Vatican City (Fides Service) - In view of the tragic
situation in Iraq and the growing weight which some Muslim leaders
have assumed on the Iraqi scene, Fides has updated a Dossier "Iraq
and Religions", produced in March 2003 which offered a panorama
of the history and situation of religion in Iraq at that time. The
revised Dossier, “Religions in the New Iraq” examines
the present state of relations and the religious picture in the
new Iraq a year after the fall of Saddam Hussein with attention
for the social and religious picture in post-war Iraq; insurgence
of new radical groups; the prospects, role and weight of religious
communities in building the new Iraq. (PA) (Agenzia Fides 24/4/2004)
Contents
ASIA/IRAQ - “The extremists will
not ruin good relations among religion in Iraq”, Father Nizar
Semaan told Fides
ASIA/IRAQ - In Iraq Islamic troops under
the aegis of the United Nations to stabilise the country: Islamic
Conference Organisation’s proposal meets consensus
ASIA/IRAQ - Good relations among religious
communities, humanitarian aid from churches and mosques without
discrimination: action of Interreligious Council in for peace
ASIA/IRAQ - “Iraqis of all the different
religious communities are a united people. It is a mistake to strike
mosques” says Prof. Justo Lacunza, Rector of the Pontifical
Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies in Rome
ASIA/IRAQ - A year after the fall of Saddam:
different religious communities amidst traditional leaders and new
radical groups: Shiiti Muslims / Sunni Muslims / Kurds / Assyrians
/ Catholics
ASIA/IRAQ - “The extremists will not ruin good relations
among religion in Iraq”, Father Nizar Semaan told Fides
Vatican City (Fides Service) – “the situation of religions
in Iraq, a year after the war of liberation, has not altered in
substance. We have seen the appearance of radical and violent groups,
formed mostly of extremists in the Shiite and Sunni communities
but at the official level, relation among religious leaders are
good and they have not been affected by the present climate of confusion
and war”. This was how Father Nizar Semaan, a Catholic priest
in Mosul, described for Fides the situation of the religious communities
in Iraq, a year after the fall of Saddam Hussein and the official
end of the war in Iraq.
“It should be said – he underlined – that these
violent groups do not represent the authentic spirit of Iraqi believers
whatever their faith. Despite their activity they have not ruined
to existing profound relations between the religious communities.
They try to stress differences, to inflame hearts to create tension
among communities of different faiths, and also among Muslims, Shiite
and Sunni, and within the Shiite and Sunni confession. But the Islamic
leaders and those of the other religions in Iraq have not pronounced
violent or offensive words. At the official level they continue
to keep a peaceful attitude and good relations and this is most
important ”.
Father Nizar explains that “these groups, some of which are
sustained and infiltrated by other countries, want to destabilise
the situation, create chaos in order to pursue their own political
interests, relying also on the religious charter”.
“But Muslim religious leaders – he stated – lack
the courage to voice explicit condemnation of violence, abductions,
killings. This is part of the Islamic logic to avoid condemning
Islam when addressing non Muslims. Recently we saw a good action
by some Sunni leaders who wrote and open letter affirming that the
method of abduction is not acceptable, but this is only a small
step forward. Unless Islam openly condemns these violent acts and
abductions it will lose face in front of the west. Silence encourages
radical groups to take the lead and think that they are the holders
of authentic Islam”.
And if the great Islamic leaders remain silent, Father Nizar said,
it should be noted “in the meantime in mosques certain Shiite
and Sunni preachers are inciting to hatred and violence. In this
context of words which enflame hearts, to call non-Muslims ‘infidels’
(although this is a term used by Islamic theology) can only make
the situation worse and create a context of which radical movements
will take advantage”.
Speaking of the Christian communities the priest said, “they
still have good relations with the people. They have received isolated
threats, but they have not ceded to violence. It should
be remembered that Iraqi Christians share with Iraqi Muslims a common
history which has always been one of co-existence. The situation
varies according to the city: in Mosul, for example the Christian
community received many threats, but the city governor, a Muslim
and the local Muslim reassure the Christians promising to protect
them. In Baghdad there is great fear but the community survives
in hiding. In districts where the religious communities are mixed
life is better but where there are monolithic groups (for example
in the all Shiite zone) there is more danger violence. In Bassora,
in the south, an all Shiite city, the situation today is calm (although
here too the Christian community has been threatened), also thanks
to moderate politics adopted by the British coalition troops”.
