Upcoming Events View All
4
From the Heart Rummage Sale

Saturday, 05/04/2024 at 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM

4
La Festa

Saturday, 05/04/2024 at 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM

5
May procession

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 1:00 PM

5
International Bereaved Mothers' Gathering

Sunday, 05/05/2024 at 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

8
Made for More Speaker Series

Wednesday, 05/08/2024 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

13
Bingo Fun Night at Chicken N Pickle to benefit The Care Service

Monday, 05/13/2024 at 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

1
Birthright 23rd Annual Run for Life and Learning

Saturday, 06/01/2024 at 7:30 AM

1
SSJJ All Class Reunion

Saturday, 06/01/2024 at 3:00 PM - 10:00 PM

14
SSND Summer Service Week

Sunday, 07/14/2024 at 7:00 PM -
Saturday, 07/20/2024 at 11:00 AM

Smoke rose over Gaza as seen from Israel Jan. 16 amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas. Violence and attacks have spread throughout the Middle East region, including Iran’s launch of ballistic missiles Jan. 15 on neighborhoods of Irbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, which has left the Iraqi Catholic community feeling unsettled.
Smoke rose over Gaza as seen from Israel Jan. 16 amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas. Violence and attacks have spread throughout the Middle East region, including Iran’s launch of ballistic missiles Jan. 15 on neighborhoods of Irbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, which has left the Iraqi Catholic community feeling unsettled.
Photo Credit: Amir Cohen | Reuters

Prelate says Middle East is ‘like a volcano,’ Christians are targeted

Iran conducted strike on what it claimed was an Israeli spy facility in Iraq, furthering tensions in the Middle East and threats to Christians

AMMAN, Jordan — Many Iraqi Catholics feel unsettled after Iran launched ballistic missiles, striking upscale neighborhoods of Irbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, signaling the latest spate of violence targeting northern Iraq.

Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed it targeted a spy base for Israel’s intelligence agency, Mossad, close to the U.S. consulate in Iraq Jan. 15, a charge refuted by both the region’s prime minister and the United States.

The strikes killed four, including Kurdish real estate tycoon Peshraw Dizayi and Christian businessman Karam Mikhail, owner of Al-Rayyan Iraq Group, who attended a social gathering at Dizayi’s home.

On Jan. 17, Iraqi Kurdish Prime Minister Masrour Barzani canceled a meeting with Iran’s foreign minister at the World Economic Forum at Davos in Switzerland in protest over Iranian missile strikes on the Iraqi Kurdish city of Irbil, a source told Reuters.

Barzani earlier called the attacks “unjustifiable and cowardly,” urging “the Baghdad government to adopt a firm position against this violation of Iraqi sovereignty.” Barzani also called on “our partners within the international community to put an end to these brutal attacks.”

The U.S. condemned the action, with State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller describing it as “Iran’s reckless missile strikes.”

Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Yousif Thomas Mirkis of Kirkuk and Sulaimaniya said that the entire Middle East region “is like a volcano,” with the expectation that anything can happen at this time.

This, he said, was a consequence of the ongoing war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, troubles in Syria and Lebanon, and the targeting of commercial shipping in the Red Sea by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, now under fire by the U.S. and Britain.

Archbishop Mirkis pointed to several distressing incidents also affecting Christians, considered injustices caused by the government in Baghdad against the dwindling community.

Baghdad has still not reinstated the title of Chaldean patriarch to Iraq’s Chaldean Catholic Cardinal Louis Sako. Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid revoked his title July 3, 2023, and this usurped the clergyman’s position both as the officially recognized head of Iraq’s Catholic Chaldean Church as well of his position and powers to administer the Chaldean religious endowments, including church properties.

Cardinal Sako left Baghdad at the time and remains in Irbil “in protest over the decree.”

Both the cardinal and media in Iraq say the action was likely instigated by Rayan al-Kildani, a leader of a nominally Chaldean Catholic militia in Iraq, the Babylon Brigades, closely tied to Iran. Its political wing holds four seats in parliament reserved for Christian candidates.

“The Christian quota is taken by a militia that’s supposed to be Christian, but is not,” Archbishop Mirkis explained. “They want to marginalize the Christian votes, so we feel very weak in this situation,” likely because al-Kildani has backing by Baghdad and Iran.

Archbishop Mirkis said there is a cloud hanging over the Christian community following the tragic wedding hall fire in Qaraqosh in September 2023. This led to a cancellation of Christmas and New Year celebrations out of safety concerns.

“The wedding fire in Qaraqosh killed 132 persons and has created a sense of depression about the future for Christians,” he said. “Some 200 families from Qaraqosh left for Amman in the hopes of emigrating abroad.”

Iraqi Church leaders expressed their concerns to Baghdad in an official statement on Nov. 28, 2023. “All we fear now is that the state will continue not to take serious action to preserve the rights of Christians, provide them with justice, and return their usurped property … but no one responds to our request,” Archbishop Mirkis said.

“There is division inside every community,” Archbishop Mirkis observed. “The Kurds are divided, the Arabs likewise. Some Shiites are with Iran, others are not. There are even Christians now that say what will we lose if we go with Rayyan al-Kildani? The challenge of unity, being strong together, this is one of the signs of our time.”

Archbishop Mirkis said this is particularly poignant as the Church dedicates Jan. 18-25 as the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. “When I invite people to pray together for unity, they smile and say, ‘What for?’ Even Chaldeans are divided.” He expressed a strong need for hope to be restored.


Pope appeals for restraint against escalating conflict in Middle East

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis called for dialogue and cooperation between neighboring nations and appealed for restraint against any actions that could escalate tensions in the Middle East.

After missiles struck Irbil, the capital of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, Jan. 15 and killed at least four people and wounded six, the pope expressed “my sympathy and solidarity with the victims, all civilians, of the rocket attack.”

“I ask everyone to avoid any step that increases tension in the Middle East and other scenarios of war,” he added Jan. 17 at the end of his general audience in the Paul VI Audience Hall.

Iran launched 11 ballistic missiles late Jan. 15 at the Kurdish region in northern Iraq, targeting what it said were Israeli “spy headquarters” in Irbil and launched four other missiles at locations allegedly linked to the Islamic State group in northern Syria, according to the Associated Press.

Cardinal Louis Sako, the Iraq-based patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church, said the attack on innocent lives was “reckless and irresponsible ... a blatant violation of the country’s sovereignty and people’s lives and a grave sin according to Islamic law.”

At his general audience, the pope asked people to not forget all countries in the world that are at war. “Let us not forget Ukraine, let us not forget Palestine, Israel, let us not forget the inhabitants of the Gaza Strip who are suffering so much.”

“Let us pray for so many victims of war, so many victims. War always destroys, war does not sow love, it sows hatred. War is a true human defeat,” he said.

— Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service


Related Articles Module

From the Archive Module

Prelate says Middle East is like a volcano Christians are targeted 9307

Must Watch Videos

Now Playing

    View More Videos