Raeda Paulos could hardly conceal her joy when the television inside
her cramped trailer showed Iraqi forces raising the national flag over a
church in her hometown, a day after it was freed from Islamic State
rule.
“This is our church, this is where we used to pray!” she exclaimed as
she watched the images at a camp for displaced Iraqis in Irbil, the
Kurdish regional capital.
It was also where her husband, Adil Mateh, hid when the extremists
swept into Bartella, a historically Christian town east of Mosul, in the
summer of 2014. He had stayed to volunteer at the church, but by 2
a.m., when the power and water were cut, he decided it was too dangerous
and fled into the night, eventually joining his wife and their four
children.
“The church is the safest place. It is God’s house. But Daesh isn’t
afraid of God,” Mateh said, using an Arabic acronym for the group. “They
aren’t afraid of anything.”
Paulos and her family are among hundreds of thousands of displaced
Iraqis who are closely watching the offensive to retake Mosul, the
country’s second-largest city. Each battlefield advance brings hope that
they can return home, but they also fear what they might find when they
get there.
Iraqi special forces pushed into Bartella, nine miles from Mosul’s
outskirts, on Thursday, after fending off a wave of suicide truck
attacks.
Homes along the town’s main road were charred and riddled with bullet
holes. Many were spray-painted with graffiti, including the first
letter of a derogatory word in Arabic for Christians that the militants
used to mark Christian property. Under the extremists’ rule, Christians
had to either convert to Islam or pay a special tax.
Inside the church, the walls were sprayed with slogans and the floors
were littered with dirt and garbage. As Iraqi soldiers raised the
national flag over the building, they rang the church bell to signal its
liberation.
“Bartella was liberated yesterday, and today we are inside its
church,” Lt. Gen. Talib Shaghati declared. “I bring the good news to our
Christian brothers that the church is liberated.”
Intisar Mateh, her husband and their five children, aged 3 to 15
years old, fled the nearby town of Qaraqosh on a summer night in 2014,
shortly after IS moved in.
They slept on the floor of a shopping mall in Irbil, before moving to
a camp on the edge of the city, where 1,200 white trailers arranged in
neat rows shelter some 5,000 people.
Mateh works as a maid, but says it’s hard to make ends meet for her
family and her mother-in-law, who is ill. The family of eight shares a
two-room trailer.
They were also glued to the TV on Friday, watching as Iraqi forces fought their way across the Ninevah plains.
“Hopefully we can go back home, because we are not comfortable here,”
Mateh said. “We feel stuck here, and there is nothing like being home.”
She’s worried about the toll the war has taken on her children. She
hears them warn each other not to touch anything on the side of the
street, even empty plastic bags, for fear they could be roadside bombs.
It’s a lesson that may serve them well if they return to their hometown.
IS has heavily mined areas around Mosul to slow the advancing Iraqi
troops. The villages where most of the fighting has taken place are
largely uninhabited, so the U.S.-led coalition has been able to use
airstrikes and heavy artillery to help flush the militants out.
But the
fighting has destroyed houses, bridges and roads, which could take
months or even years to rebuild.
For the Christians of Bartella, at least, the town’s church is still
standing, a foundation on which a community scattered by war may one day
gather again.
“God willing, we can all go back home,” Paulos said. “We have suffered enough.”