Father. Nizar concludes: “I am certain that religious will
continue to make their contribution to building a free and peaceful
Iraq. I am confident for the future of Iraq, which can be built
following a path of an attitude of interreligious harmony. We Iraqi
Christians will do all be can to see that the situation evolves
in this way. Behind us we have 1,600 years of co-existence which
will certainly continue in the future”. (PA) (Agenzia Fides
24/4/2004 lines 56 words 643)
ASIA/IRAQ - In Iraq Islamic
troops under the aegis of the United Nations to stabilise the country:
Islamic Conference Organisation’s proposal meets consensus
Putrajaya (Fides Service) – A role for the United Nations
to stabilise Iraq, and the presence of troops from Muslim countries:
this proposal emerged from a recent meeting in Malaysia of 57 delegates
of the Islamic Conference Organisation. The Organisation asked the
United Nations to adopt a resolution to restore peace in Iraq, with
the support of the international community .
Observers say the proposal met with consensus in Iraqi Muslim circles,
and could be a solution for the present situation of chaos and instability
in the country.
The proposal has also been welcomed by other religious communities
in Iraq. Rev. Nizar Semaan told Fides that the proposal to “to
involve the international community through the United Nations could
help to stabilise the situation. It should be noted that today terrorism
aims to plunge Iraq into chaos: a military presence to assure order
and growth on the way to human rights and democracy would appear
to be indispensable at this point. The presence of the United Nations
with the aid of military contingents from Muslim countries would
be important also because to would be seen differently and more
favourably by the Iraqi people. One path could be to involve Iraqi
personnel more in measures to enforce law and order. They are familiar
with the territory and the people with whom they have a more direct
and potentially peaceful relationship”.
The important novelty of a new UN mandate, according to the Islamic
Conference Organisation, should be to provide the presence of troops
from Muslim countries to guarantee order and security in the country.
Important Muslim majority countries such as Pakistan, Indonesia
and Malaysia have already said they are willing to send a military
contingent to Iraq, if the UN decides to return to Baghdad.
At the Conference meeting, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
warned that the situation in Iraq and Palestine is a threat for
the entire Middle East region. Several delegates stressed the need
for unity and cohesion among Muslim nations approving motions on
Israel and Palestine, and Iraq.
The declaration issued at the end of the meeting affirms that the
Organisation “recognises and underlines the importance of
the United Nation’s role in restoring peace security and stability
in Iraq” and it asks the UN security council to adopt a resolution
to reach these objectives. The document asks the Coalition to respect
the date of June 30 for transferring sovereignty to an Iraqi government.
“Stability in Iraq – the document affirms – can
only be guaranteed by allowing the Iraqi people to express its legitimate
rights including the right to hold free elections”.
(PA) (Agenzia Fides 24/4/2004 lines 56 words 643)
ASIA/IRAQ - Good relations
among religious communities, humanitarian aid from churches and
mosques without discrimination: action of Interreligious Council
in for peace
Baghdad (Fides Service) – That the authentic role of religion
is to contribute to dialogue, reconciliation and peace has been
affirmed more than once by John Paul II. Despite difficulties and
the presence of some “preachers of hatred” in Iraqi
mosques testimony of how the religious communities intend to work
to build good relations in the new Iraq was the creation of “Iraq
Interreligious Council for Peace”, in August 2003 which for
about a year has promoted meetings and activities to underline the
authentic role of religion in the Iraqi scenario.
Organised by the “World Conference of Religions for Peace”,
the Council comprises Iraqi leaders of Sunni and Shiite Muslims
and various Christian denominations, some are members of the Iraqi
transition government .
The Council immediately spoke out against religious violence and
action by sectarian groups underlining instead that the task of
the different faith communities is to help the people of Iraq who
live problems of daily survival. The Council stated that contribution
of the religions and the development of good relations among the
different religious communities is fundamental for build a new Iraq
of peace, democracy and tolerance.
