Mosul prelate calls for liberation of city, Nineveh Plain--or mass asylum in the West
Sunday, June 21, 2015
"I am calling on the international community: if they cannot protect us, then they must open their doors and help us start a new life elsewhere."
By John Pontifex
NEW YORK (June 11, 2015)—A leading Iraqi
prelate has called on world governments to increase their efforts to defeat ISIS
and restore land and property to some 120,000 exiled Iraqi Christians.
Marking the first anniversary of ISIS’s
capture of Mosul, Syrian Catholic Archbishop Yohanna Mouche called on “people
who have the responsibility” to come to the rescue of the ousted Christian
communities, whose people, he added, long to go home.
In an interview with international Catholic
charity Aid to the Church in Need, the archbishop
said that military action is the “best
solution.” “We ask everyone to put pressure on the people who have the
responsibility to free the [towns and villages] as soon as possible so the
people can come back and live in peace in their homes and continue their lives
there,” he said.
The archbishop’s comments reflect ongoing frustration felt by a number of
senior Middle East clergy about what they perceive as the West’s reluctance to
commit to a full-scale intervention to confront and overcome extremism in the
region—a move many Church leaders opposed until very recently.
Archbishop Mouche also said that if the
West is unable to redouble its efforts in the fight against ISIS, it should
open its doors to Christians and other minorities seeking asylum.
“I
am calling on the international community: if they cannot protect us, then they
must open their doors and help us start a new life elsewhere,” he said, adding,
however that “we would prefer to remain in Iraq and be protected here.”
Speaking of his own hardship, the prelate
said: “I am like someone who is dreaming or drunk. I can’t understand what is
going on around me. It is a nightmare.”
Asked about widespread reports of destruction
of religious artefacts and Churches buildings in Mosul, he said his contacts
with the city had been severed. But he confirmed that “all our heritage is in
Mosul, and in Qaraqosh,” on the Nineveh Plain. He singled out the monastery of
St Behnam, which dates back to the fourth century AD. The monastery is rumored
to have been partially destroyed by ISIS.
“We have no news about our churches and
monasteries, because we have no-one left in Mosul to report on it,” the
archbishop concluded.
ACN photo: Archbishop Mouche
|