Some of the world’s most ancient Christian communities are found in the Arab world. Sadly, however, religious persecution has forced many Christians to flee the West Asia and seek refuge in Europe and America. In recent years, the numbers of people leaving their homeland has increased exponentially particularly in Syria and Iraq. In their host countries as well as more generally, it is often forgotten that the Eastern churches are very different from their European counterparts.
Some years ago when I first arrived in Syria I went to the shrine of Sayyidah Zainab, the Prophet's grand-daughter and the daughter of Imam Hussain, which is in the suburbs of Damascus. At night, on the way back to the old city, I couldn't find the right bus until a tall gaunt man asked if he could help. I asked him to tell me which minibuses went to Souq al-Hamidiyyah, one of the oldest markets in the old city. He told me where to wait and then said he would stay with me until the right bus came. He spoke broken English and I replied in broken Arabic having just begun my classes at the university there. It transpired that he was a Christian refugee from Mosul where he had been a basketball coach. He said that he had come to pray at the shrine of Sayyidah Zainab since she too was forcibly brought to Damascus, albeit as a prisoner and not as a refugee not that there is much difference between the two. He was on his way to London while his wife, whom he had not heard from for two weeks, was also headed to London but via Helsinki.
Today there has been another exodus from Mosul as well as many other Christian communities in other parts of Iraq as well as Syria. Most recently this has been because of a frightening announcement by ISIS that Iraqi Christians need to either pay jizya, protection money to the tune of nearly $400 per month per person or convert. If neither option is taken then offenders will be killed. To identify them, ISIS foot soldiers have gone around painting the letter 'Noon' on the doors of Christian houses. The letter stands for Nasrani, an Arabic word for Christian.
Of course this threat has only exacerbated the urgency with which people are leaving their homes. Some have headed north into Kurdish controlled areas, others have headed for Baghdad and yet others have found refuge in the shrines of Najaf and Karbala where Sayyidah Zainab's father and brothers are buried. A small number, who can, have also tried to head for Europe and America. Not so long ago, driving from Karbala to Najaf, I saw huge number of empty mowakib or rest stops for pilgrims along the side of the road. These normally only come alive in the month of Muharram when pilgrims walk from Baghdad and other cities to Karbala but nowadays they have offered shelter to some of the thousands of Christians feeling with their families. Needless to say, the barbaric and vile statement that led to this exodus is as alien to Islam as the people who made it but there have been very few voices of protest, particularly amongst Muslims.
Of course with the assault on Gaza, the situation in Syria and the efforts by ISIS to recruit in Lebanon, the whole region is in tumult. Although Lebanon has a thriving Christian population sadly sectarian conflict is an ever-present reality. One of the few places where Arab Christians are ‘integrated’ is Jordan, as Prince Hassan bin Talal said in an interview in 2001, although he was worried even then of the exodus of Arab Christians from the Middle East noting that there were more Christians from Jerusalem in Australia than Jerusalem itself. What is often forgotten is that the Christian communities are culturally Arab.