In agreement with the Council humanitarian aid has been promoted
through mosques and churches offering food, water and medicines,
according to need, without religious discrimination. “In our
mosques we offen distribute food which is supplied by Christian
organisations. Together we survive”, said Ali Houssein al
Jabbouri at Shakir al-Adoud in Baghdad.
A recent episode was a concrete example of interreligious solidarity:
Christians wanted to help the people of the besieged Sunni Muslim
city of Falluja, surrounded by American troops to bring out violent
groups of extremists. The different religions in Baghdad collected
food aid and medicine and delivered them to Falluja. The delegation
was led by Chaldean Catholic Bishop Sholomon Warduni, a Shiite imam
and Sunni religious leader offering an example of shared concrete
activity of solidarity. The people of the city were very happy not
to be left abandoned .
In fact many observers say that religious communities, because of
the capillary organisation are irreplaceable for help a general
improvement of Iraqi society. Among the finalities of the Interreligious
Council:
- meet the need of the different religious communities and work
immediately ;
- sustain traditions of religious tolerance and freedom in Iraq;
- sustain Iraqi religious leaders in their efforts to build a multi-religious
Iraq; These finalities will be pursued in collaboration with the
World Conference of Religions for Peace which sustains the activity
of the Iraqi Council .
(PA) (Agenzia Fides 24/4/2004 lines 46 words 487)
ASIA/IRAQ - “Iraqis
of all the different religious communities are a united people.
It is a mistake to strike mosques” says Prof. Justo Lacunza,
Rector of the Pontifical Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies in
Rome
Vatican City (Fides) – “The common denominator which
today unites all Iraqi believers whether Shiite or Sunni Muslims,
Christians or Kurds, is a strong nationalist sentiment. Iraqis,
liberated from Saddam Hussein, today want dignity and legitimate
rights of sovereignty”. Prof. Justo Lacunza Balda, Rector
of the Pontifical Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies in Rome
explained to Fides. “The problem is complex but the frame
for coexistence has been outlined with the new Constitution which
does not recognise Islamic law as source of inspiration for law.
This is a guarantee but it must be filled with contents”.
Prof. Lacunza said “the situation is complex because Iraq
is at the centre of a strategically important area, it has borders
with states of different political, cultural and religious character,
it is at the heart of a large area of political-religious intensity
by which it is affected and influenced”.
Today the political and religious forces in Iraq, Prof. Lacunza
said “enter the field to build a political space for the future
Iraq. The insurgence of extremist groups can be explained with the
generalised state of war registered today in Iraq: those who a year
ago took the path of war must today face the consequences of that
decision, which provoked more violence, hatred and revenge. The
present condition is a consequence of a lack of dialogue and the
unilateral option for violence. The war in Iraq pulled in terrorist
actions from outside the country and complicated an already difficult
situation”.
Prof. Lacunza concludes speaking to Fides: “Religious have
a very difficult and delicate role today: on the one hand they must
respond to the immediate pressing needs of the Iraqi people, impoverished
families, people who have nothing; on the other they have a function
of important responsibility to outline the future and lay the grounds
for a climate of good relations with civil, military authorities
and among the different religious communities. Shelling mosques
is a serious and irresponsible mistake because of its symbolic value
and its power to unleash anti-west hatred in a people who feel threatened
in their identity”.
(PA) (Agenzia Fides 24/4/2004 lines 39 words 420)
ASIA/IRAQ - A year after the
fall of Saddam: different religious communities amidst traditional
leaders and new radical groups
Baghdad (Fides Service) – It is a composite scenario which
is registered in Iraq a gear after the fall of Saddam Hussein: emerging
new political groups, reawakening of traditional religious movements
and birth of new formation, the return to the homeland of exiled
religious leaders, the influence of neighbouring countries produce
a picture in which often political and religious instances cross
paths and within which each different group works to gain its place
in the Iraq of the future.
One of the most evident dynamics was relative to Shiite Muslims:
with masse demonstrations and capillary grass roots organisations
Iraq’s Shiite Muslims are reaffirming their identity after
years of brutal repression in the years of the dictatorship of Saddam
Hussein. As the largest religious community (about 63% of the population)
the Shiites showed a desire to have a say in the planning of the
new Iraq. Not without knots difficult to unravel.
