Iraqi Church Rescued From ISIS Holds First Service in Two Years
An ancient, bombed-out Christian church just outside of Mosul, Iraq, held its first Sunday service in more than two years this past weekend.
The Syriac Catholic church, located in the city of Qaraqosh, held the service just days after Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) retook the city last week. Archbishop Butrus Moshe led the Mass undeterred by charred walls and a nearly destroyed altar.
“Today Qaraqosh is free of Daesh (ISIS),” Moshe told church goers.
Iraqi Christians celebrate Mass in Qaraqosh for the first time since liberation from ISIS: https://t.co/RV3z9Kv7h0 pic.twitter.com/dwqRE476NJ
— Christian Today (@ChristianToday) October 31, 2016
The congregation was comprised of the Syriac community’s ragged remains in Qaraqosh and some of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) fighters who helped retake the city.
WATCH:
The first Sunday mass has been held at this Iraqi church near Mosul, two years after it was captured by ISIS. pic.twitter.com/eUgVFndAmx
— AJ+ (@ajplus) October 31, 2016
Iraq’s Syriac Catholic sect is one of many religious minorities persecuted by ISIS. The terrorist group also targeted Yazidis, Chaldean Christians, Assyrian Christians and Shiite Muslims during its rise from 2013 to 2014. ISIS forced the Syriac sect to pay a religious tax (known as a jaziyah), submit to Islam or face death. Much of the Syriac population fled to Iraqi Kurdistan as a result of the ISIS oppression.
ISIS took hundreds of Christian prisoners during its land-grab campaigns in Iraq and Syria, often holding them as hostages. The terrorist group forced Assyrian Church to pay millions of dollars in exchange for 230 hostages held for months on end. Members of the church were able to scrabble together enough money to release the final 42 hostages in February
“Our role today is to remove all the remnants of Daesh,” said Moshe, a native of Qaraqosh. “This includes erasing sedition, separation and conflicts, which victimized us.”
Syriac Catholicism is one of the oldest Christian traditions, with roots in Iraq dating back to the first century. The number of Iraqi Christians dropped significantly after facing persecution from Muslims after the U.S. invasion in 2003.
The Iraq Security Forces (ISF) seized Qaraqosh as part of an ongoing campaign to retake Mosul from ISIS forces. The campaign has seen significant success thus far, with ISF troops breaching the city limits Tuesday.
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