ishtartv.com - thetablet.co.uk
08 June 2017
The
Knights of Columbus has donated over $12 million to groups in the Middle East
aiding Christian refugees
The
co-authors of a bipartisan bill that will provide humanitarian aid to
Christians and other religious groups suffering at the hands of Islamic State
militants have praised the quick passage of the measure through the United
States House of Representatives on 6 June and have urged the Senate to quickly
act on it.
The
House unanimously approved the bipartisan Iraq and Syria Genocide Emergency
Relief and Accountability Act, or H.R. 390, in a voice vote.
Co-authored
by Representative Chris Smith, R-New Jersey, and Representative Anna Eshoo,
D-California, the bill will provide emergency relief and aid to the victims of
genocide in Iraq and Syria, particularly the Christians in the Middle East as
well as other religious minorities.
The
humanitarian aid will be directed to groups such as the Chaldean Catholic
Archdiocese of Irbil, Iraq, which provides direct care for victims, and those
groups in turn get the assistance to those in need.
Smith
and Eshoo held a news conference on 7 June urging the Senate to continue the
progress of this legislation to ensure the swift direction of funds to the
Middle East.
"We
are celebrating something today that we believe is something that is going to
make a difference in the lives of tens of thousands of people who have been
persecuted by IS," Eshoo said. "Certainly the Christians, those of my
own background, the Yezidis, and other minorities in the Middle East."
Since
2013, Smith has actively worked through hearings and mission trips to spread
awareness of the situation of the victims of IS in the Middle East. Part of the
effort was to get the United States to admit that what was occurring was
genocide.
"As
I think many of you know, Congress has been trying for the better part of three
years to finally get a designation of genocide being committed by IS against
Christians, Yezidis and some other Muslim minorities in the area," Smith
said. "Ultimately, it did become a policy of the United States of
America."
When
then-Secretary of State John Kerry issued a declaration of genocide about IS in
March 2016, it was one of the few times in the nation's history that the US
government had made such a determination. Eshoo said the declaration requires
further legislation that will confirm what the victims have endured.
"They
too, like people in our country, want their lives to go on, especially for
their children," Eshoo said. "The State Department would not allow
any US dollars to flow to church organizations and this legislation allows for
that."
In
addition to sending humanitarian aid for groups in Iraq and Syria to provide to
genocide victims, the bill also ensures that the government's money will be
monitored.
"There
will be accountability for these dollars," Eshoo said. "But it is so
essential to work with those who are on the ground that know exactly where the
dollars should go."
Supreme
Knight Carl Anderson, the CEO of the Knights of Columbus, has worked with Smith
to get support of the bill and has testified on behalf of the measure.
"We
must have the courage to confront reality and then we must have the courage to
change reality," Anderson said.
The
Knights of Columbus has donated over $12 million to groups in the Middle East
aiding Christian refugees. In addition, they recently began an ad campaign in
an effort to raise more funds.
"These
are people who are still praying in the language of Jesus," Anderson said.
"They have every right to survive."
Chaldean
Catholic Bishop Bawai Soro, who heads the Diocese of St. Peter the Apostle,
which is based near San Diego, also attended the news conference. He said the
current situation for Christians in the Middle East remains fragile, as they
suffer at the hands of radical Islamic groups.
"It
is very unfortunate that Iraq as a country still lacks the certain
constitutional amendments that guarantee liberty and equality to all
Iraqis," Bishop Soro said. "It remains our dream that the Christians
will not be second-class citizens in their own native homeland, Iraq. But
instead, they will hopefully soon have equal social, economic, political, lives
and statuses just as all Iraqis have."
Haider
Elias, president of the human rights group Yazda, whose own brother and other
relatives were killed by ISIS, spoke to the critical aspect of the bill.
"As
this legislation has been passed by the House, we urge the Senate to act upon
it and expedite it as quickly as possible," Elias said. "These
Yezidis and Christians are in dire need for such assistance in order to survive
as religious minorities in our region."
Smith
said that they have contacted several representatives in the Senate who they
believe will offer similar support to the bill. He said he hopes they will vote
within the next couple of weeks.
"I
think its very important that the Senate moves quickly - within weeks,"
Smith said. "There's no reason for delay on this. Its not a complicated
bill."
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