One of the problems regards the model of a theocratic nation championed
by the Shiite community while some leaders call for an immediate
withdrawal of coalition troops from Iraqi soil. Within the Shiite
community in the past year there have emerged young radical leaders
which are challenging the traditional clergy, more moderate, composed
of Muslim leaders many of whom have returned from exile. Another
challenge to consider is how determinant the influence of neighbour
Iran totally Shiite and the Lebanese Hezbollah.
On the other hand the Sunni community in Iraq, which gathers 34%
of the Muslim population, has been penalised in the post-Saddam
era, given that at the time of the Baath Party it was identified
with the group holding political power. After reorganising itself
with difficulty, at the end of military hostilities a year ago,
it has had to face a great rising of Shiite Islam reawakened after
suffering harsh repression in the years of the dictatorship of Saddam.
In this process of reorganisation it suffered from infiltration
of Wahabiti individuals and groups which brought with them the anti-west
ideology of Al Qaeda.
According to some analysts precisely on the basis an ideology anti-west
and contrary to the presence of foreign troops on Iraqi soil, in
Iraq we see a progressive healing of relations between the Shiite
and Sunni communities historically divided. Most reliable hypothesis
speak instead of a “temporary alliance” of the two branches
of followers of the Prophet, or better, between some groups of Shiite
and Sunni Muslims , to reach common objectives, particularly direct
political sovereignty in the country.
Divided fundamentally in two factions, the Kurds, mostly Sunni Muslims,
want to take part in the government of the country despite the existing
rivalry between the two internal groups. The groups in which they
are divided are the Kurdistan Democratic Party(KDP), led by Massoud
Barzani, Kurdistan Patriotic Union (KPU), led by Jalal Talabani.
Both leaders are present in the Iraqi governing Council and they
have their own military force of Peshmerga militants.
In this scenario the Christian community in its diverse articulations,
has reaffirmed that it is part of the Iraqi people, and it intends
to build relations of brotherhood with the other religious communities,
and contribute towards building a new Iraq. Worth noting is also
the great commitment of Christians in works of solidarity towards
the poorest sectors of the population through Caritas Iraq, which
often reaches non Christians.
Shiite Muslims
One of the leading Shiite groups is the Daawa movement, started
in 1950 and the oldest Islamic movement in Iraq. After suffering
a series of brutal killings of its leaders in the time of Saddam,
it was dissolved and suppressed and many Shiites went underground.
Guided by Sheikh Mohaammed Nasseri, returned from exile in Iran
after the war, the Daawa movement has two members in the Iraqi Governing
Council. Nasseri has always stated that “the period of occupation
by the coalition forces must not be longer than six months”.
Another Shiite movement which has been active in the last year
is the Iraqi Supreme Revolution Council, whose leader Muhammad Baqr
al-Hakim, was killed in a bomb explosion in Najaf in August 2003.
Acclaimed by thousands of believers, Hakim returned from exile where
he was sent by Saddam. Before he was killed he had offered to support
the Iraqi Governing Council legitimating it in the eyes of the Shiite
community. His place in the leadership was taken by his brother
Abdel Aziz, who has close ties with Iran, and obtained a seat in
the Iraqi Governing Council for his movement. The Iraqi Supreme
Revolution Council, can count on an armed wing known as the Badr
Brigades comprising 10,000 men.
One of the radical Shiite groups is led by Moqtada al Sadr, aged
32, son of the Shiite leader murdered by the Baath Party in the
years of the dictatorship. Sadr, who opposes traditional Shiite
leadership, has made his headquarters in Najaf and he is openly
against what he calls “American occupation”. Sadr, today
wanted by the coalition authorities, in his discourses has always
invoked Islamic law and appealed to Iraqi national pride, putting
himself against the Grand Grande Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, the main
Shiite authority present in Iraq. Sadr has also recruited a militia
of about 10,000 men and his positions have had ample resonance and
popularity in the Shiite district of Baghdad, renamed “Sadr
City”. Recently he threatened to use suicide bombers against
the coalition forces if they enter the Shiite holy cities of Najaf
and Kerbala. Today, according to observers, he is isolated from
the rest of the Shiite community.
