Christian women in Baghdad face intimidation to veil
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
BAGHDAD, IRAQ (ANS --Dec/ 21. 2015)
– The few Christians still holding out in Baghdad have found themselves
on the receiving end of another barrage of intimidation.
According to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
posters appeared on the morning of Dec. 13 - a Sunday - near Christian
places of worship with a message to Christian women to cover up,
according to the London-based website, Al-Araby al-Jadeed.
The
Qatari-owned media, which says it aims to counter sectarian narratives,
reported the messages were the work of the government-sanctioned
“People’s Mobilization” Shiite militias.
Posters
of a veiled Virgin Mary appeared around the mainly Shia neighborhoods
of Karada, Kadhimiya, Zayouna and Ghadir - in areas where Christians
still form a noticeable minority.
Addressed
to “honorable Christian” women, they said “The Virgin Mary was veiled,
for such has been the way of the prophets” and included a call to “pause
and think deeply”.
World
Watch Monitor goes on to say that their version of the Madonna’s iconic
picture, included, however, an extra wrapping of cloth to cover from
the chin down, in line with the Shia dress code.
They
read “The way [of the hijab] emanates from one common divine source,
one Lord who is Allah Almighty above all. Satan dislikes [this way] …
You have to follow the Virgin’s example, so why don’t you wear the
hijab?”
Posters had also appeared in some areas of the city in November, Fides reported.
Al-Hashd
Al-Shaabi (“People’s Mobilisation”) is a paramilitary umbrella under
which various Shiite factions operate. The Hashd (“mobilisation”) was
formed by the Iraqi government in June 2014 as a counter-jihad to defend
Baghdad, following the fall of Mosul to the Sunni jihadist “Islamic
State”, or IS.
“People,
probably Shiite militias, pasted images of the Virgin on the homes of
Christian families,” Louis Sako Raphael, Head of the Chaldean Catholic
church, said on Dec. 15.
Quoting
eyewitnesses, Al-Araby al Jadeed claimed un-specified Shiite clerics
were behind the offensive, which Christians have found insulting.
“When
you find those posters put up by militiamen right at your doorstep and
next to your place of worship, it only means one thing: ‘You’d better
obey, or else!’” said Hanna Sliwah, a 47-year-old Iraqi Christian.
“To
again see their freedom to dress thus threatened is very worrying for
Christians, let alone for the larger Iraqi society,” French newspaper Le
Figaro quoted Sako as saying.
World
Watch Monitor said, “The Chaldean Catholic Patriarch cited other
examples of intimidation, such as the recent proposed legislation to ban
the sale of alcohol throughout the country. In November, the Iraqi
Parliament passed a resolution forcing non-Muslim children to become
Muslims if their father converts to Islam, or if their non-Muslim mother
marries a Muslim. A call for an “amendment” was only heeded after
Christian protests.
“Throughout
some of the Sunni-dominated areas of Iraq, Christians have had to flee,
including in places where, historically, Christianity predominated. In
2014, IS overran Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, and the surrounding
Ninevah Plains to the north.”
So far, Christians have fared, by a limited margin, relatively better in Shia-majority areas of Iraq.
“Apparently, we have no place here, either,” said Sliwah, pointing out that similar messages were displayed around Baghdad government offices.
“Apparently, we have no place here, either,” said Sliwah, pointing out that similar messages were displayed around Baghdad government offices.
Maria
al-Chaldeani confirmed this soft-touch intimidation: “I was going about
my business, issuing papers from a Baghdad government office. There,
right at the entrance to the office stood a large poster of Christ, with
the message underneath: ‘Cover up, my children!’”
She said the instruction, like others, left little in the way of a choice.
Isolated Incidents?
Iraqi Christian MP Joseph Sliwa dismissed the issue as an “isolated” incident.
“Some
posters appeared here or there. They were promptly taken down after the
matter was taken up with the authorities,” he told World Watch Monitor.
Sliwa
said it is “unthinkable” the government, or the People’s Mobilisation,
or even Shia clerics, could or should, be behind such incidents.
Yet
he acknowledged that issues abound. He said Christian women had been
pressured to present photos of themselves in hijab to obtain passports.
“Christian
girls cannot go out to work, study, or even venture out in the streets
without hijabs in cities across the [Shiite] south, such as Basra and
Babel,”, Seliwah said, though he said this was due to social, not
official, pressure.
“Two-thirds
of Iraq’s Christian population fled the country during the chaos that
followed the US-led invasion. From around 1,500,000, or above 6% of the
population, in 2003, current estimates are that barely 0.8% still remain
in Iraq,” said World Watch Monitor.
“In
June 2015, a member of Baghdad municipal council claimed that nearly
70% of Christian-owned homes in Baghdad were illegally seized during the
post-2003 chaos.”
In
an interview with Iraqi TV station Al-Mada, Mohammed al-Rubai said:
“These houses belonged to Christians who fled from Baghdad, seeking
refuge from violent attacks targeting them and their homes. The title
deed documents have been falsified and the new title deeds have been
lodged with the real estate registry. Many properties had been given
illegally to other Iraqi citizens.”
The
result, he said, was that “it is possible that both parties [the
original and new owners] can possess legally registered title deeds to
the same property”.
According
to the NGO Baghdad Beituna (Baghdad Our Home), there have been more
than 7,000 violations against properties belonging to Iraqi Christians
in Baghdad since 2003.
Saad
Jassim, the group’s director, said in June: “Most of the Christians who
left Iraq for Europe had their homes stolen. Since then, their
ownership was transferred, and the homes are now occupied by militia
commanders and politicians in or close to power.”
Christians have also repeatedly suffered attacks and kidnappings.
“For
instance, October 2010 saw 58 people, including 41 hostages and
priests, killed after an attack on a Catholic church in Baghdad. Long
before IS came to gain such notoriety, Iraq's indigenous Christians were
declared a “legitimate target”. In November 2010, a series of bombings
and mortar attacks targeted Christian-majority areas in the capital,”
stated World Watch Monitor
“Since
2003, church bombings and other attacks by both Sunni militants and
Tehran-backed Shia militias have hit international headlines with
increased frequency.”
Out
of a list of 50 countries where Christians find themselves most
pressured, Open Doors’ World Watch List places Iraq as number 3.
Note
from Dan Wooding. I have written a novel about Mary called “Mary, My
Story from Bethlehem to Calvary,” which you check out and purchase at http://marythebook.com.
Photo
captions: 1) The offensive poster is aimed squarely at Christian women.
2) Patriarch Sako notes the trend of growing encroachments on freedoms
(World Watch Monitor). 3) Mary book cover. 4) Dan Wooding reporting from
outside the Kurdistan Parliament in Erbil, Northern Iraq.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning author, broadcaster
and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents,
and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he
has been married for 52 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter,
and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. He is the author of some
45 books and has two TV programs and one radio show in Southern
California. He has reported widely for ANS from all over the Middle
East, including from Northern Iraq.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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