As more and more refugees from Iraq are relocated to Arizona, Msgr.
Felix Shabi has a happy problem: his community of Chaldean Catholics
continues to grow steadily.
About 600 families belong to Mar Abraham Parish in Scottsdale and
Holy Family Mission in Phoenix. Msgr. Shabi said many others live in the
East Valley and Tucson.
Last November, after a brutal attack on the Syriac Catholic Cathedral
in Baghdad left 58 dead, local Roman Catholics began reaching out to
their Eastern-rite brothers and sisters here in the Valley.
That’s something Fr. Mike Straley wholeheartedly supports. As a
longtime member of the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre, an organization
that supports Christians in the Holy Land, he understands the plight of
Christians in the Middle East.
“The Diocese of Phoenix is getting big enough to where we need to
talk more about what it means to be Catholic,” Fr. Straley said. The
word “Catholic,” he explained, means universal and refers to the
universality of the Church.
Julie Nackard, area councilor of the Western Lieutenancy for the
Knights of the Holy Sepulchre in Phoenix, met with Msgr. Shabi in March
at the request of Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted.
The bishop urged the Knights
to broaden their definition of the Holy Land to include Iraq.
After hearing about the needs of the Chaldean community, Nackard
spoke with fellow members about reaching out to local Iraqi Catholics.
In April, the group gathered at Mar Abraham to pray the rosary and
listen to a short presentation by Msgr. Shabi.
On May 17, Fr. Straley, Nackard and other members of the Knights of
the Holy Sepulchre enjoyed a dinner with Emmanuel III Cardinal Delly,
patriarch of Babylon, who was visiting from Baghdad.
Representatives from the local Byzantine Catholic Church, including
Bishop Gerald Dino, the Right Reverend Archimandrite Wes Izer and Fr.
Stephen Washko, as well as representatives of the Knights of Columbus
from nearby St. Patrick Parish were also in attendance.
On May 18, Msgr. Shabi concelebrated a Mass for members of the
Knights of the Holy Sepulchre and spoke at the group’s annual dinner and
business meeting at the Diocesan Pastoral Center.
“We are a Church of martyrs,” Msgr. Shabi said. “We trace our roots to the apostle Thomas, the one who evangelized our country.”
Explaining that tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians have been
forced to flee their homeland in the face of ongoing persecution, he
spoke of the traumatized, orphaned children who belong to his Phoenix
mission.
“One girl, she was in her mother’s arms when a bomb went off,” Msgr.
Shabi said. The child’s father was killed in a separate attack a year
later. The girl and her two siblings now reside with their grandmother
in Phoenix.
“Martyrdom is a gift, but not everyone is meant to receive it,” Msgr.
Shabi said. “Our patriarch has begged people to stay, but young
families are leaving because they fear for their children’s lives.”
Experts say more than half of Iraq’s Christians have fled the
violence plaguing the country since the ouster of Sadaam Hussein. Msgr.
Shabi said his homeland’s instability has allowed terrorists from
neighboring countries to enter and target Christians.
“One Christian was decapitated last week,” he told the crowd,
describing horrifying photos of the dismembered body circulated on the
Internet. He also told of another incident in which the Chaldean bishop
of Mosul was killed.
“They collected his blood in a glass vase, saying that an infidel’s
blood should not desecrate what they claim is Islamic soil,” Msgr. Shabi
said.
Growing awareness
For years, many in the Phoenix Diocese were unaware of the presence
of Eastern-rite Catholics. After a series of articles in The Catholic
Sun spotlighted the hardships endured by Chaldean Catholics, readers
responded.
Brian C. McNeil, an Iraq War veteran who served two tours, was one of
those inspired to help.
He contacted Msgr. Shabi and set up a meeting.
“After serving in Iraq, it bothers me to know that many people,
including many Christians, had to abandon their homes and flee to other
places because of extremists committed to driving them away. While the
Kurdish region of Iraq has become a refuge for some, many have sought
homes in the United States and around the world as an answer to the
persecution in places like Baghdad and Mosul, which has become all too
common,” McNeil said.
McNeil came up with a plan to help the Chaldean community in the
Valley after he and his son Ezekiel visited Msgr. Shabi on a Saturday
during religious education activities at the Holy Family Mission.
Soon
after, the McNeil family, who are parishioners at Ss. Simon and Jude and
whose children attend the parish school, organized a raffle to raise
money for the religious education program at the Chaldean church.
“With the support of Fr. Lankeit, Sr. Raphael [Quinn, IBVM], a good
friend Don Cardon, and many others, the raffle and other activities will
have raised more than $1,000 to help the faith formation of these
children in our diocese,” McNeil said. “More importantly, it has helped
raised the awareness of the needs of these brothers and sisters in
Christ, both here and in Iraq.”
Historic meeting
On May 19, in a first-ever for the Phoenix Diocese, Bishop Olmsted met with the Chaldean patriarch.
Emmanuel III Cardinal Delly, 84, named patriarch of Babylon in 2003,
has steadfastly endured as the Christian population of Iraq dwindles.
Once estimated at 1.4 million, today there are fewer than 500,000.
When
the Oct. 31 massacre took place in Baghdad, for example, a church that
in previous years might have held 500 worshippers, just 60 faithful were
in attendance.
Bishop Olmsted and Cardinal Delly discussed their years in Rome as
they sampled homemade Iraqi pastries and sipped tea. Both men had spent
more than a dozen years each living and working in the Eternal City.
Bishop Olmsted paid tribute to the patriarch’s unflinching courage in
the face of ongoing persecution of Christians in his homeland. He told
Cardinal Delly he hoped to visit Iraq one day.
As a member of the USCCB’s committee on ecumenical and interfaith
relations for the United States, Bishop Olmsted said the commission
wanted to visit a region characterized by interfaith and ecumenical
cooperation.
“One of the things we proposed to do was to go to Syria and Iraq,”
the bishop said.
“In those countries, because of persecution, they’ve
had to stick together and overcome sometimes some longstanding
differences or misunderstandings. We felt we could learn a lot from
them.”