Amman, Jordan - 01/13/2003 - Micah Shristi - In northern Iraq as in
Baghdad, Muslims and Christians have lived together in harmony for
hundreds of years. Rhetoric and threats of full-scale war from
Washington are beginning to disrupt that harmony. "When Mr. Bush
called the invasion of Afghanistan a 'crusade' it made a lot of people
here very nervous," says Father Akhmed a Dominican priest at "Clock"
Church in Mosul.
Although Bush's aides quickly had him apologize for the remark, Father
Akhmed says the damage was already done. Many Muslims here already
perceived US aggression as anti-Islamic, and Bush's remark just
confirmed that suspicion.
Christians here worry that a regime change in Iraq could mean that
radical Islamic factions take power and diminish the rights and
freedoms of Christians afforded by the current secular government in
Baghdad.
Minority Muslim groups and have similar concerns about US-influenced
regime change. Although many top Iraqi officials are Sunni, a Shiite
and a Christian sit on the seven-member Revolutionary Council. The
current government provides security guards for minority Shiite
pilgrimage sites and pilgrim groups. Sufi mosques are increasingly
attended throughout the country. "I hope in your visit to Iraq you
have discovered that Islam - like all religions - is a religion of love
and peace." says Dr. Ali Abuteebu, a representative for the Sufi
Muslim leader Al Sheikh Mohammad Abdul Khareem.
Sipping on a glass of sweet Iraqi tea he continues, "It is more
difficult to build than destroy. By killing our people and destroying
our buildings America does not show that it is strong. Why don't the
Americans build the people of Iraq by sending medicines and food and
by participating in our economy?"
The sound of air raid sirens in Mosul is an almost everyday
experience according to Sister Shereen, a Dominican nun. People are
struggling to deal with the bombings that often follow the sirens.
"It is our job in the church to help take this pain from our people,
but how can we?" she says speaking of what she describes as "deep
psychological pain" that comes from loss of life as well as fear of
American bombings.
During the Gulf War, a US plane dropped a bomb on the church next to
Sister Shereen's convent. Several members of the five families who
were taking refuge there were killed. The church has recently been
rebuilt. The US military is getting increasingly aggressive in its
bombing campaigns in the no-fly-zones, especially in the South, but
also in the North near Mosul.
US fighter pilots apparently have been ordered to take more risks,
using lower flight plans and attacking more controversial targets.
Some conjecture that military planners hope to provoke an incident,
such as a US plane getting shot down, to give an excuse to begin a
full-scale invasion.
This is an immoral and dangerous strategy for many reasons. It puts US
pilots at great risk of being harmed by Iraqi anti-aircraft fire.
Furthermore, the bombing of Iraqi military targets puts nearby
civilians and civilian infrastructure at risk. On Jan. 1 AFP reported
on three bombings that affected civilians.
Sister Shereen and Father Akhmed sent me off with a song. They
chanted the Lord's Prayer in their native language Aramaic. Iraq is
home to the world's largest population of native speakers of the
language Jesus spoke, with some 300,000 Aramaic-speaking Christians
living mostly in and around Mosul. "Give us this day our daily bread
and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against
us."