Pope calls for peace from ruins of Iraq’s war-battered Mosul

Pope Francis made a emphatic appeal for peaceful coexistence in Iraq on Sunday as he prayed for the country’s war dead amid the ruins of four demolished churches in Mosul, which suffered widespread destruction in the war against the Islamic State group.
Francis travelled to northern Iraq on the final day of his historic
visit to minister to the country’s dwindling number of Christians, who were
forced to leave their homes en masse when IS militants overtook vast swaths of
northern Iraq in the summer of 2014.
Few have returned in the years since IS was routed in 2017, and Francis
came to Iraq to encourage them to stay and help rebuild the country and restore
what he called its “intricately designed carpet” of faith and ethnic groups.
For the Vatican, the continued presence of Christians in Iraq is vital to
keeping alive faith communities that have existed here since the time of Christ.
In a scene unimaginable just four years ago, the pontiff mounted a stage
in a city square surrounded by the remnants of four heavily damaged churches
belonging to some of Iraq’s myriad Christian rites and denominations. A
jubilant crowd welcomed him.
“How cruel it is that this
country, the cradle of civilization, should have been afflicted by so barbarous
a blow, with ancient places of worship destroyed and many thousands of people –
Muslims, Christians, Yazidis — who were cruelly annihilated by terrorism — and
others forcibly displaced or killed,” Francis said.
He deviated from his prepared speech to address the plight of Iraq’s
Yazidi minority, which was subjected to mass killings, abductions and sexual
slavery at the hands of IS.
Today, however, we reaffirm our conviction that fraternity is more
durable than fratricide, that hope is more powerful than hatred, that peace
more powerful than war.”
The square where he spoke is home to four different churches —
Syro-Catholic, Armenian-Orthodox, Syro-Orthodox and Chaldean — each of them
left in ruins.
IS overran Mosul in June 2014 and declared a caliphate stretching from
territory in northern Syria deep into Iraq’s north and west. It was from
Mosul’s al-Nuri mosque that the group’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, made his
only public appearance when he gave a Friday sermon calling on all Muslims to
follow him as “caliph.”
Mosul held deep symbolic importance for IS and became the bureaucratic
and financial backbone of the group. It was finally liberated in July 2017
after a ferocious nine-month battle. Between 9,000 and 11,000 civilians were
killed, according to an AP investigation at the time. Al-Baghdadi was killed in
a U.S. raid in Syria in 2019.
The Vatican hopes that the landmark visit will rally the country’s
Christian communities and encourage them to stay despite decades of war and
instability. Throughout the visit, Francis has delivered a message of
interreligious tolerance and fraternity to Muslim leaders, including in an
historic meeting Saturday with Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani.
The Rev. Raed Kallo, was among the few who returned to Mosul after IS
was defeated. “I returned three years ago and my Muslim brothers received me
after the liberation of the city with great hospitality and love,” he said on
stage before the pontiff.
Kallo said he left the city in June 10, 2014, when IS overran the city.
He had a parish of 500 Christian families, most of whom have emigrated abroad.
Now only 70 families remain. “But today I live among 2 million Muslims who call
me their Father Raed,” he said.
Gutayba Aagha, the Muslim head of the Independent Social and Cultural
Council for the Families of Mosul, encouraged other Christians to return.
“In the name of the council
I invite all our Christian brothers to return to this, their city, their
properties and their businesses.”
Francis will later travel by helicopter across the Nineveh plains to the
small Christian community of Qaraqosh, where only a fraction of families have
returned after fleeing the IS onslaught in 2014. He will hear testimonies from
residents and pray in the Church of the Immaculate Conception, which was
believed to have been torched by IS and has been restored in recent years.
He wraps up the day with a Mass in the stadium in Irbil, in the
semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region, that is expected to draw as many as
10,000 people. He arrived in Irbil early Sunday, where he was greeted by
children in traditional dress and one outfitted as a pope.
Public health experts had expressed concerns ahead of the trip that
large gatherings could serve as superspreader events for the coronavirus in a
country suffering from a worsening outbreak where few have been vaccinated.
The Vatican has said it is taking precautions, including holding the
Mass outdoors in a stadium that will only be partially filled. But throughout
the visit, crowds have gathered in close proximity, with many people not
wearing masks. The pope and members of his delegation have been vaccinated but
most Iraqis have not.
Iraq declared victory over IS in 2017, and while the extremist group no
longer controls any territory it still carries out sporadic attacks, especially
in the north. The country has also seen a series of recent rocket attacks by
Iran-backed militias against U.S. targets, violence linked to tensions between
Washington and Tehran.
The IS group’s brutal three-year rule of much of northern and western
Iraq, and the grueling campaign against it, left a vast swathe of destruction.
Reconstruction efforts have stalled amid a years-long financial crisis, and
entire neighborhoods remain in ruins. Many Iraqis have had to rebuild their homes
at their own expense.
Iraq’s Christian minority was hit especially hard. The militants forced
them to choose among conversion, death or the payment of a special tax for
non-Muslims. Thousands fled, leaving behind homes and churches that were
destroyed or commandeered by the extremists.
Iraq’s Christian population, which traces its history back to the earliest days of the faith, had already rapidly dwindled, from around 1.5 million before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that plunged the country into chaos to just a few hundred thousand today.