The most important Shiite spiritual leader present in Iraq is,
among the other leaders, Ali Al Sistani, 78, who has shown himself
to be one of the more tolerant towards the coalition forces, remembering
the persecution his community suffered under the old regime. Al
Sistani spent many years under arrest, for refusing to go into exile.
During the war he was in favour of the coalition and today he is
challenged by many young radical leaders looking for space in their
Shiite community. While not sparing reserve with regard the project
for an Iraqi Constitution recently elaborated, he has not openly
criticised the work of the Governing Council on which some of his
supporters are sitting. Sistani respects separation of religions
and state and rejects the use of force while calling for the date
set for passing of power to Iraqis to be respected. Also because
within the Shiite community there is growing malcontent with regard
to coalition policies. According to many observers his is a position
of “waiting”: he does not want to enter into conflict
with the US administration which after all liberated the country
from Saddam, but he waits for the passing of power in order to make
the numerical consistence of the Shiite community bear weight in
the new Iraqi scenario , through a legitimately elected government.
Sunni Muslims
Among the Sunni Muslims is a group linked with Mohsen Abdel Hamid,
an Islamic theologian and a member of the Iraqi Governing Council.
Hamid is the leader of the Iraq Islamic Party, which is part of
the Muslim Brothers group. His moderate position clashes with that
of Ahmad el Kebeisey, professor of Islamic Studies at Baghdad University,
one of the leaders of Friday prayers at Abi Hanifa mosque in the
Sunni district of Baghdad. More than once the Imam has incited to
anti-American hatred and instigated protests against the coalition
forces.
Repeated fighting and kidnapping has brought new actors onto the
Iraqi scene. Among them the Association of Sunni Clergy, noted for
helping to achieve the fragile treaty between Sunni rebels in Falluja
and US troops, and also the release of seven Chinese taken hostage
for a few days.
Sheikh Harith al Dhari, one of the leaders of the Association explained
that “the organisation is religious but is also interested
in politics and social questions and acts in the interest of the
country”. The Association has been on the front page several
times for the void created within the Sunni community since the
end of the war. Its activity mirrors also nationalist behaviour
and extends to include some important Ulema, like those at the Haanifa
and Abd al Kadr mosques in Baghdad, becoming in this way an influential
institution. Although not represented in the Governing Council,
the organisation has legitimated it declaring its closeness to the
position of the Iraq Islamic Party. It also has relations with the
Kurd community and claims to want to build good relations with the
Shiite community.
Kurds
Divided basically in two factions the Kurds, mostly Sunni Muslims
expect to take part in the government of the country, despite rivalry
which exists within their two groups. The formation in which they
are divided are the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), led by Massoud
Barzani, and the Kurdistan Patriotic Union (KPU), led by Jalal Talabani.
Both leaders are present in the Iraqi Governing Council and they
have their own army formed mainly of Peshmerga militants.
The Kurds living mostly in north east Iraq, about 4 million people,
converted to Sunni Islam when Kurdistan was occupied by part of
the Islamic army in the first half of the 7th century. Before Islam
the most widespread religions was Zoroastrianism, but the Kurds
were familiar with the other two monotheistic religions and had
among them Jewish communities (since the 6th century) and Christian
communities (since the 2nd century). Today among the Kurds there
are very few Jews but the Christian community is still present,
and so is Yazidanism.
The conversion of the Kurds to Islam was due not so much to attraction
for Arab spiritual teaching as their desire to escape injustice
in a feudal society and aspiration to a society based on equality,
fraternity and solidarity. In the 12th century the Kurds were included
in the Ottoman Empire. The end of the Empire in 1918, was the origin
of the Kurdish question. The borders of the Empire in fact were
first of all replaced with a British mandate and then state borders
set and impenetrable (Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran,) which prevented
the function of the Kurdish ethnic group as a whole. And so, while
under the Empire the Kurds enjoyed privileges because they were
“the guardians of the frontiers”, later they were seen
as an obstacle to the homogenisation of national territories.
