Christian Fighters Join Battle Against Islamic State in Syria
By Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
RAQQA, SYRIA (ANS – June 30, 2017) --
Dozens of Syriac-Assyrian Christians have united to fight ISIS
militants in Raqqa, Syria, driven by a desire to protect their homeland
and rid the region of Islamic extremism for the first time in three
years.
"I'm
sacrificing for what they did to our people, our sects, for the
churches they blew up. For all these things," Aleksan Chmou, a Syriac
fighter, told the AFP.
"Our
Messiah Jesus Christ has a saying: if anyone slaps you on your right
cheek, turn your left cheek to him," the 28-year-old added. "But for me,
if someone slaps me on my right cheek, I'm going to put a bullet in his
head."
According to Leah Marieann Klett, writing for The Gospel Herald, (www.gospelherald.com),
Islamic State, also known as IS, ISIS, ISIL or Daesh, has been
operating from Raqqa, one of its two major strongholds, since 2014.
However, the terrorist group is now losing ground as the U.S.-backed
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) close in on the city. IS could be
defeated within months, officials have said, as forces on Thursday cut
off militants' last remaining escape route.
The Gospel Herald
says that while the ground assault is being carried out by the SDF, a
majority Kurdish and Arab alliance, dozens of Christians from the Syriac
sect have also joined the fight. Many of them have tattoos of rosaries
inked around their wrists and the word "JESUS" printed down their
forearms.
"In
some neighborhoods, we are on the front lines of the fight,"
23-year-old Fadi, a Christian, told the outlet. "We received military
training and put on this uniform to fight Daesh, liberate our people and
all the peoples of this region," he said.
In its report, The Gospel Herald
says thousands of Syriac Christians once lived in Raqqa alongside
Armenians, Kurds and the city's mainly Sunni Arab population, but many
fled when IS overran the city. After the group declared an "Islamic
caliphate" in the Raqqa it said Christians could remain - if they paid a
special tax or converted to Islam. Instead of complying, many fled.
The Gospel Herald
cites an investigative report on displacement and emigration of
Christians in Syria and Iraq which recently estimated that at least 50
percent and up to 80 percent of the Christians have fled the two
countries since the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011.
Abboud
Seryan, also Christian, told AFP, "We're participating in the
liberation of Raqa in the name of all Syrians. There's no difference
between Syriacs, Kurds, or Arabs. We're all brothers."
The
jihadists "blew up Raqqa's churches and forced Christians to convert to
Islam. This is also why we're participating in this battle," he said.
The Gospel Herald
went on to report that while thousands of ISIS fighters are believed to
have fled Raqqa into the group's territory to the south, remaining
members of the terrorist group have increased its use of suicide bombers
and roadblocks in the city. On Saturday, two IS car bombs targeted SDF
headquarters in the Jazara and AL-Idkhar districts, according to the
terror outfit's self-described news agency, Amaq.
Johannes
de Jong, who works closely with Syriac-Assyrian Christians involved in
the campaign to defeat ISIS, told Premier News Hour the fighters are
desperate for the support and prayers of the international Christian
community.
"The
very clear picture they're giving me is that there's a wall around
Raqqa, they put it full of mines," he said. "You have to imagine a
situation where they have to fight for every street and every house. It
will be bad. There are still a lot of civilians they [ISIS] will use as
human shields. They still have high end military equipment they stole in
their past from places like Mosul. It will be tough." He added that
prayers for the Christian fighters should be focused on strength and
resources.
"Pray
that as many as possible will make it through and this fight will not
be too long," he said. "Pray that there will be guns and ammunition for
Syriac-Assyrian Christians while part of this fight to liberate Raqqa.
Your prayer shouldn't be lofty, but we should pray to Jesus for the
daily bread."
Meanwhile,
the Raqqa Civilian Council, established by the SDF, last week pardoned
83 captured ISIS fighters, in what it said was a goodwill gesture
designed to promote stability.
The
council, which is expected to rule Raqqa once ISIS is eliminated in
Raqqa, said the pardoned fighters "were low-ranking members and were not
involved with violence." All were transported to the headquarters of
the Raqqa City Council in the village of Ain Issa, north of Raqqa.
According to Reuters, the youngest of the prisoners pardoned was 14 years old.
Photo
captions: 1) A fighter from the Syriac Military Council (SMC),
Christian fighters supporting the Syrian Democratic Forces in the fight
against the Islamic State group, guards a lookout point on the western
outskirts of Raqa on June 27, 2017 (Photo AFP. 2) A fighter from the
Syriac Military Council, a Christian militia fighting alongside the
Syrian Democratic Forces against the Islamic State (IS) group in Raqa,
shows his tattoo of a cross and rosary beads (Photo AFP). 3) Michael
Ireland.
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Chief Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ANS since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Please consider
helping Michael cover his expenses in bringing news of the Persecuted
Church, by logging-on to: https://actintl.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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