‘We Have No Voice,’ say Christians in Jordan two years after fleeing Northern Iraq
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
AMMAN, JORDAN (ANS – August 9, 2016)
-- Bahija, 65, a housekeeper, says she cries every day and suffers from
headaches – two years after Islamic State (IS) fighters raided her home
in Tel Kayf (outside Mosul) in front of her, while her elderly father
lay in bed upstairs.
According
to a story by Abigail Frymann Rouch and published by World Watch
Monitor, Kurdish security forces stationed near their house, by whom the
family had expected to be protected, were absent when the jihadists
arrived.
Two
years ago, IS invaded Qaraqosh, a town on the Nineveh plains, which
with Mosul, formed the biggest community of Christians in northern Iraq.
When
it seized control of vast areas of northern Iraq two years ago, IS
spray-painted the homes of non-Sunnis with the Arabic letter “N” for
“nasrani”, a derogatory term for “Christian,” “M” for members of the
military or police, and “R” for “rafithi,” a derogatory term for Shia
Muslims, threatening them all with death if they did not convert or
leave.
Church
leaders estimated that between 100,000 and 160,000 Christians fled
Mosul and its surrounding villages for Kurdistan in the summer of 2014.
Many remain in camps there, while others have traveled to Jordan or Lebanon to join pre-existing Christian communities.
Bahija, her sister and their parents first fled to Kurdistan, where a month later, her father died.
World Watch Monitor said the women lived for seven months in a room in a church, and spent 11 months at the Ashti camp in Erbil.
When
hygiene levels in the camp deteriorated, they moved to Amman, Jordan,
where they share a sparsely furnished two-roomed house with three other
relatives.
Bahija
said their 80-year-old mother, Bahar, cries at night, has become very
fearful and developed high blood pressure since the ordeal.
Bahija’s
sister, Samira, lost her teacher’s pension as soon as they left Iraq
because she worked for 23 years of the 35 years required to qualify.
Bahija said: “I wouldn’t go back to Iraq if they paid me billions. No one is left for us, only God.”
Levels
of poverty, hunger and trauma are soaring among the thousands of Iraqi
refugees, who have sought refuge in Amman and are receiving little or no
aid. Some women have turned to prostitution to make ends meet and some
households are missing meals.
A
2015 census recorded 130,000 Iraqis in Jordan, among whom Christians
appear to be disproportionately represented. In 2007, 12 percent of
Iraqi migrants in Jordan were estimated to be Christian, compared to an
estimate of 1.6 percent of Christians in the population in Iraq itself
(Operation World, 2010).
Waves of Iraqis have been arriving in Jordan in the wake of the US-led invasion of 2003.
However,
World Watch Monitor said, Jordan is also sheltering 1.3 million
Syrians, who have fled the horrors of their country’s four-year civil
war.
The big institutions and NGOs, such as Save the Children, Oxfam and the World Food Program, are focusing their aid on Syrians.
UNICEF’s
educational programs focus on Syrians, although a spokesman said that
some of their facilities are open to all vulnerable children.
Three
years ago a spokesman for UNHCR said Iraqis registered with UNHCR were
“extremely impoverished” because any savings they had arrived with had
run out.
According
to World Watch Monitor a spokesman for the charity CARE, told IRIN
news: “As the Syrian crisis grew bigger, the Iraqi case has become
invisible.”
Since then, the number of Iraqi refugees and the scale of their needs has become more acute.
Many
are living in basic private accommodation, paid for by local
philanthropists or churches, whose resources are being stretched to the
limit.
A
few local clergy are distributing food parcels, furniture, fans and
cash-grants to families. They also help with medical care and are
supported by a small number of Christian charities, aided by local
Muslim individuals and organizations.
Some refugees have serious physical injuries from attacks by militias and require ongoing medical treatment.
Safwan
Hikmat, who owned a shop in Mosul before he fled, has had eight
operations on his leg since militias beat him with their guns and ran
him over in 2011. He was left unable to walk for two years. He said he
was targeted in an attempted “ID killing,” which singled out non-Sunnis.
There
are considerable mental-health needs among the refugees. Justin Hett, a
psychotherapist trainer at the Center for Victims of Torture in Amman,
which has seen a huge rise in the need for its services in the last ten
years, said issues included post-traumatic stress disorder, suicidal
thoughts, anxiety and relationship tensions.
Father
Emmanuel al-Bana, a Syriac Orthodox priest in Amman – who oversees an
informal aid network for hundreds of the 3,000 Iraqi refugee families he
says fled to Jordan – said Iraqi Christians’ applications for asylum in
the West were often rejected. This can add to their anxiety, if they
are insistent on doing that.
“They
are taking care of Syrians and Muslims, but not Iraqi Christians,”
World Watch Monitor reported he said, “We have no voice.”
Another
refugee from a village outside Mosul asked, “Why are they (the Western
world) letting Muslims in and not us? Europe doesn’t seem to want us to
travel legally.”
He
said his nephew was in Turkey, trying to reach a relative in Germany.
“He’s tempted to go illegally, but he may be lost at sea or killed by
border guards on the way,” he added.
World
Watch Monitor reported that Hungarian Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, has
said the size of the largely Muslim refugee influx threatened Europe’s
identity.
He
is now gearing up to hold a referendum on the issue of mandatory
migrant quotas, with voters expected to reject the forced resettlement
of asylum seekers.
On
August 4, 2016, the Czech Deputy Prime Minister, Andrej Babis, said his
country will not accept refugees, after recent IS-inspired attacks in
Germany and France.
“I say clearly that I don't want even a single refugee in the Czech Republic, not even temporarily,” he said.
Last
summer, these same Eastern European governments faced criticism for
saying they wanted to prioritize taking Christian refugees.
Lord
Alton, the respected British Christian campaigner who has lobbied the
British Government to describe IS’s actions against Christians and
Yazidis as “genocide,” said: “Everyone is suffering in this situation
(in Iraq), but not everyone is the victim of genocide.”
World
Watch Monitor said he added, “Rather than getting into a sensitive
debate about accelerating one group because of their faith or
denomination … we should simply give priority to those who are subject
to genocide.”
However,
Father al-Bana said some opposition to resettling Christians came from
his church's bishops, who fear the Christian presence dwindling to
nothing in the Middle East.
For more information, please visit www.worldwatchmonitor.org.
Photo
captions: 1) Bahar (left), 81, with her daughters, Samira and Bahija.
IS beat Bahija and ransacked their home in Tel Kayf, outside Mosul.
Bahar’s family shares a one-bedroomed house in Amman with another family
of three, who sleep in the living room. (World Watch Monitor). 2) At
this memorial service, young people performed their own poetry, made
music and danced in front of a cross, around which are the names, in
Arabic, of the villages still under IS control. (Open Doors
International). 3) An urgent plea from a former resident of Mosul. 4) A
photo exhibition of the refugees' first six months away from their
homes. (Open Doors International). 5) Front cover of Jeremy Reynald’s
latest book.
About
the writer: Jeremy Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News
Service, a freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy
Junction, New Mexico’s largest emergency homeless shelter (www.joyjunction.org).
He has a master’s degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. One of his newest books is “From Destitute to Ph.D.”
Additional details on the book are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. His latest book is “Two Hearts One Vision.” It is available at www.twoheartsonevisionthebook.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information, please contact Jeremy Reynalds atjeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
Please tell your friends and colleagues that they too have a
complimentary subscription to our news service by going to the above
website and signing up there.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar