Christian refugees who have fled ISIS in Iraq and Syria are
practising their faith in secret now they live in a Muslim-majority
nation, according to a Turkish reporter.
When civil war in Syria broke out in 2011, thousands fled to
neighbouring Turkey. The number of refugees swelled following the
uprising of so-called Islamic State, and the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees says that tens of thousands of Iraqis are now also seeking
refuge in Turkish towns and cities, alongside 1.9 million Syrians.
Thousands of Armenians, Syriacs and Chaldean Christian refugees are now
living in small Turkish cities including Amasya, Erzurum and Yozgat.
One family who fled Iraq in 2014 said that they pretend
to be Muslim in public.
The Turkish government is secular, but there
are fears that it is becoming increasingly Islamist under president
Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
"My husband and I fled with our two children one year ago with around
20 other families. There was pressure on us in Iraq," an Armenian woman
living in Yozgat, stated.
"We have relatives in Europe. We are only getting by thanks to their support.
"Our children cannot go to school here because they cannot speak
Turkish. They can only communicate with the children of other Armenian
families who have moved here."
Another family who fled Baghdad said that their
seven-year-old daughter had not spoken since the day their home was
raided by ISIS militants in 2014.
"We are working hard to provide her treatment, but she still won't speak," Linda Markaryan said.
"We do not have a future here. Everything in our lives is uncertain.
Our only wish is to provide a better future for our children in a place
where they are safe and secure... We are pious people, but we have to
conduct our sermons and prayers at home. This is hard."
Turkey has a strong Christian heritage – the apostle Paul and Timothy
were both born there, and the city of Antioch, now Antakya, was known
as "the cradle of Christianity" – but a series of genocides in the early
20th century killed much of the Christian population. The collapse of
the Ottoman Empire in 1923 also forced many Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks
and Georgians to leave the country, and the population of Turkey is now
more than 97 per cent Muslim.
A recent study by the Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in
Massachusettes found that the Christian population of Turkey has
plummeted over the past 100 years from 21.7 per cent to just 0.2 per
cent.
In an interview with the BBC in
August 2013, however, a Syriac Orthodox priest said that the influx of
Syrian refugees into Turkey had revived the faith community.
"Thank God our community is alive again," Father Joaquim said. "On Sundays our church is full with worshippers."
No comments:
Post a Comment