Concern and Support for Iraqi Christians Forced by Militants to Flee Mosul
International New York Times | 20 July 2014
BAGHDAD
— A day after Christians fled Mosul, the northern city controlled by
Islamist extremists, under the threat of death, Muslims and Christians
gathered under the same roof — a church roof — here on Sunday afternoon.
By the time the piano player had finished the Iraqi national anthem,
and before the prayers, Manhal Younis was crying.
“I can’t feel my identity as an Iraqi Christian,” she said, her three little daughters hanging at her side.
A
Muslim woman sitting next to her in the pew reached out and whispered,
“You are the true original people here, and we are sorry for what has
been done to you in the name of Islam.”
The
warm scene here was an unusual counterpoint to the wider story of
Iraq’s unraveling, as Sunni militants with the Islamic State in Iraq and
Syria gain territory and persecute anyone who does not adhere to their
harsh version of Islamic law. On Saturday, to meet a deadline by the
ISIS militants, most Christians in Mosul, a community almost as old as Christianity itself, left with little more than the clothes they were wearing.
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