August
9, 2005:
Worried
Christian Leaders in Iraq
by Jon M. Sweeney
Iraqis
are now writing their first real constitution. As Sunni and Shia
Muslims compete on various fronts for the final language, the
Shia majority (62%) is seeking to establish sharia (Islamic
law) as the primary basis of civil law throughout the land.
Where
would this leave Christians in the future Iraq? Christian leaders,
most of them Catholic and Orthodox, are wondering…and worrying.
Many
Americans are completely unaware that there are Christians
in Iraq. We’ve heard so much about Islam in relation to
the trouble in Iraq over the last fifteen years that we have often
passed over the fact that there are nearly 750,000 Christians
native to Iraq. Approximately 3% of all Iraqi citizens are baptized
Christians. Catholics and Orthodox have been there for two millennia;
Southern Baptists, Free Methodists, and Evangelical Presbyterians
are much more recent arrivals.
The most visible Christian in Iraq in recent months is probably
the Archbishop of Mosul, Basile Georges Casmoussa, a Syrian Catholic.
A native Iraqi, Casmoussa is the spiritual leader of Mosul’s
nearly 40,000 Syrian Catholics. Back on January 17, 2005, Casmoussa
was kidnapped at gunpoint, stuffed into the trunk of a car, and
sped off to an undisclosed location—all outside his church
in Mosul. He was freed, reportedly without any ransom being paid
to his abductors, twenty-four hours later.
Other
prominent Christians in Iraq include the Roman Catholic Archbishop
of Baghdad, Jean Sleiman; Syrian Archbishop of Iraq, Athanase
Matoka; Chaldean Auxiliary Bishop of Iraq, Shlemon Warduni; and
Monsignor Andon Atamian, the administrator for Armenian Catholics
in the country.
The
controversy over the constitution has been brewing for more than
two years now. Back on April 30, 2003 the Vatican released a jointly-signed
statement from Catholic and Orthodox religious leaders in Iraq
which called for the as-yet-to-be-written constitution to guarantee
equality and freedom of religion for all Iraqi citizens.
In
2004, an interim constitution was drafted and put into use by
the interim Iraqi government. That document was hastily prepared
so that it could be put in place before the U.S. hand-over of
sovereignty in June of last year. At that time, many issues of
civil law, including the issue of sharia as a set of
precedents and guidelines, were avoided altogether.
President
Talabani of Iraq has pledged that the new constitution will be
put to a referendum before final ratification. But with the process
of its creation now nearing an end, religious freedom appears
more and more unlikely. Christian groups do not have the power
or influence to overturn points of the final document in a referendum.
The
diverse Christian community in Iraq suffered persecution of all
sorts under the rule of Saddam Hussein. Today they have a fleeting
amount of religious freedom, but a constitution that enshrines
sharia as the basis of civil law will leave the future
looking very uncertain. The
Tablet, the world’s leading Catholic news magazine,
reported in its July 23 issue that Chaldean Bishop Andreos Abouna
has taken an appeal to the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster,
Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor. Chaldean Christians make
up the largest Iraqi Christian group in the country.
According to The Tablet, “[Bishop Abouna] warned
that a pro-sharia constitution would massively speed
up the exodus of Iraq’s Chaldeans [from Iraq].”
And so, the rest of the world’s Christians are watching
and waiting along with our Iraqi brothers and sisters.
Jon Sweeney is an author and editor living
in Vermont. His new book is
THE LURE OF SAINTS: A PROTESTANT EXPERIENCE OF CATHOLIC TRADITION.
More
by Jon Sweeney.
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