Today Islam is the substance of Kurd civilisation: it organises
all social, cultural and political life, sets the scale of moral
and social values, education and formation in families. The men
of religion have an important place in Kurd society. Very often
the Mullah is the person with the most instruction in the village.
Religious leaders played an important role also in the modern Kurdish
national liberation movement, as was the case of Mullah Mustafà
Barzani (1931-1978). This phenomenon consolidated the foundations
of the national movement outlining the ideological and political
dimensions of the Kurd’s struggle for a national state, for
recognition of the Kurdish ethnic group by Muslim countries such
as Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. The death of Barzani, marked the
end of the phase of religious and civil power and the beginning
of a phase of secular leadership.
For their aspirations for self rule (or at times secession) the
Kurds were persecuted by the regime of Saddam Hussein. Since the
institution of the no fly zone, established by the United Nations
in 1991, Iraqi Kurdistan has been under international protection
and the Kurds reached a degree of self rule.
Assyrians
Also Assyrian Christians in Iraq hope to live their religious and
cultural identity after the fall of Saddam. One of their representatives,
Younadem Kana, is the only Christian member of the Governing Council.
They tend to be followers of the Assyrian Church of the East and
they are very close to the Chaldean Catholic Church, since they
too were born from the preaching of Saint Thomas in the 1st century
AD. Fiercely persecuted by the Baath regime they have now a certain
freedom which is expressed in customs, culture and religious activity.
The Assyrian Oriental Church, an autonomous Church not in communion
with Rome, or any of the Orthodox Churches, is strongly connected
with the Chaldean Catholic Church and shares its origins. The evangelisation
carried out by the two disciples of the Apostle, Mar Addai and Mar
Mari, created a prosperous Church which spread between the 1st and
4th century and founded communities and monasteries from Syria to
Iraq and Iran. This Church, called Assyrian Oriental Church, attained
its autonomy through the Councils of Seleutia in 410 and Markbata
in 424, and was granted permission to elect its own Patriarch, the
"Catholicos".
In the mid 15th century the Assyrian Church lived a moment of difficulty
and decline. At the beginning of 1553 - when Pope Julius III nominated
Simon VIII "Patriarch of the Chaldeans"- a schism opened
between the Assyrian and the Chaldean Church, lasting to this day.
Since this historical division relations between the Chaldean Church
and the Assyrian Church have improved, a new era of dialogue and
good relations brought to the signing of a common Christological
declaration by the Pope and Patriarch Mar Dinkha IV in Rome in November
1994. In August 1997 the Chaldean and the Assyrian Holy Synods instituted
the Commission for dialogue to discuss pastoral co-operation at
all levels.
One especially delicate stage of the history of the Assyrians was
the persecution endured in 1933, just after Iraqi independence (1932):
considered hostile to the authority, they were slaughtered by the
Iraqi army. The event is remembered on August 7th every year, when
the Assyrians celebrate the day of "Assyrian Martyrdom".
Presently a community of about 70,000 Assyrians lives in North Iraq,
preserving its cultural, linguistic and religious identity. In the
seventies the government of Baghdad chose to grant equal cultural
and civil rights to Assyrians and Turkmen, since then the Assyrians
attained the possibility to teach Syrian (or Aramaic) language in
Assyrian elementary schools.
Catholics
“All Iraqi Christians are praying and working to preserve
the co-existence of believers of different faiths which has lasted
for 1,600 years”, Archbishop Athanase Matti Shaba Mattoka,
Archbishop of the Syrian Catholic community in Baghdad, told Fides
with regard to the situation of Iraqi Christians in the new Iraqi
scenario. “We are convinced that dialogue is means for putting
en end to violence ”, he added.
In the post-Saddam era the Christian community has sought its social
and political space upholding a secular and pluralist nation, with
respect for religions minorities. The Christians welcomed the approval
of Iraq’s new constitution in March 2004, and they said this
was “a positive step for the unity of the nation and for the
birth of a new Iraq, a civilised Iraq which respects all minority
groups”, a local Catholic priest Father Nizar Semaan told
Fides. “What prevailed was the vision of a secular Iraq with
religious values because secularism is not contrary to religion”,
Father Nizar explained. “This constitution can be a solid
basis for a future of democracy for Iraq where there is respect
for people of all faiths and ethnic groups ”, he added noting
that for Christians “the most important fact is that the text
of the Constitution is not based on Islamic Law”.
