Posted on 02/01/2016 2:03:22 PM PST by Trumpinator
Anti-Christian persecution Syrian Catholic leader demands the West step up against ISIS
By Inés San MartÃn
Vatican correspondent January 29, 2016
ROME â According to one of Syriaâs most prominent Catholic leaders, if the West doesnât commit to fighting extremism in the region, violence will escalate until there are no Christians left in the Middle East.
âWe have to say that the morale of the Christians in Syria and Iraq is getting lower, because we see how the world powers donât care about the survival of minority communities, but [only] about their own geopolitical interests,â Syriac Catholic Patriarch Youssef III Younan said Thursday.
âOur nightmare, our greatest fear, is that in Iraq and Syria will happen what happened in Turkey, where we can hardly speak of a Christian presence,â he said.
In centuries past, he said, major Church councils were held in Turkey because it was a thriving center of Christianity. Today, however, there are barely 150,000 Christians left, he said, in country with a population of 75 million.
âBy now, not even the media is talking about us anymore,â he said to journalists. âThis indifference toward the fate of so many innocent people hurts me deeply.â
Younanâs complaints came a day after the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe adopted a resolution condemning the actions of ISIS in the Middle East as genocide, and a day before the third Geneva peace talks regarding Syria were set to begin, although theyâre now being postponed due to disputes over which opposition parties should attend. Advertisement
Speaking in Rome, Younan also said that the Christian community in the Middle East is grateful to Russia, which has been bombing ISIS targets since mid-November 2015. This intervention, he said, done in coordination with the local army, has âchanged the situation on the ground.â
He also offered a grudging defense of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
âWestern media speak about the âmonstrositiesâ of Assad, saying heâs killed 100,000 Syrians,â Younan said. âBut they donât speak about the 1 million people who died in Iraq as a result of the allied military intervention in 2003. Itâs all been forgotten.â
He acknowledged that Assad has committed atrocities, but said the West âwent there to murder and bomb, because you wanted to bring down the government of Saddam Hussein, and people died because of the bombings, of starvation, of illnesses.â
Younan also said he is thankful to the Russian Orthodox Church and its Patriarch Kirill, who visited the country in 2012, promising to defend religious freedom for all the Middle East.
âRegrettably, we havenât heard these declarations from the West,â he said. Related
Covering nude statues in Rome for Iran head draws Syrian Catholic leader's scorn A statue of the Virgin Mary overlooked the village of Maaloula, north of Damascus, Syria. (Alexander Kots/Komsomolskaya Pravda via AP) Syria: 'An endless Calvary' Egyptian Christian villagers cleaned up the damaged ancient chapel inside the Virgin Mary and St. Abraam Monastery that was looted and burned by Islamists in Dalga, Minya province, Egypt, in 2013. It was part of a wave of attacks in the southern Minya province that targeted Christians, their homes, and their businesses. (AP Photo/El Shorouk Newspaper, Roger Anis) Globally, religious persecution is Christian persecution
He acknowledged the concerns many have regarding Russiaâs own geopolitical interests in the region, saying that the help could very well be a political maneuver.
âBut the fact is that itâs possible that weâre going to disappear from the region,â Younan said. âRussiaâs intervention gives us hope.â
Repeating a statement he made in Washington last September, Younan said drone attacks wonât be enough to stop ISIS, Al-Qaeda, and other terrorist organizations, while a coordinated military force using Western intelligence and the local armies could suffice.
The patriarch also spoke about the hundreds of thousands of Christians who have already left these two countries, and became emotional talking about Qaraqosh, a former Christian enclave in the Nineveh Plain, currently in the hands of the Islamic State. Until 2014, it was mainly inhabited by Syrian Catholics.
âThey destroyed everything,â he said. âThere were about 30 churches and monasteries; now theyâve either been destroyed or turned into mosques.â
As a footnote, during the conversation the patriarch refused to use the acronym ISIS when referring to the Islamic State. Instead, he insisted on using the Arabic term Daesh, saying that ISIS âis a name that resembles a delicate flower and it canât be used for these barbarians who kill, rape, kidnap, and enslave women and children.â
As the prelate pointed out, the number of Christians living in the region has dropped dramatically, and he says it will continue to do so.
âMany have already left the country and many others continue to leave, risking their lives in the sea of death,â Younan said, referring to drownings in the Mediterranean.
Among other things, he asked the international community to build a humanitarian corridor to protect refugees. âWe must not abandon these people,â he said.
Younan acknowledged the need for screening refugees before resettling them.
âWe hear some representatives from Czech Republic or Poland saying that they only want to welcome Christian refugees,â the patriarch said. âIâm saying this because itâs no secret, theyâre afraid of there being a great risk of, in the future, having these conflicts based on religion which would be damaging to their culture.â
In recent months, several European countries have defended the policy of welcoming only Christians based on the argument that they would integrate more easily into a Christian-majority society, while others have pointed to the direct and imminent threat from the Islamic State group to Christians in Syria and Iraq.
Younanâs appeal for politicians to take action doesnât mean heâs not thankful for what charitable organizations have done for Syria and Iraq, such as Aid to the Church in Need, which in 2015 donated more than $7 million to help the local population.
He also suggested that Catholics from around the world who want to help those fleeing persecution, war, poverty, and starvation, can do so through this and other groups.
Finally, echoing the appeal of many other Christian leaders, Younan asked both the Shiite and Sunni branches of Islam to deliver a clear condemnation of the crimes committed by ISIS.
âThey canât just say itâs a sin to kill their Muslim brothers,â he said. âThey must also condemn those who kill Christians and people belonging to other religious minorities in the name of Islam.â ines_stmartin
Inés San MartÃn ï ines@cruxnow.com ï inesanma
Inés San MartÃn is the Vatican correspondent for Crux, stationed in Rome. More
Just why is getting rid of Assad so important that the powers that be in DC are willing to sacrifice historic Christian populations for this goal?
Is it because they are Catholics? Eastern Christians? So they don't count?
ISIS is Islam, and Islam is ISIS.
No doubt about that since that is the goal of Islam.
I wish these Catholic clergy leaders would get the Pope to stop his dangerous nonsense of portraying Islam as something you can get along with, in spite of 1400 years of evidence to the contrary, and the Koran and Hadiths that encourage killing all Kafirs. (Infidels) -tom
FYI
Truth, Justice, and the American Way.
Perhaps if the Vatican would ditch the Marxist homo-embracing heratic it now has for a “leader” - and put a real man in charge ... Then they might actually find a backbone and fight their own battles for once.
Unfortunately, at the moment, most of the Church hierarchy consists of a cabal of liberal limp-wristed sodomites, child molesters and Marxists, more interested in advancing the cause of “gay pride” than anything so trivial as defending the Catholic faith.
But that is what happen when the Bishops turn a blind eye to faggots in the seminaries and feminazi dykes in the convents
http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/2884/assad-slaughtering-syrian-christians
Assad Slaughtering Syrian Christians
The Pope said different, the Pope outranks the New Jersey transplant to Syria.
The fact that you don't get that makes me think you are some kind of foreigner trying to get the USA to sympathize with your cause. Any American reading that would understand that the story shows zero persecution of Christians for their religion in Syria. And your link had zero to do with the Pope.
I see zero articles of the Pope backing the rebels or saying Syria's Assad persecutes Christians.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/29/bashar-al-assad-private-message-pope-francis-syria
Bashar al-Assad sends private message to Pope Francis
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/commentandblogs/2013/09/06/i-thought-we-should-hit-assad-hard-but-pope-francis-has-changed-my-mind/
I thought we should hit Assad hard, but Pope Francis has changed my mind
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.