Baghdad believers being terrorized for crime of Christianity
By Hannah Allam and Leila Fadel
Is Islam incompatible with democracy, decency?
AGHDAD, Iraq — An al-Qaida-affiliated insurgent group is giving
Christians in Baghdad a stark set of options: Convert to Islam, marry
your daughters to our fighters, pay an Islamic tax or leave with only
the clothes on your back.
A U.S. military official said American forces became aware of the
threats only last month and now have erected barriers around the
largest Christian enclave in Baghdad's Dora neighborhood in an effort
to protect its residents.
Christians in Baghdad refuse to discuss the threats for fear of
retribution. But in Syria, where thousands of Iraqi Christians have
fled, tales abound of families that were killed or driven from their
homes because they either refused or couldn't afford to pay the jizya,
a tax usually levied on non-Muslim men of military age that's been part
of Islam for more than 1,000 years.
"Two or three months ago, we heard we were going to be forcibly removed
from Dora," said Rafah Elia Daoud, 53, who fled to Damascus, Syria's
capital, on May 24. "Not everyone got a paper with the threat, but we
knew. The choice was to convert, pay the jizya or get out."
"My brother was threatened; my sister was threatened. All of them had
to pay the jizya," added her husband, Jamal Antone Karoumy, 66. "One of
my brothers got a note and a single bullet under his door. The note
said, `If you don't pay the jizya to the resistance, you'll be
killed.'"
Madeline Shukr Yusuf, 74, is still shaken by her recent escape to
Damascus. She said she didn't have enough money to pay a monthly jizya
of 250,000 Iraqis dinars, about $200. The insurgents were determined to
collect their tax, she said.
"They wanted to kill me and take my gold bracelets," she said, tears
filling her eyes at the memory. "They tell us pay or give a daughter in
marriage to a fighter."
Iraq long had been home to thriving Christian communities, primarily
Assyrians and Chaldean Catholics, who trace their roots to ancient
Mesopotamia. Some of Saddam Hussein's closest confidants were
Christian, including his foreign minister, Tarik Aziz. Christian
communities were prominent in many major Iraqi cities, including Mosul
in the north and Basra in the south.
Baghdad had major Christian enclaves in the central neighborhood of
Karada, the eastern mostly Shiite neighborhood of New Baghdad and
nearby al-Ghadir and the notorious Sunni-dominated Doura in the
capital's south.
As Iraq has descended into chaos, however, many Christians have fled,
joining an estimated 2.2 million exiles, including 1.4 million Iraqis
now estimated to be living in Syria. At least 19,000 Iraqi Christians
have registered in Damascus with the United Nations refugee agency, and
thousands more are thought to have sought shelter there, but have yet
to register.
A Christian Iraqi legislator estimated Tuesday that a half-million
Christians have fled Iraq since 2004.
"What is happening today in Iraq against Christians is shameful,"
Ablahad Afram Sawa said in an impassioned statement read to Iraq's
parliament by its speaker. He said Christians hadn't faced such
oppression in nearly 2,000 years. "Most of the churches in Baghdad have
closed their doors," he added.
Iraqi officials said others have left their homes but remained in the
country. At least 1,050 Christians from Baghdad and Mosul have taken up
residence in Kurdish areas of northern Iraq in the past month,
according to Nowrooz Khan, spokesman for the Ministry of Migration and
Displacement.
The relationship between Christians and Muslims has been a complex one.
In the Middle Ages, Christian crusaders tried to capture Jerusalem from
Muslim rule at least 10 times, and modern-day extremists still invoke
those efforts in calling for jihad - holy war - to defend their faith.
Al-Qaida, which has killed thousands of Sunni and Shiite Muslims, also
has targeted Christians, whom Iraqis widely consider to be pacifists.
Still, early Muslims considered Christians, along with Jews, to be
"people of the book," as Muslims refer to followers of other
monotheistic religions, and believed they were entitled to protection
under Islamic rule, in exchange for jizya, as the tax was called. It
was considered a substitute for the tax for the poor, zakat, which
Muslims pay annually.
In some cases, Christians who fought alongside Muslims were exempted
from the jizya and shared in the spoils of war equally with Muslims.
Sawa, in his statement to the Iraqi parliament, recalled how some
Christians fought against European crusaders. The first general said to
have entered Jerusalem after Salahaddin repulsed the crusaders was a
Christian.
In Iraq today, however, fear is palpable among Christians. Last Sunday,
a priest was gunned down in Mosul with three companions after afternoon
prayers. His body lay in the streets for hours. Another priest was
kidnapped on Wednesday in New Baghdad.
Christians in the capital refuse to talk. At a church in Karada, a
priest shooed away a McClatchy correspondent. Nearby, five black
funeral banners graced with yellow crosses fluttered in the wind.
Rumors abound. Residents said a priest and an altar boy were killed on
Wednesday and their church was burned, but they refused to say more.
"We are afraid of retribution," one said. The U.S. military denied that
the incident occurred.
It's unclear when the Islamic State of Iraq, an insurgent umbrella
group that's dominated by al-Qaida in Iraq, began demanding that
Christians either leave their neighborhoods or pay the tax.
A U.S. military spokesman said American troops had been aware that some
Christians were being forced from their homes, but realized only
recently that it was a wide-scale campaign.
"We're aware that some Christians have left the area," Maj. Kirk
Luedeke, a spokesman for the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team of the
Army's 1st Infantry Division, said in an e-mail. "But we weren't aware
until last month how widespread the situation was, after initially
being led to believe it was a few isolated incidents of intimidation."
Since then, Luedeke said, the U.S. military has erected barriers around
Dora's largest Christian enclave and begun a census to identify
Christian residents so they can be checked on regularly.
Such efforts, however, are too late for thousands of Iraqi Christians
who've flooded Jaramana, an industrial area on the southeast outskirts
of Damascus and a popular destination for Iraqi Christian refugees.
In apartment after ramshackle apartment, Iraqi Christians last week
recounted the horror of being forced from their homes after demands for
jizya — or worse.
Yusuf, the 74-year-old who arrived there days ago, said her family
couldn't afford the tax the insurgents demanded — but they also
couldn't afford for all the members to flee. So they bundled Yusuf into
a rented car headed for the Syrian border. She packed only a few
clothes, her delicate white rosary and a tiny prayer book with a
portrait of the Virgin Mary and the infant Christ on the cover.
She left behind her two daughters and her grandchildren.
"We can't pay, and my daughters are beautiful, so ..." she said. Then,
too upset to continue, she clutched her rosary, turned her gaze
heavenward and mouthed a prayer.
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