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Friday, April 26 2024 @ 10:27 PM CDT

The MOST Dangerous Job in Iraq Today

Whited Sepulchers

Bush and his GOP Radical Reich Khristian Krusaders have destroyed Christianity in the Middle East.

Christians among the most targeted people in the city
Selling Christmas trees dangerous in Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq — Nouri Dawoud has one of the most dangerous jobs in Baghdad. He sells Christmas trees.

For seven hours a day, he stands on the same street corner in a neighborhood where drive-by shootings and snipers are not uncommon. He caters to Christians, who are among the most targeted people in the city. On a good day, he attracts a crowd, a draw to any would-be suicide bomber.

Dawoud has been selling trees at the same corner in the Karrada district every Christmas season for 10 years. At 77, he is not ready to abandon his spot. But he might have no choice.

Christmas was once a holiday that Christians and a few Muslims in Iraq enjoyed. Now, they fear celebrating it. These days in Baghdad, even buying a Christmas tree can lead to getting killed.

"People now, they have a lot of things to worry about other than trees," Dawoud said, his mouth full of pumpkin seeds, a popular snack here.

Last Monday, a week before Christmas, Dawoud was the only tree vendor on his street, which in times past had become Christmas tree row in early December. His colleagues were too afraid to join him.

"They said, 'You go check it out first. You’re an old man,"’ he said.

With a black-checkered kaffiyeh wrapped around his head, he placed five tall, anemic-looking trees against a wall and waited for people to show up. Few did. With his one good eye, he scanned every car that drove by. He called his presence on the street a "fidai" — a suicide mission — and broke into a hearty laugh.

"Why should I be scared?" he asked. "The old men, they don’t care like the young people."

Dawoud is a Muslim, but he has lived among Christians in the mixed Karrada district for years. "We are brothers," he said, expressing a tolerance that is increasingly rare in Baghdad.

For centuries, including under the rule of Saddam Hussein, Iraq’s Christian minority coexisted with Muslims. Saddam’s deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz, was a Christian, one of an estimated 600,000 to 1 million people of the faith living in the country before the U.S.-led invasion overthrew Saddam in 2003.

Since then, militant Islamic groups have waged a campaign against Christians, in part because some ran liquor stores and took jobs on American bases. But they appear to have been targeted mostly for not being Muslims.

In recent years, churches have been bombed, and priests, ministers and worshipers have been kidnapped or killed.

The violence has led many Christians to flee the country. The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that 44 percent of Iraqis seeking asylum in Syria are Christians. In the first four months of this year, Iraqi Christians were also the largest group seeking asylum in Jordan.

Christians are moving out of Mosul, Baghdad and the southern city of Basra to the generally peaceful northern Kurdistan region, while others are migrating to Turkey, Sweden and Australia.

At no time is the exodus more evident than Christmas. Churches, now hidden behind barbed-wire fences and blast walls, do not advertise services.

Carlo Aziz, a monk at the Church of the Roman Catholic in Karrada, stood at the altar of his church Tuesday afternoon. There were no decorations. No Christmas tree. No nativity scene.

"Celebration doesn’t always mean making a show. The celebration is inside the heart," he said, placing a hand on his chest. "Jesus is here inside the heart of the human being."

The Washington Post
http://www.uruknet.info


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