Genocide of Assyrian Christians in Iraq Continues in Syria
The genocide of
Assyrian Christians in
Iraq continues in
Syria.
ISIS attacked 35
Assyrian villages in northeast Syria in the Hassaka province. At least 9
Assyrians fighters were killed defending their villages. Up to 373 Assyrians were captured.
3000 Assyrians fled from their villages and are now in shelters in Hasaka and Qamishli.
None of the Assyrians want to return. This is what they have told their bishops.
Three weeks earlier, ISIS ordered Assyrians in the region of Hasaka to remove the crosses from their churches and to pay jizya (
Christian poll tax), warning residents that if they failed to pay they would have to leave or else be killed (
AINA 2015-02-03).
The list of atrocities against
Assyrians in Syria is very long; it includes murders, kidnappings and the destruction of cultural resources, including churches and ancient
Assyrian historical artifacts.
In Iraq it has been the same. With the first church bombing on
June 24, 2004 there began a relentless, low grade genocide which culminated in the displacement of
200,000 Assyrians from the
Nineveh Plain by ISIS. Where the population of
Assyrians in Iraq was at 1.4 million in 2004, it has dwindled to
300,000 in
2015. Most fled to Syria,
Jordan,
Lebanon and
Turkey --and now these same refugees will be forced to flee from Syria, along with the Assyrians of Syria.
ISIS has not only killed and displaced Assyrians in Syria and Iraq, it has destroyed the Assyrian cultural heritage. It has destroyed
118 churches in Iraq and 6 in Syria. It has destroyed Assyrian archaeological sites and historical artifacts in Iraq and Syria.
This is genocide -- there is no other word for it. This is the erasure of a nation from the land which it has inhabited for 6764 years.
Article 2 of the UN
Convention on the
Prevention and
Punishment of the
Crime of
Genocide lays down the meaning of genocide:
In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
• Killing members of the group;
• Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
• Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
• Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
• Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
To this we can add the destruction of the cultural heritage of a nation, including the destruction of secular and religious institutions and historical and archaeological artifacts.
All of these acts have been committed against Assyrians in Syria and Iraq in the last ten years.
It is ironic that the ISIS attacks on Assyrians in Syria is occurring in 2015, the centennial anniversary of the
1915 Turkish genocide of Assyrians,
Greeks and
Armenians, in which 750,000 Assyrians were killed (75%),
500,000
Pontic Greeks and 1.5 million Armenians.
This is not a coincidence. ISIS is pretty savvy and is historically informed. When ISIS pushed into the Nineveh Plain in Iraq last year, forcing 200,000 Assyrians to flee their homes, they began their invasion on August 7, which is the official
Assyrian Martyrs Day, a day on which each year Assyrians remember their fallen.
How should the civilized world react to this? When a group destroys a nation it destroys the cultural heritage of the civilized world. When the Taliban destroyed the 2,500 year-old Buddhist statues in
Afghanistan, the civilized world lost. When ISIS destroyed the walls of
Nineveh, the civilized world lost. When ISIS killed Yazidis, the civilized world lost. When ISIS killed
Shiites the civilized world lost. When ISIS killed Assyrians the civilized world lost.
And now ISIS is destroying the very foundations of world civilization. It is in
Mesopotamia where civilization as we know it began. Destroying Assyrian artifacts is ISIS's message to the world, that it aims to eradicate the very basis of its civilization because it is not Islamic.
There is no moral ambiguity in what is occurring -- ISIS is evil and the source of this evil is
Islam.
The civilized world must find the courage to accept the force of its moral superiority and act on it. If it does not, the world will fall into shadow.
There is a dark veil falling on the world and it is Islam as embodied by ISIS. Who has the courage to lift this veil?
Please forward a link to this video to your congressman and anyone you know who wants to see an end to these gross human rights violations of
Christian Assyrians in the
Middle East.
Thank you.
(put on screen:
This video was made from a news article written by
Peter BetBasoo of AINA, the
Assyrian International News Agency and used with permission. Their web site is: www.AINA.org
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