Gulf News

WE HAVE LET ARAB CHRISTIANS DOWN

Pope’s Iraq visit should be a reminder of the critical role they played in revival of our collective identity

- BY MOHAMMED ALMEZEL | Editor-at-Large

In 1516, when the Ottomans took over the Arab world, the Arab Christians became subjects of the Ottoman state, just like their Muslim compatriot­s. However, they were considered as ‘second class citizens’ and while, as non-Muslims, they didn’t have to do military service, they had to pay tax to the state for protection and the freedom to practise their religion.

The Arab world is the ancestral home of several Christian communitie­s. In the Levant, they are divided into many religious communitie­s, mainly the Rum Orthodox, Catholics, Armenians, Maronites, Protestant­s, and Copts in Egypt. In Iraq, the main Christians sects are the Chaldeans, the Syriacs, the Armenians and Assyrians. All these sects have been here as old as the Christian faith itself. Their contributi­on to their homeland, the Arab world, has been critical to the survival of the Arab identity, which at one point was faced with a real threat of obliterati­on under the strict Ottoman nationalis­t rule.

And as we follow the landmark visit of Pope Francis to Iraq, the birthplace of Abraham, the father of the prophets, we are reminded of the historic facts that we tend sometimes to forget when talking about the Arab Christians and how integral they are to the Arab national fabric. And how they played a leading role in preserving our collective identity when it was under attack.

In the four hundred years of Ottoman rule in what was called the Arab Provinces, the region was basically a backward place that lacked proper education, health system or a state structure. The Ottomans were themselves until the late 18th century a traditiona­l society resistant to change and modernity. One historian remarked that the only contact the Ottoman had with the outside world was on the battlefiel­d.

Literary renaissanc­e

As the state weakened in the 1800s and later years, there was much pressure on the Arab provinces to pay more taxes while the rise of Turkish nationalis­m threatened to eradicate other national identities among those ruled by the Ottoman, leading to a cultural crisis that sparked concerns among many educated Arabs, particular­ly the Christians.

Western powers had a couple of hundred years earlier struck a deal with the Ottoman State in which they put some of the Arab Christian community under their protection. They provided those communitie­s with decent educationa­l institutio­ns, built more places of worships and hospitals.

For example, in 1585 the Vatican establishe­d a school for the teaching and preparatio­n of Maronite priests in Lebanon. Those students, with the education they gained in those institutio­ns, began researchin­g and publishing their own Arab heritage. It was some sort of literary renaissanc­e. By the beginning of the 19th century, this movement reached Egypt and Iraq.

As the Arab cultural crisis deepened, cultural activities related to the Arabic language and the Arabic customs were organised, mostly by the Christian Arabs, in major cities such as Damascus and Beirut. These forums called for national unity among the Arabs and aimed to repair the sectarian and cultural damage in those societies. They also called for ‘the liberation of the Arab homeland’ from Turkish rule and the establishm­ent of a unified Arab state. Prominent among those who championed the cause were leading Christian intellectu­als Boutros Al Boustany and Ebrahim Yazaji. The principal idea is that with its different faiths and sects, the Arab world cannot be united but through a secular identity, as Arabs.

Historian Waheeb Al Shaer notes in a paper published 2014 that the 18th century Lebanese cleric, Bishop Duwayhi of the Maronite Church, wrote to Muslim scholars in Damascus “appealing to them to look to their Christian brothers instead of looking to the religious associatio­n with the Turkish outsiders in Istanbul, stressing that the national common is stronger than the religious common and more promising.”

Call for Arab unity

In the decades that followed dozens of social and literary clubs and associatio­n were set up by Arab intellectu­als, Christians and Muslims that called for Arab unity and independen­ce. It is worth noting that the Arab world’s largest newspaper today, Egypt’s Al Ahram was founded in Alexandria in 1875 by two Lebanese Christian brothers, Beshara and Saleem Takla. These efforts succeeded in formulatin­g an Arab collective feeling of a national identity that remains strong today. The 1916 Arab Revolt against the Turkish state was partly a result of the efforts of the early champions of Arab independen­ce.

In the last century, Christian thinkers and politician­s continued their vital contributi­on to the ideologica­l formation of Arab society and had key roles in establishi­ng pan-Arab movements. Among them were Antun Saadeh, a Syrian nationalis­t and promoter of the cultural cohesion of Greater Syria, Constantin­e Zuraiq, and George Habash, leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a historic figure in the Palestinia­n struggle for independen­ce.

However, things have dramatical­ly changed in the past few decades. For example, the Christian population in the Arab world declined dramatical­ly in recent years: from 20 per cent of the entire Arab population in the early 20th century to six per cent in recent years.

Have we, the Muslim Arabs, let our Christian community down? Yes. As the terror groups went after them in recent years in Syria and Iraq because they are different, we stood idle. This might not sound politicall­y correct, but Muslim Arabs haven’t moved a finger to protect our Christian brothers or help them fight the menace of Daesh and other extremist groups.

The departure of the Christians makes this region poorer culturally and socially, duller and a less interestin­g place to live in. But more importantl­y, we owe it to them to save their communitie­s and help them stay in their ancestral land for they, for hundreds of years, carried the burden of saving our own identity and existence. I hope the pope’s visit to Iraq will underscore this message too.

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