The priest commented: “I think this constitution will be an
example for the entire Middle East. Iraqis can be proud of this
constitution which lays foundations for civil harmony among the
people of different ethnic groups and religions. Today in the new
Iraq there are no first or second class citizens, all have equal
rights and duties. As Christians we hope we will have more freedom
to life our faith. We want to play an active part in building the
new Iraq”.
The constitutional paper would appear to have accepted the requests
of the Christian community, voiced clearly last Autumn by the Chaldean
Catholic Bishops (Chaldean Catholics are the largest Catholic community).
In a letter to the governing Council Consiglio they asked for the
guarantee of all rights for Iraqi Christians at the religious, social,
civil and political level. The Chaldean population – the Bishops
recalled– is the third largest ethnic group in Iraq, after
Arabs and Kurds: their presence in the professional, social and
administration fields has always been important in Iraq. This is
why the Bishops called for recognition of the importance of the
Chaldean community in the building of the new Iraq. “We express
our solidarity– they wrote – to all Iraqi citizens,
Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen and all the ethnic and religious groups, living
in peaceful fraternity especially with other Christians, Syrians,
Armenians and Latins to build a new free, democratic and prosperous
Iraq”.
Despite these positive acquisitions, recent tension caused fear
among the Christian community, threatened by extremist groups more
than once, in different Iraqi cities, especially in Mosul. Political
struggle between Shiites and Sunni Muslims – Fides sources
note – does not offer reassuring prospects to Christians.
Some Christians families are leaving Baghdad for the north in the
area of Mosul, where they feel safer .
Christians insist that they consider themselves fully Iraqis: in
fact the Christian presence in this part of the world which goes
from Iraq to India, is very ancient and it dates to the teaching
of St Thomas the Apostle who left Jerusalem in about the year 40AD,
after the death and resurrection of Jesus, to evangelise in 42-49
AD the other peoples of the Middle East .
Christians today are descendants of those who did not embrace Islam
in the 7th century when the Arabs conquered the region. 70% of Iraqi
Christians belong to the Chaldean Catholic Church. In all Christians,
Catholics and Orthodox, are about 800,000, or 3 % of the population.
In recent years some Protestants have settled in Iraq.
Catholic communities presenti in Iraq follow four different rites:
Chaldean Catolics
They are the vast majority of the local Christians. The Patriarchate
has its see in Baghdad. After the death of the Patriarch of Babylonia
of the Chaldeans His Beatitude Raphael I Bidawid, His Beatitude
Emmanuel-Karim Delly,76, is the new Patriarch and on his appointment,
3 December 2003, he told Fides: “We are living a difficult
situation and we ask for peace and tranquility. Conditions of security
must be re-established to guarantee a return to normal life ”
“The violence in Iraq – Mons. Delly continues –
must be condemned in no half measures”.
Among a vast Islamic majority, the Chaldean Church lives and professes
its faith with great vitality, dedicating itself to catechesis and
education: there is a Patriarchal Seminary in Baghdad and the recently
founded College of Babylonia, a Patriarchal College affiliated to
the Pontifical Urban University, led by the Congregation for the
Evangelisation of Peoples, where seminarians and laypersons operating
there study theology and philosophy.Since Friday is the weekly holiday
in the country (according to the Islamic calendar), parishes hold
their catechesis on Fridays for children, young people and adults.
A few years ago another Centre opened where laypersons can study
theology and philosophy to become catechists and collaborators of
the parish priests. Sunday is a working day in Iraq, so the Mass
is celebrated in the morning early or in the evenings, at the end
of the working day.
Parishes play an important role in the Chaldean Christian communities,
they are the only places where people can practise and live their
faith. Thus pastoral work becomes of crucial importance and today
it bears significant fruits despite economic difficulties. The parishes
were built according to what the Church could afford, but today,
with the communities growing, necessities increase too.
