PEACE AND security in Iraq represents the only sure way to stop a
wave of emigration that has seen the country’s Christian community fall
from an estimated 1.5 million in the 1980s to about 400,000 today,
according to a group of Iraqi Christians attending a Vatican synod on
the Middle East.
Speaking to journalists on the margins of a
two-week long synod entitled The Catholic Church in the Middle East,
Communion and Witness, Fr Sameer Shaba Maroki, professor of eastern
theology in Babel College, Ankawa, said the major reason for the mass
emigration was fear of violence and kidnapping.
“Fear is the first
cause. We lived through very difficult times during the embargo when
people were earning as little as $1.50 per month but people stayed.
“Now
they are frightened because of the kidnapping and the ransoms asked and
the fact that people pay ransoms but do not recover the person . . . It
is true as well that Christians are easy targets in today’s Iraq”.
Bishop
Shlemon Warduni, the Chaldean patriarchal vicar of Baghdad, stressed
that the climate of fear was “the same for everyone”, Christian or
Muslim, given the unacceptable level of daily violence in the country.
SIC: IT/IE