Christians and all people in the Middle East need the solidarity of
the U.S. Catholic Church, said the chairmen of three committees of the
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the head of the Catholic Relief
Services board.
“A concern for our Christian brethren is inclusive and does not
exclude a concern for all the peoples of the region who suffer violence
and persecution, both minorities and majorities, both Muslims and
Christians,” said a Feb. 10 statement from four bishops.
“To focus attention on the plight of Christians and other minorities
is not to ignore the suffering of others,” the statement said. “Rather,
by focusing on the most vulnerable members of society, we strengthen the
entire fabric of society to protect the rights of all.”
The group included Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, chairman
of the Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty; Bishop Oscar Cantu of Las
Cruces, New Mexico, chairman of the Committee on International Justice
and Peace; Bishop Joe S. Vasquez of Austin, Texas, chairman of the
Committee on Migration; and Bishop Gregory J. Mansour of the Eparchy of
St. Maron of Brooklyn, New York, chairman of the board of Catholic
Relief Services.
The group pointed to the findings of a recent USCCB delegation to
Iraq, which confirmed that Christians, Yezidis, Shiite Muslims and other
minorities had experienced genocide at the hands of the Islamic State
group.
“It is important for Syrians and Iraqis of all faiths to recognize
this as genocide, for that recognition is a way to help everyone come to
grips with what is happening and to form future generations that will
reject any ideology that leads to genocidal acts and other atrocities,”
the bishops said in their statement.
The bishops called on Americans to accept “our nation’s fair share”
of vulnerable families, regardless of religion and ethnicity, for
resettlement as refugees. They called for special consideration of the
victims of genocide and other violence.
They urged the U.S. to encourage the Iraqi government and the
regional government in Irbil, Iraq, to “strengthen the rule of law based
on equal citizenship and ensure the protection of all.”
U.S. aid should assist local and national efforts to improve policing
and the court system and encourage local self-governance, the bishops
said. Similar efforts are needed in Syria as well, they said.
The U.S. also can provide “generous” humanitarian and development
assistance to refugees, displaced people and Iraqi and Syrian
communities as they rebuild, the statement said. Such funding can be
directed in part to “trusted faith-based nongovernmental agencies” such
as Catholic Relief Services and local Caritas agencies, the bishops
said.