Arkivbild. Kvinna inspekterar skadorna i sitt hem efter att Bartella befriats, 23 november. (KHALID AL-MOUSILY / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

Kristna firar jul i återtagna staden: ”Bästa dagen”

Hundratals kristna irakier samlades på lördagen i Bartella för att fira jul, för första gången sedan staden ockuperades av terrorgruppen IS år 2014. Det skriver Reuters. Staden var en av de första som återtogs under den USA-stödda offensiven mot IS som inleddes för drygt två månader sedan.

– Det är en blandning av sorg och glädje, säger biskopen Mussa Shemali, som höll mässan i kyrkan Mar Shimoni.

Kyrkobyggnaden har liksom många andra plundrats och skändats. Det kommer dröja innan de boende kan återvända till staden permanent. Under terrorgruppens våld fick de många kristna i området välja mellan att fly, betala en särskild skatt, konvertera till islam eller bli avrättade, skriver Reuters.

– Det här är den bästa dagen i mitt liv. I bland trodde jag aldrig att den skulle komma, säger 52-åriga Shrook Tawfiq.

bakgrund
 
Kristendom i Irak
Wikipedia (en)
The Christians of Iraq are considered to be one of the oldest continuous Christian communities in the world. The vast majority are indigenous Eastern Aramaic-speaking ethnic Assyrians. There is also a small community of Armenians and populations of Kurdish, Arab and Turkmen Christians. While older sources mention also Christian Kurds, most present-day Christians are ethnically different from Kurds and they identify themselves as being separate peoples, of different origins and with distinct histories of their own. In Iraq, Christians numbered about 1,500,000 in 2003, representing just over 6% of the population of the country down from 12% on 1947 in a population of 4.7 million. They numbered over 1.4 million in 1987 or 8% of the population. After the Iraq War, it was estimated that the number of Christians in Iraq had dropped to as low as 450,000 by 2013 — with estimates as low as 200,000. The most widely followed denomination among Iraq Christians is the Chaldean Catholic Church. Christians live primarily in Baghdad, Basra, Arbil and Kirkuk and in Assyrian towns and regions such as the Nineveh Plains in the north. Iraqi Christians live primarily in northern Iraq; and in regions bordering it in northeastern Syria, northwestern Iran and southeastern Turkey, an area roughly corresponding to ancient Assyria. Christians in Iraq are not allowed to proselytise, especially to Muslims. Muslims who change their faith to Christianity, are subject to societal and official pressure, which may lead to the death penalty. However, there have been cases in which Muslims have secretly adopted the Christian faith, becoming practicing Christians, but legally Muslims; thus, the statistics of Iraqi Christians does not include Muslim converts to Christianity. In Iraqi Kurdistan, Christians are allowed to proselytise.

Bartella, Irak

karta
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