(Vatican
Radio) While issues of everyday concern to families are on the agenda
at the extraordinary Synod on the Family, one participant has come to
Rome with a very sinister tale to tell. It’s the plight of tens of
thousands of Iraqi Christian families who fled for their lives to escape
from Islamic State militants. Few think they will ever return home.
That’s according to Archbishop Ignatius Joseph III Younan, Patriarch of
Antioch and All the East of the Syriac Catholic Church who was eager to
speak to Vatican Radio outside the Synod hall. He wanted to raise
global awareness about the desperate conditions in which his people are
now living in northern Iraq.
“The situation is disastrous for our communities in northern Iraq,”
says Patriarch Younan. “Our people in northern Iraq, especially the
Syriac Catholic people,” he says, “have been really hit by the
…fanaticism, jihadism of the so-called Islamic State.” Islamic State
militants have swept through large swathes of Iraqi territory,
threatening Christians and other minorities to convert to their extreme
brand of Islam, pay a special tax or die.
Patriarch Younan explains that Syriac Catholics were the largest
Christian community caught up in the jihadi violence: “over 70,000
Syriac Catholics have been uprooted. And that means over two-thirds, if
not three quarters of our numbers in all Iraq - they have been displaced
and they have nowhere to go. And that means (now) we only have the
Church in Baghdad. And this is also experiencing a lot of pressures.”
He explains that even though it “does not have the means,” the Baghdad
Church is taking in many Christian families who are trying desperately
to get out of the country.
“It’s a disastrous situation for families and children, and also for
our parishes” he says with dismay. “We don’t know what to do with our
people, especially the young… leaving them in that kind of limbo – no
hope for the future.”
The other community of our Syriac Catholics, he adds, used to live in
Syria: “between 35,000 - 40,000 of Syriac Catholics were in the fourth
diocese in Syria. Now (they) also are facing a…dangerous threat to…
survival there. The largest two dioceses were Homs and Aleppo and those
two dioceses have been very badly hit.”
20 October Consistory a chance to press for peace, support Mideast Christians
Pope Francis, who has been following developments in the region with
concern, has invited the leaders of Catholic Churches of the Middle East
to participate in the upcoming 20 October Consistory in the Vatican.
Patriarch Younan will be among them. “Now our people in northern Iraq
are facing a kind of genocide - that means extermination. They have
been uprooted of their lands and I am very sad to say we have not yet
any hope that they will be able to return. And if they return, who is
going to guarantee the security for them?”
Patriarch Younan says at the Consistory, he and the other Patriarchs
will urge the Holy Father and the Cardinals to use every asset at the
Church’s disposal, including its media, diplomatic relations and moral
authority, to press for a cessation of violence and to advocate on
behalf of the region’s Christians.
He says the Church must challenge “those who are powerful on the
international scene…to apply their principles for democracy through
(ensuring) religious liberties on the ground – not (just) in speeches
and press conferences and articles.”
Will coalition airstrikes stop Islamic State?
Asked if the international coalition’s campaign of airstrikes on
Islamic State is enough to stop the jihadists’ advance, the Patriarch
responds “We can’t say it doesn’t work, but how long (will it take)?”
How effective will it be? he asks. The Patriarch observes that while
the U.S. administration and Nato say “it will take time,” he suggests
help has come too late and that time is running out for the refugees who
need humanitarian assistance and some hope of returning home. “The
international coalition intervention is meant not to help those
defenseless minorities like Christians and Yazidis (and others),” he
argues. Rather, he alleges the region has become the pawn of a
“geopolitical strategy” of “economic opportunism.”
Education and its role in the Jihadi mindset
Meanwhile, the number of extremists joining the ranks of the
jihadists appears to be growing as Islamic State continues to gain
territory in Iraq and Syria. “We know very well that this kind of
radical: the extremists, the jihadists, they are growing; they’re joined
by many jihadists around the world – not only from countries where you
have a majority of Muslims, but also from the West, from the East … and
this will be very dangerous for our existence in Mesopotamia, especially
northern Iraq.”
Archbishop Younan, whose Patriarchate is based in Beirut, enjoys
cordial relations with Muslim religious leaders in Lebanon and
elsewhere in the region. Asked how education plays a part in the jihadi
scenario, he says “It’s quite normal that we ask our brethren of
Muslim religion to look at the formation of their youth, especially to
be careful about their religious speeches in mosques or in their
schools. And this is something which is very, very important… To
people, they (seem) silent and they don’t have the courage to stand up
to those radical groups and to those who preach hatred and intolerance.
Of course, we have to tell them and we keep telling them. In Lebanon
for instance, when we meet with the Muslim sheikhs, either Sunni or
Shiites, we keep… discussing this topic very often. And we hope that
there will be a day they will understand that in their religion, they
have to find the positive aspects of their relation between men and God
and not focus on those verses that spread violence, hatred and
discrimination against non-Muslims.”
Lebanon: a model of coexistence for Middle East?
Lebanon, a country home to 17 different confessions, has been often
cited – despite periods of instability - as a model for coexistence
between people of different faiths. “This is right!” exclaims the
Patriarch. “In all countries of the region, especially where you have a
Muslim majority that rules the country, you have no separation of
religion and state. And that means, you have always discrimination
against the non-Muslims who are a minority. Except in Lebanon. This is
quite a model for the whole region. And thanks God you have equality
of rights for all citizens in Lebanon. And we wish, and we try to
spread the word that the Arabic countries, and those of Muslim majority
have to follow up with this example and also to apply seriously and
honestly, the U.N. human rights charter of 1948.”
Source: http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2014/10/13/patriarch_younan_help_iraq_syria%E2%80%99s_christians,stop_violence/1108493
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Monday, October 13, 2014
Patriarch Younan: help Iraq/Syria’s Christians, stop violent rhetoric
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