
A U.S. soldier rests near a statue of Mary outside a church in the
Dora district of Baghdad, Iraq, Nov. 21.
CNS PHOTO/MAHMOUD RAOUF MAHMOUD/REUTERS |
By Simon Caldwell
Catholic News Service
LONDON (CNS) — The war in Iraq might have caused
the end of Christianity in the country, said a Chaldean Catholic bishop.
Bishop Antoine Audo of Aleppo, Syria, said that the hundreds of thousands
of Christians who had fled their homes in the aftermath of the 2003 U.S.-led
invasion were still too scared to go home.
During an interview in London’s Church of the Immaculate Conception
he said that unless security improved in Iraq the Chaldean diaspora may
become permanent.
“They love their country, but at the same time it is impossible
for them to go back to this situation,” said Bishop Audo, who ministers
to approximately 60,000 Iraqi Christian refugees in Syria.
During a Nov. 29 press conference, Bishop Audo said that prostitution
among desperately poor Iraqi Chaldean female refugees had emerged as a
“serious problem” for the Church in Syria.
The bishop visited London Nov. 28-29 as a guest of Iraqi Christians in
Need, a British-based group set up this year to provide displaced or persecuted
Christians with money for food, medicine and an education.
The bishop told CNS that the war was a tragedy for the 1.2 million Christians
who lived in the country at the time. More than half of those Christians
have since fled.
“It may be the end of Christianity in Iraq,” he said. “This
is very sad and very dangerous for the church, for Iraq and even for Muslim
people, because it means the end of an old experience of living together.
“If in the Middle East Christians and Muslims are not able to live
together, then it will also be very dangerous for the West in the future,”
he said. “We have to save this coexistence, this nice experience
of history, in spite of all the difficulties which we have.”
The bishop’s comments came as the Iraqi government said that refugees
slowly were beginning to return to the homeland after a decline in sectarian
violence. The reverse flow has followed a recent surge in U.S. and Iraqi
military operations against terrorists and militia groups.
The government has offered free transportation and is offering to pay
$800 for every family willing to return. Some 4,700 families have heeded
the call, and another 8,500 are on a waiting list.
Of the 4 million Iraqi refugees, about 1.4 million are in Syria and 750,000
are in Jordan. Two million are displaced within Iraq. In Syria, 44 percent
of Iraqi refugees are Christian, according to the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees.
Bishop Audo said Iraqi refugees were suffering great hardships.
“They have no legal protection by law and they are not recognized
as refugees,” he said. “They feel that they can’t go
home because of the war, and at the same time they can’t get a (work)
visa.”
He said Western governments should grant asylum to more Iraqi Christians
and that Christians in the West should support them with money and with
work in peace and reconciliation.
“They have to work on the black market and they are exploited by
the Syrians,” he added. “They pay huge amounts of money to
hire (rent) apartments, and they are suffering from severe poverty.”
The bishop said many of the refugees had lost family members, as well
as their homes and jobs, because of the violence.
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