The Chaldean community, devoutly charitable, assists a number of
poor families, both Christian and Muslim, giving them food, clothes
and other kinds of help every month. The official language used
in the Chaldean Liturgy is Aramaic, as it is the liturgical, theological
and classical language of Christianity of Semitic tradition. But
since Arabic is currently widely spoken by believers and young people,
and since Aramaic's terminology and synonyms are incomplete, the
Holy Mass is celebrated in two languages. Catechism is done in Arabic,
except for the mountain villages in the north, where Aramaic is
the spoken language.
In Iraq there are also communities of two Chaldean religious orders:
the Sisters of the Sacred Heart and the Chaldean Daughters of Mary
Immaculate. There is also a Chaldean monastic and missionary institution.
Chaldean monks began by opening monasteries and evangelising the
people living in the mountain ranges in Northern Iraq, and today
they still teach at schools and hold catechism in Kurdish villages.
Later they descended to Mosul and finally to Baghdad, where there
is the headquarters of the General Superior today. The congregation
now possesses four monasteries in Iraq, one in Rome and one mission
in America.
Chaldean rite Christians are now more than 700,000, and at least
as many are spread throughout the world.
- Syrian Catholics
They are a community of about 75,000 believers, living in Baghdad
and Mosul. The Bishop in Baghdad is Bishop Athanase Matti Shaba
Matoka and the community in Mosul is led by Bishop Basile Georges
Casmoussa. The Church was born from the good relations established
during the Crusades by some Catholics with several Syrian Orthodox
Bishops. After the missions of Jesuits and Capuchin Franciscans,
which started in Aleppo (Syria) in 1626, many Syrians returned to
communion with Rome. The greatest number of Syrian Catholics is
in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. In Iraq there are Syrian Catholics in
the north: at Bassora there is a small communty; in Bagdad there
is a community of about 30,000; in Kirkuk and Mosul almost 45,000.
The language most spoken is Arabic, but in some Iraqi villages people
still use the ancient Assyrian language especially in Mosul, and
in the village of Karakosh, where there are 25,000 Catholics. It
should be remembered that the Patriarchate of Syrian Catholics is
in Beirut, in Lebanon.
- Armenian Catholics
The Armenian communities present in Iraq come from the emigration
and deportations of the Armenian population after 1915, following
the massacres of the Young Turks' regime. The Armenian Church is
inspired to the figure of St. Gregory the Illuminator, who Christianised
Armenia in the III century. It is divided in Orthodox (or Apostolic)
and Catholic. At Baghdad Armenian Sisters run a school attended
by 800 pupils, half Armenians, half Muslims. The head of the small
Armenian community present in Iraq (2,000 people) is the Patriarchal
Administrator Andon Atamian. Before the nineties the Armenians (Catholic
and Apostolic) in Iraq were somewhere between 20 and 30 thousand
people. In the past decade, the community has decreased largely
because of emigration due to poverty.
- Latin Catholics
For three centuries a large group of Latin missionaries has been
working in Iraq: men and women belonging to religious congregations,
in Baghdad and in the north of the country are working on pastoral
activities in local parishes, gathering young people for catechesis,
for the celebration of the Sacraments, around activities of solidarity
to the poor. Latin missionaries learn Arabic and study the Chaldean
liturgical and confessional traditions, becoming totally part of
the local culture.
There are several religious orders present in Iraq: the Redemptorist
Fathers, the Dominicans, the Carmelites, the Salesians, Antonian
monks, Missionary Franciscans of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the
Dominican Sisters of the Presentation of the Virgin of Tours, who
also run the St Raphael Hospital in Baghdad, Dominican Sisters of
St Caterina from Siena, the Little Sisters of Jesus, the Missionaries
of Charity, who follow the charisma of Mother Theresa of Calcutta
and take care of disabled children. The head of the small Catholic
community of Latin rite (2,500 people), living mostly in Baghdad,
is Archbishop Monsignor Jean Benjamin Sleiman.
Catholics in Iraq Chaldean Catholics: more than 700,000; Syrian
Catholics 75,000; Armenians: 2,000; Latins: 2,500
(PA) (Agenzia Fides 24/4/2004 lines 353 words 3.850)
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