On Iraq's Nineveh Plains, a Christian village is coming back to life
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
"There is water and electricity and the Church is helping us. It is really wonderful to be able to live here again."
By Daniele Piccini
BARTELLA, a Christian
village on the Nineveh Plains in Iraq, was the first of the region’s communities
to be liberated from the grip of ISIS, freed in fall 2016.
It was home to 3,400 Christian families before ISIS captured the community.
Recently, after three years of exile in Kurdistan, the first six Syriac-Orthodox
families have returned to their newly restored homes.
ISIS wreaked havoc in
Bartell. More than 90 homes were completely destroyed, some 360 were badly
damaged by fire and another more than 1300 homes suffered varying degrees of
damage. To-date, Aid to the Church in Need, the international Catholic charity—working
with the Nineveh Reconstruction Committee (NRC)—has restored 17 homes in the
village. Once funding is secured, another 150 homes are due to be worked on.
The village infrastructure needs repair too. However, “the water network is
slowly being brought into service again,” Noor Sabah Dana, NRC engineer, told ACN.
He added: “there is not enough water to meet everyone’s needs, and sometimes
the network breaks down completely. There is a municipal water tank, which
serves other villages as well and. Electricity is also coming back slowly,
though there are regular power failures, especially interruptions caused by the
repair work.”

The municipal
administration is repairing the streets and a group of garbage collectors is
cleaning up trash and debris
These are small miracles
for a village still deeply scarred by the jihadist occupation. Still, many of
the community’s former residents, having spent three years as IDPs in
Kurdistan, are eager to return home. “At least 200 families come to Bartella
from Erbil every day to clean their houses and try make them habitable again,” Noor
Sabah Dana reported. “The families come here to clean their flats and clear
them out; then they call the Committee to appraise their homes and provide an
estimate for the damages. Then the restoration process can begin,” the engineer
explained.
“After everything that
happened, we returned to this house and asked the Church in Bartella for help,”
explained Mark Matti Ishaq Zora, the son of a local farmer who is the owner of
the house. He said: “A team of experts came and appraised all that was
necessary: the paintwork, the electrical installations, the doors and windows,
the water pipes.
“This is our city, our
life, our history. Besides, in Kurdistan we struggling with difficult economic
conditions. Food and rent are expensive. That is why I would like to tell all
the families from Bartella to come back here. There is water and electricity
and the Church is helping us. It is really wonderful to be able to live here
again.”
Down the block, Nohe Ishaq
Sliman, another home owner, chimes in: “We are all returning to Bartella
because this is our city. I have lived here since I was a child.
“I drank the waters of the
Tigris River and work here as a farmer. I built this house myself. How can I
leave? I thank our benefactors for the help in restoring my house. I could no
longer pay 600 or 700 dollars a month for rent and leave this house standing
empty. How could I not return? This is my city, I want to return and live
here.”
The challenges facing Christians on the Nineveh Plains
are enormous: Currently there are still 14,000 families who have fled from
Mosul and the Nineveh Plains living in Erbil (approximately 90,000 people);
nearly 13,000 homes have to be repaired or rebuilt; there are security concerns
in the villages; there is Kurdish-Iraqi political manoeuvring on the ground;
there are massive infrastructure concerns (water, electricity, roads, schools
and clinics); and, most urgently, the IDPs in Erbil will continue to need food
aid as well as help paying the rent, pending their hoped-for eventual return to
their homes on the Nineveh Plains.
At this writing, 342 properties are being renovated,
in part through funding by ACN. Since the crisis began, ACN has provided
ongoing support to the Christian refugees in northern Iraq. To date, close to
$35M has been donated for emergency aid, including food, education, housing,
pastoral help and reconstruction.
Members of the Zora family back in Bartella; ACN photo
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