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by Edwin Mora30 Mar 2018
Many
followers of Jesus Christ in Iraq will get to celebrate Easter at home for the
first time since fleeing the region in 2014, when the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL)
began its genocide campaign against the religious minority group.
Iraq,
particularly the Nineveh Plain area, is known as the cradle of Christianity.
In
2014, ISIS forced many Christian families out of their historical homeland, including
the village of Qaraqos.
Many
of the Jesus followers who returned to Iraq have reunited with their families
following the defeating blow the U.S.-led coalition and local forces dealt ISIS
on the battlefield late last year, marking the revival of the Iraqi Christian
community in places like Qaraqosh.
Open
Doors, an organization that tracks the persecution of Christians across the
world, reported on March 26:
For
the first time since ISIS drove Christians from Iraq’s Nineveh Plain in 2014,
the Christian village of Qaraqosh is celebrating Easter after many of its
families returned. Yesterday, our on-the-ground team was there as thousands of
Christians filled the streets to wave palm branches and celebrate Palm Sunday.
Today, they meet with believers in the town as they prepare to celebrate Easter
together back in their homes after three years of displacement.
During
Palm Sunday Mass in Qaraqosh on March 25, Syriac Catholic Patriarch Ignace
Joseph III Younan praised his flock for not losing their faith during the
nearly three-year genocide campaign at the hands of ISIS.
His
comments came while he celebrated mass at the partly destroyed cathedral in
Qaraqosh.
“We
will remain faithful to our Christian call, and we will remain lovers of our
church despite all the horrors that have afflicted us,” the Syriac Catholic
patriarch told the faithful.
“This
magnificent church attests to the criminal acts of those criminals and
terrorists,” he added, referring to the damaged cathedral in Qaraqosh.
From
around mid-2014 until the U.S.-led coalition and local forces liberated
Qaraqosh in October 2017, ISIS occupied the city.
Since
its liberation, “around 5,000 families have returned to the city that used to
be a home to 50,000 Christians. They are now rebuilding their lives amidst the
ruins and rubble that IS [Islamic State] left behind,” World Watch Monitor news
reported, adding:
On
Palm Sunday, celebrations saw thousands of Christians take to the streets of
the ancient city, where they marched, waving palm and olive branches, and
chanted Christian songs. The march culminated in an open-air religious service
on the square of St. John’s Church.
The
Catholic Universe newspaper acknowledged that ISIS nearly emptied Christian
town of Qaraqosh in just one night in 2014, reporting:
In a
single night during the summer of 2014, the town’s entire population of some
50,000 Christians was forcibly displaced by the Islamic State. In all, more
than 100,000 Christians were evicted from the Nineveh Plain and Mosul that
summer during [ISIS’s] campaign of terror in Iraq, and those uprooted fled to
the Kurdish region in northern Iraq.
“The
forced displacement imposed on you is not easy,” declared Patriarch Younan,
commending Christians for enduring the jihadi campaign in Iraq.
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