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A 2015 file photo shows displaced Iraqi Yezidi children greeting Catholic Relief Service workers and a delegation of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, led by Bishop Oscar Cantu, during a visit to Shariah Collective, Iraq. (OSV News photo/Dale Gavlak)

Iraq marks 10th anniversary of ‘collective’ tragedy under Islamic State group’s terror

August 9, 2024
By Dale Gavlak
OSV News
Filed Under: News, Religious Freedom, World News

AMMAN, Jordan (OSV News) — As Iraq marked 10th anniversary of Islamic State group-induced terror recognized by the United Nations as genocide, and subsequent tragic Christian exodus, a top Iraq cardinal said that evil will not last and Christians called for more support for Iraq’s ancient Yezidi community still struggling for restitution and justice.

IS militants first rampaged through the Yezidi heartland of Sinjar Aug. 3, 2014, murdering men, abducting and enslaving women and children, while destroying homes and businesses affecting tens of thousands of Yezidis. More than 3,000 Yezidi men, women and children were unlawfully killed, and at least 6,800 more — primarily women and children — were abducted by IS.

Then, on the night of Aug. 6, 2014, IS went after Iraqi Christians, forcing 120,000 to flee their homes.

It was a “collective tragedy” for the Iraqi people, Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako, the Chaldean patriarch of Baghdad, told Vatican News. “A tragedy involving Christians and other minorities that remains etched in people’s minds. It is true that ISIS has been defeated, but its ideology remains strong, and not only in Iraq.”

A 2015 file photo shows displaced Iraqi Yezidi children standing in the doorway of an unfinished building in Shariah Collective outside of Dohuk, Iraq. Their family later received insulated doors and windows through a Catholic Relief Services project. (OSV News photo/Gavlak)

Following the territorial defeat of IS in March 2019, an estimated 2,600 Yezidis remain missing 10 years after the IS attack on the Yezidi heartland, according to the Office for Kidnapped Yezidis in Dohuk, as cited by Amnesty International.

“The ISIS genocide against Yezidis and Christians didn’t happen just one night. And it hasn’t ended just because the territories controlled by ISIS are now regained,” Father Emanuel Youkhana, a priest, or archimandrite, of the Assyrian Church of the East, told OSV News by phone. “Therefore, we are speaking about an ongoing crisis and ongoing genocide.”

Iraqi troops failed to protect Yezidis and Christians during the 2014 Islamic State invasion and aftermath. The Iraqi government has since also largely left Sinjar without reconstruction, observers say.

Father Youkhana’s Christian Aid Program Northern Iraq (CAPNI), a Christian program for displaced Iraqis around the city of Dohuk and the Ninevah Plains, has been at the forefront of providing badly needed aid to displaced Yezidis.

“In the first months, CAPNI provided food, hygiene and clothing to Yezidis who lost everything,” Father Youkhana said. “Afterwards, when displacement became more formal in the camps or informal settlements in the villages, we organized 110 buses to take Yezidi children to and from school.”

“We also provided child-friendly spaces to help deal with their trauma from such devastation,” Father Youkhana said. “And we continued such support until the areas taken by ISIS were regained. I never use the word ‘liberated’ because that means more than what we currently have.”

CAPNI’s next phase included helping 1,500 Yezidi and Christian families return to their native Ninevah Plains by rehabilitating their homes, shops, 32 schools, infrastructure and public services. “This is still ongoing,” Father Youkhana said.

“We continue to provide job opportunities, vocational training and loans to female-headed households which are unable to compete in the public job market, but can produce home goods,” the Catholic priest said. A mobile health clinic and hygiene packs distribution are also important. But such aid is challenging given a significant decline in financial resources due to conflicts in Ukraine and the Holy Land. Also, humanitarian needs are no longer a focus for the United Nations agencies in Iraq, observers say.

“Unfortunately, the Yezidis displaced by ISIS in Sinjar are still in camps 10 years after the ISIS invasion. So, they are still in the phase of displacement/return,” Father Youkhana explained.

“There are concerns of a lack of security, damaged or destroyed homes, minimal job opportunities, and a lack of health care, education, and even access to clean water,” former U.S. Congressman Frank Wolf of Virginia said of the dire situation in Sinjar during remarks at Washington’s Wilson Center July 30.

“People do not have much faith in the future,” Cardinal Sako said in an interview for Vatican News. “Everyone keeps asking themselves: When will we finally have a modern, democratic, and civil state where everyone can be citizens with equal rights and duties?”

He said that “this is why many leave Iraq, not just Christians. I try to talk to people, reassuring them that this evil will not last and that they need to be patient.”

“There needs to be fair compensation for these (Yezidi) families that are leaving (the camps) to resettle either in the Kurdistan region or going back to Sinjar,” Nadine Maenza, president of the International Religious Freedom Secretariat, told OSV News. “It’s in the best interests of Iraq, to rebuild Sinjar and provide that support for them to return.”

Both Maena and Wolf called for robust representation for Yezidis, Christians and other religious minorities in Iraq’s government. Cardinal Sako has for years urged Baghdad to provide equal rights to all of Iraq’s citizens, but observers say this is still unrealized.

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