The National - News

TINY PACIFIST SECT FEARS RETURN TO IRAQ HOME

▶ Exiled Mandaeans perform their baptism rites far from Tigris and Euphrates rivers, write Margaux Dzuilka and Sebastian Castelier

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On a recent Sunday, a group of 40 men wearing long white robes and turbans gathered around a pond in the Jordan Valley. They were there to re-enact the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist two millennia ago.

They were exiled Iraqi Sabean Mandaeans, a tiny ethnorelig­ious group whose origins trace back to the riverbanks of Mesopotami­a. Presiding over the baptism was their leader, Tarmida Nethan Kremdi Al Sabbahi.

Mandaeans share with Christians and Muslims a reverence for John the Baptist, but venerate him as a leading prophet, basing their beliefs on their holy text, the Ginza Rabba – “the great treasury”. And in the Mandaean religion, flowing water plays a central role in ritual and faith. But their esoteric religion is often misunderst­ood, which has led to persecutio­n in their homeland.

Filmed by his two sons, Nethan Al Sabti is one of the first to be blessed. After praying three times on the shore, Mr Al Sabti is called into the water. Blessed by Mr Al Sabbahi, he is dipped several times in the water, and then drinks from the pond.

Once a prosperous family of jewellers in south-eastern Maysan province, Mr Al Sabti and his family last year left Iraq for Amman in Jordan.

Until 2003, nearly all of the world’s estimated 60,000 Mandaeans lived in communitie­s along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and the tributarie­s flowing into the Shatt Al Arab in southern Iraq, with the largest population centred in Baghdad. The Mandaens were skilled goldsmiths, and their communitie­s prospered.

In the vacuum left by the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, minorities were vulnerable to the violence and lawlessnes­s that enveloped Iraq. As sectarian militias formed to protect communitie­s, minorities without their own gunmen were vulnerable. The Mandaeans, with their obvious source of wealth, stood out as targets.

“People always hated Mandaeans, but they couldn’t do anything to us during Saddam’s reign because there was a government and a strong army,” Mr Al Sabti said. “After 2003, we were not safe any more. Only the militias reigned. We couldn’t turn to anyone to ensure our security.”

In northern Iraq, Kurdish Peshmerga militias insulated the Kurdistan region from much of Iraq’s violence. In south and central Iraq, men from Shiite and Sunni communitie­s took up arms, first to resist the American invaders, and then to fight a civil war.

Later when ISIS overran parts of Iraq in 2014, directing much of their genocidal violence against Christian, Turkmen, Shabak and Yazidi minorities, those groups all formed their own militias.

But pacifism has always been a tenet of Mandaean faith, leaving the group largely defenceles­s against extortion and kidnap gangs.

“Our religion forbids us to kill, steal, cheat,” said Tarmida Mustapha Najim Luaa’bee, 31, one of the 54 Mandaean priests in the world.

Speaking from his house in the Al Hashmi Al Shamali district of Amman, where the majority of Jordan’s Mandaean diaspora live, he told how that prohibitio­n prevents his people from taking up arms. “Even when someone attacks us, we have no right to defend ourselves.”

Between 2003 and 2009 – the most dangerous years for Iraq’s Mandaeans – 163 of the community were murdered and 271 kidnapped, according to a report by the Mandaean Associatio­ns Union.

“Shiite militias engaged in criminal activity such as kidnapping­s of Mandaeans in order to finance their competitio­n with other militias,” said Dave van Zoonen, an independen­t researcher who has written about the Mandaeans.

Faced with such persecutio­n, most Mandaeans chose to leave. Today, fewer than 5,000 live in Iraq, with the rest scattered across the world. About 1,400 live in Jordan, 10,500 in Sweden, 10,000 in Australia, and 8,000 in North America.

“We cannot go back,” said Mr Al Sabti, who is 37. “Our province is still held by Shiite militias. If we go home, they’ll kill us.”

Last year, masked men broke into Mr Al Sabti’s jewellery shop. The gunmen smashed the counter and threatened to kill the family, Mr Al Sabti said. “We were all very scared, wondering what was going to be next.”

Even today, with the war against ISIS largely over, and security in Iraq the best it has been since 2003, Mandaeans fear to return to Iraq.

“Protecting minorities has never been a priority for the Iraqi government,” Ibrahim Al Marashi, an associate professor of Iraqi history at California State University San Marcos, told The National.

“Even if they wanted to, Iraq doesn’t have the resources or even the capability to carry out this kind of protection.”

Far from Iraq, Mandaeans are struggling to maintain their religious customs, which are intrinsica­lly linked to their proximity to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. In Australia, Mandaeans worship in the Nepean River in western Sydney. But practising their faith in unfamiliar countries can result in misunderst­anding.

Last year, Mr Luaa’bee was arrested by a policeman while praying in the Jordan river. “Because of the beard, he thought I was ISIS,” he said.

To prevent further misunderst­andings, the exiled Mandaean community in Amman rents a private lake to conduct its ceremonies. Limited funding means baptism rituals have become less frequent, and the longer their displaceme­nt lasts, the more they say they are losing their roots.

“If the exile continues, we will become Swedish, Australian, American and Jordanian Mandaeans – but not Iraqi any more,” Mr Luaa’bee said.

We cannot go back. Our province is still held by Shiite militias. If we go home, they’ll kill us NETHAN AL SABTI Mandaean who last year fled Iraq with his family

 ?? Photos Sebastian Castelier for The National ?? Tarmida Nethan Kremdi Al Sabbahi conducts a Mandaean wedding in Jordan in April. The Mandaean diaspora is now spread across the world due to persecutio­n in Iraq that prompted many to flee their religious homelands
Photos Sebastian Castelier for The National Tarmida Nethan Kremdi Al Sabbahi conducts a Mandaean wedding in Jordan in April. The Mandaean diaspora is now spread across the world due to persecutio­n in Iraq that prompted many to flee their religious homelands
 ??  ?? Above, Tarmida Mustapha Najim Luaa’bee, 31, is one of just 54 Mandaean priests in the world. Left, Muheeb Lamis Basim Badawi Jalab, 26, an Iraqi Mandaean living in exile in Amman, Jordan
Above, Tarmida Mustapha Najim Luaa’bee, 31, is one of just 54 Mandaean priests in the world. Left, Muheeb Lamis Basim Badawi Jalab, 26, an Iraqi Mandaean living in exile in Amman, Jordan
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