Just months before he died, he said ‘I
can’t leave my people, I can’t leave my
church, I am director of this church, how can I leave
them?’" Salibi told CNA on April 11.
Salibi, who hails from the now-ravished city of Homs,
grew up as a close friend and pupil of Fr. Frans, who was
brutally killed on April 7. Days before his 76th birthday,
an unknown gunman entered his church, beat him and shot
him in the head. [19]
In Hasakah (Hasce) many of the Christian Syrians fled, but
almost 30,000 stayed as internal refugees. The Syrian
Christians who belonged to the Chaldean Catholic Church,
Syriac Orthodox Church, Syriac Catholic Church, Armenian
Apostolic Orthodox Church, and the Armenian Catholic
Church collectively asked the world for help and to put an
end to the fighting, in an appeal that went unheard, in
late-2012; they have suffered from persecution,
lawlessness, kidnappings, ransoms, and murder. One
Christian from the area told Fides News Agency that
Al-Nusra was targeting "all young people who were
born between 1990 and 1992. They look for them, accuse
them of being soldiers for the national service and kill
them cold-bloodedly. They want to terrorize young people
to prevent them from enlisting." [20]
Another example of the assault on the Christian community
is Al-Nusra’s assault on the town of Maaloula.
Maaloula is one of a few villages maintaining an old
dialect of Aramaic, known as the language of Jesus of
Nazareth. Many Christian structures and historic sites
fill the Syrian town, but the Melkite Greek Catholic Saint
Sergius (Mar Sarkis) Monastery and Antiochian Greek
Orthodox Saint Thecla (Mar Taqla) Monastery standout. The
town became the scene of fighting between Al-Nusra and the
Syrian Arab Army and switched hands between the insurgents
and Syrian government four times between late-2013 and
mid-2014.
Many of Maaloula’s residents, both Christian and
Muslim alike, became trapped in their homes and local
buildings, including forty Greek Orthodox Christian nuns
and the orphans they were looking after, which sparked
panic in the Christian populations of Syria and Lebanon.
Hence the strong backing of Bashar Al-Assad’s
government by all of Syria’s minorities and the
expression of these type of sentiments were nearly
universal among Christian Syrians:
"‘They’re coming after us,’ [said]
Odette Abu Zakham, a 65-year-old woman in the congregation
who lives in the nearby historic Christian district of Bab
Touma. ‘All they do is massacre people, all they
know is killing.’" [21] Not only were the nuns
held hostage by Al-Nusra, but the anti-government fighters
desecrated absolutely all of Maaloula’s shrines and
Christian buildings, stole its historic artifacts to sell
in the black market, and scattered the partially
Aramaic-speaking population of the town. Eyewitnesses who
escaped Maaloula give this account below:
[The insurgents] tried to change the religious and
architectural-historical look of the ancient Christian
town entirely: completely destroying some churches, the
militants brought down all bells from other ones. The fate
of two other world-famous monuments of Ma’loula was
no less tragic: extremists blew up the statue of Christ
the Savior, which had stood at the entrance of St. Thecla
Convent, as well as the statue of the Most Holy Virgin
Mary, which had stood close to the Safir hotel, the latter
of which served as the main shelter for Takfirists for
many months. [22]
Easter, in 2014 was a special time for Maaloula. Around
Easter, the Syrian government regained the town. Maaloula
was finally secured and residents were returning.
"The display of hatred was clear — the houses
are totally destroyed, the whole village was destroyed. I
can’t describe the amount of damage to the
village", a returning resident by the name of Lorain
told the press about what the insurgents did. [23]
President Al-Assad visited too. Al-Assad himself came to
visit it as a sign of the Syrian government’s
commitment to its entire population regardless of their
faith or ethnicity. Both the Western rite and Eastern rite
Christian celebrations of Easter, respectively using the
Gregorian and Julian calendars, fell on the same date too:
April 20, 2014.
(To be continued)
NOTES
[1] The term Christian is akin to the term Mohammedian,
which was once used to describe Muslims. It was a name
originally used as a derogatory term by non-Christians to
identify the followers of Jesus of Nazareth and "the
Way" by them, but would eventually be accepted and
adopted by many of the Christians; the Arabic word
"deen" means "way" and not religion as
it is commonly substituted for.
[2] Pinar Tremblay, "Armenian-Americans blame Turkey
for Kassab invasion, Al-Monitor, April 3, 2014.
[3] "Syria has been reduced to banditry and anarchy,
says Gregory III Laham", Vatican Insider, May 4,
2012.
[4] "13 Syrian Christian Women Raped and
Killed by Islamists" Pravoslavie.ru, April 5,
2013; "Rape and atrocities on a young Christian in
Qusair", Fides News Agency, July 2, 2013; Stoyan
Zaimov, "Syrian Christian Mother Reveals Stories
of Rape, Church Attacks in Streets of Damascus",
Christian Post, October 17, 2013; Jamie Dettmer,
"Syria’s Christians Flee Kidnappings, Rape,
Executions", Daily Beast, November 19, 2013.
[5] "Rape and atrocities", Fides, op. cit.
[6] "ISIS in Mosul Orders Unmarried Women to
‘Jihad By Sex,’" Assyrian International
News Agency, June 21, 2014.
[7] Leonardo Blair, "Christian Father Commits Suicide
After ISIS Members Rape Wife and Daughter in Front of Him
Because He Couldn’t Pay Poll Tax", Christian
Post, June 25, 2014.
[8] Mohammed Yassin Al-Jalassi, "Tunisians Raise
Alarm on Fatwa Encouraging ‘Sexual
Jihad,’" Al-Monitor, March 27, 2013.
[9] Ibid.
[10] "Sex Jihad raging in Syria, claims
minister", Agence France-Presse, September 20, 2013.
[11] Dikran Ego, "Turkey’s Role in the
Kidnapping of the Syrian Bishops", Assyrian
International News Agency, February 1, 2012.
[12] Ismail Akkaya, "Suriyeli metropolitlerin katil
zanlıları Konya’da yakalandı"
["Syrian metropolitan’s alleged assassins were
caught in Konya"], Dogan Haber Ajansı, July 23,
2013.
[13] Dikran Ego, "Turkey’s Role in
Kidnapping", AINA, op. cit.
[14] Grand Mufti Hassoun explains this in a video released
by the Stockholm-based Syriac Foundation on May 4, 2014.
[15] Ibid.
[16] Ibid.
[17] "Fr. Fadi Jamil Haddad: Priest, Trusted By All,
Martyred in Syria", Pravmir.com, October 28, 2012: .
[18] "Custos of the Holy Land: Fr Franҫois
Mourad killed by Islamist insurgents in
al-Ghassaniyah", AsiaNews.it, June 25, 2013: .
[19] Elise Harris, "‘I can’t leave my
people’: Priest killed in Syria hailed as
martyr", Catholic News Agency, April 15, 2014.
[20] "Appeal from the people of Mesopotamia, left to
themselves", Fides News Agency, January 17, 2013.
[21] Lee Keath, "Seizure of nuns stokes Syrian
Christian fears", Associated Press, December 8, 2013.
[22] "All Shrines of Ma’loula Either
Destroyed or Desecrated", Pravoslavie.ru,
January 13, 2014.
[23] Firas Makdesi, "Syria’s Assad pays Easter
visit to recaptured Christian town", Reuters, April
20, 2014.
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