Despite being Yazidi, a religious minority that has suffered persecution in Iraq, Wael Jejo Khdeida, along with his wife, tends to Mar Odisho Church in northern Iraq without pay and treats it as sacred. / Credit: Ismail Adnan/ACI MENA
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By Georgena Habbaba
June 22, 2025
Though Christians left the northern Iraqi village of al-Nasiriya decades
ago, the doors of Mar Odisho Church remain open — thanks to the devotion of a
local Yazidi family.
Wael Jejo Khdeida, a young Yazidi man, holds the keys to the church and,
along with his wife, tends to the building without pay. Continuing a legacy
passed down from his parents, Khdeida ensures that the church is clean,
accessible, and respected.
In an interview with ACI MENA, CNA’s Arabic-language news partner,
Khdeida recalled his parents’ unwavering service to the church before they
emigrated in 2012.
“Before they left,” he said, “they gave me one instruction: Take care of
the church. ‘The church comes first — before your own house,’ they told me.” He
smiled, adding that they still ask about the church in every phone call,
jokingly warning that if he neglects it, they’ll come back to resume the duty
themselves.
Despite being Yazidi, a non-Christian religious minority that has
suffered persecution in Iraq, Khdeida treats the church as sacred.
“We remove our shoes before entering, we touch its walls and kiss them
in reverence,” he said. “This is a place of holy prayer. We respect all
religions and will serve this church until our last breath.”
In 2023, for the first time in 22 years, Mar Odisho Church hosted a Mass
again, as the Chaldean Diocese of Alqosh marked the feast day of St. Odisho on
the Sunday after Easter. Since then, both Christians and Yazidis have resumed
visiting the church, especially on Sundays, lighting candles and seeking the
saint’s intercession.
Khdeida noted that Yazidis often come to pray as well — many believing
they have received miracles.
“Women with lactation problems used to come here seeking healing with
the blessed oil, and many were cured,” he said. “I even saw a Yazidi woman
healed from a skin disease after being anointed.”
He continued: “Many couples who couldn’t have children came to ask St.
Odisho’s intercession. One family came back from the diaspora after years away
just to fulfill a vow — their son, now a boy, walked into the church with
them.”
Wael Jejo Khdeida, a young Yazidi man, holds the keys to his village’s church and cares for it. Credit: Ismail Adnan/ACI MENA
The first Mass celebrated in Mar Odisho Church in 2023 after a 22-year hiatus. Credit: Alqosh Parish
An exterior view of Mar Odisho Church in al-Nasiriya, Iraq. Credit: Ismail Adnan/ACI MENA
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