On
Monday evening, I attended a talk titled, “Saving the Flickering Light of
Christianity in Iraq.” Admittedly, I originally wasn’t planning on attending
this talk, because there were a variety of other things that I could have been
doing (homework, relaxing, Zumba class, or sleep, to name a few). Plus, don’t I know that the situation is bad
for Christians in the Middle East? I pray for them every now and then, so I’m
good, right? I am extremely grateful that, by the grace of God, I found
myself sitting in Christ the King Chapel, waiting to hear Juliana Taimoorazy (founder
of the Iraqi Christian Relief Council) speak.
Julia Taimoorzay. Photo from honordiaries.com |
For
the next hour and a half, I didn’t hear about the politics and legislation
regarding the Middle East, and I didn’t hear about the latest news reports.
Instead, I heard about the humanity that has been attacked and persecuted for
hundreds of years. I saw photographs of displaced Christians living in
abandoned parking garages. I heard stories
about killings that, at times, don’t hit the radar of a news station—or if they
do, people don’t make a big deal about it.
No
matter what religion or political party you are a part of, I hope that we can
all open our eyes to see this atrocity. Taimoorzay explained that from the rise
of Islam to the mid-19th century, Christians have been persecuted approximately
every 45 years. During and after World
War I, two thirds of Assyrian Christians, 1.5 Armenians, and 700,000 Greeks all
died. Today, churches that are 1800-1900 years old are being bombed or turned
into mosques. In 2008, the Chaldean Archbishop of Mosul was shot and killed. In
2010, the church, Our Lady of Salvation was attacked during the liturgy,
leaving at least 58 people dead. In our present-day, ISIS is killing,
kidnapping, and torturing Christians frequently. On Easter Sunday this year, I ate junk food and played games. For some Assyrian Christians, Easter Sunday included having to hear or see that their church was bombed.
During
Taimoorazy’s presentation, she showed us many disturbing photographs of the
persecutions, killings, and sex slavery that are forced onto Christians in the
Middle East. But the point where I actually broke down and cried was during the
video that showed some survivors of the Our Lady of Salvation attack. Two women
and a man sat on a couch, and one women did all the speaking. She couldn’t have
been much older than I am now, and her words were wracked in sobs. The other
woman couldn’t speak because of the trauma, but rocks back and forth, at times
collapsing into the man’s arms, a look of horror on her face. I wanted to look
away, so that I wouldn’t have to see the pain and suffering, and read the
subtitles—but I forced myself to keep watching. This woman does not need me to close my eyes.
But because he
wished to justify himself, he said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” Jesus replied,
“A man fell victim to robbers as he went down from Jerusalem to Jericho. They
stripped and beat him and went off leaving him half-dead.
A
priest happened to be going down that road, but when he saw him, he passed by
on the opposite side. Likewise a Levite came to the
place, and when he saw him, he passed by on the opposite side. But a Samaritan traveler who came upon him was moved with
compassion at the sight. He approached the victim,
poured oil and wine over his wounds and bandaged them. Then he lifted him up on
his own animal, took him to an inn and cared for him. The next day he took out two silver coins and gave them to the
innkeeper with the instruction, ‘Take care of him. If you spend more than what
I have given you, I shall repay you on my way back.’ Which of these three, in your
opinion, was neighbor to the robbers’ victim?” He answered, “The one who
treated him with mercy.” Jesus said to him, “Go and do likewise.”
~Lk 10:29-37
Are
we closing our eyes to the suffering Christians in the Middle East? They have
been persecuted for hundreds of years, and the persecutions have been
intensifying at the hands of people in ISIS. Out of all of the problems in the
worlds that we fight for, shouldn’t we place more of a focus on helping the
people who are being slaughtered brutally? Furthermore, many persecuted Christians have
told Taimoorazy that this persecution is coming to America; ISIS and other
terrorist groups will not restrain their violence to the Middle East. Open your eyes! We must
be vigilant and help our brethren!
Pray. Pray for the persecutors, because
they have a tremendous need of healing and conversion in their lives. They must
be hurting deeply, and probably do not know of the great, authentic joy that
they can experience when they cease the persecutions. Pray also for those being
persecuted, for their courage, for their strength, for hope, and for peace.
Pray for those who are helping them, for their safety. During Taimoorazy’s talk,
she mentioned that a friend of hers recently received a death threat from ISIS.
Folks, this is real. People are dying, and we must pray and sacrifice!
Educate others. I’m not a fan
of politics. Researching political stuff makes me crazy. So should I just sit
on my comfortable couch and not look up political stuff when there are
Christians being killed? Love is sacrifice, and we can make those kinds of
sacrifices for the persecuted people. Also, like Taimoorazy stressed, draw an
awareness to the humanity of others
in the Middle East. People can talk politics all day long, but if it doesn’t
reflect the dignity and reverence due to a human person, the conversation will
not make the impact that it needs to. Try to keep up with current events
(though I recognize that we are bombarded with news from all sorts of places,
so it can be tough to read everything that’s important to know).
Give humanitarian aid. I’m a poor
college student, and I understand what it’s like to not have money. But when
the occasion arises that you have money to donate, consider donating it to an
organization that helps persecuted Christians (though Taimoorazy noted: not all
organizations are good. Some that claim to help the Christians work with Muslim
groups (for instance, she said, Caritas). There are many good people who are Muslim, but some Muslim groups in
Iraq are connected with terrorism. So do your research! ). Host a fundraising
event for the Christians, give up coffee and give that money to a good
organization, get creative!
Hundreds of Christians are being killed, and many of the survivors are being forced to flee their homeland with nothing, in order to find safety. The number of Christians in the Holy Land is dwindling, and ISIS is present in the United States of America. We need to open our eyes to the plight of persecuted Christians. Let's make people aware of the issues that they face, so that together, we unite in helping end the horrors that these people live through daily. I challenge you (and myself) to behind the computer screen and do something to change the world.
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