The Pope’s visit to Iraq must be more than a PR exercise

Pope Francis can use this trip to highlight the plight of minorities and start the process of ensuring equal rights for all groups in Iraq, both constitutionally and in practice, writes Bel Trew

Tuesday 02 March 2021 19:00 EST
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Father Nazeer Dako arranges a Vatican flag to welcome Pope Francis at St Joseph’s Chaldean Church in Baghdad
Father Nazeer Dako arranges a Vatican flag to welcome Pope Francis at St Joseph’s Chaldean Church in Baghdad (AP)

The stories from Iraq’s Christian communities are harrowing. There is the Iraqi archbishop who fled with his parishioners and precious manuscripts but drove straight into Isis fighters storming their hometown. The Christian family unable to get relatives out of their Isis-besieged town in time and, seven years on, are still looking for them. The priest whose parents escaped with minutes to spare before the slaughter and have now moved to Australia.

While Isis has been almost entirely defeated, the scars from the past few years in Iraq run deep. There are still tens of thousands of Christians who are displaced or who have left the country. Their homes were destroyed by the fighting and they cannot return. They feel targeted because of their religion and do not feel safe or treated as equal citizens.

Many are looking to the visit of Pope Francis on Friday, the first time a Pope has come to Iraq, not just for hope but as a vehicle for real change – for Christians, yes, but also for all of Iraq’s vulnerable minorities.

Max Joseph from Minority Rights Group tells me security threats and land theft are still major issues facing all minorities in Iraq. So is hate speech, which means people are “othered” in their own homeland, creating an atmosphere of impunity for crimes against them.

The visit by the Pope is not just a public relations exercise for an imagined unity in Iraq. It must be a platform to highlight the plight of minorities and the beginning of the process of ensuring equal rights for all groups, both constitutionally and in practice.

As such, Pope Francis is due to meet Christian leaders as well as the country’s political rulers and Iraq’s top Shia cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, in Najaf. On Saturday, he will fly to Nasiriya in the south for an inter-religious meeting at the ancient Mesopotamian site of Ur.

Iraq will continue to suffer unless there is real change for everyone.

Yours,

Bel Trew

Middle East correspondent

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