Khaleej Times

Christians start afresh in Qaraqosh by burning memories

Families return to Nineveh and set flame to rubbish left by Daesh terrorists who were driven out by Iraqi troops

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Several plumes of smoke rise above Iraq’s main Christian town Qaraqosh, but this time it isn’t the Daesh extremists burning crosses and churches. Almost three years after fleeing the town, families are beginning to return and the first thing they do is burn old household items, a way of cleaning their homes and cleansing bad memories.

“As you can see, we are burning our own clothes, our own furniture. We are burning our history,” said Milad Khodhr, 42, whose family is one of 17 who have returned to Qaraqosh.

“But we see no feeling of vengeance in these fires, we are peaceful... we are the real people of this country,” he said.

Daesh fighters swept through the Nineveh plain, east of Mosul, in August 2014 and forced around 120,000 of Iraq’s Christians to flee their homes, the biggest disaster to hit the minority in its nearly 2,000 year history.

Iraqi forces launched a major offensive to retake Mosul and surroundin­g areas in October last year and chased Daesh out of Qaraqosh a few days later.

The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Iraq’s biggest

Religious authoritie­s have stepped in to organise the return of Qaraqosh’s population which many see as crucial to the long-term survival of the minority

church, was burnt and the reconstruc­tion work that lies ahead in Qaraqosh is huge.

The families who have returned in recent days take out all the damaged furniture and rubbish that the extremists who occupied and looted their homes left behind.

With virtually no state services available and rubbish collection a distant prospect for the town, residents have no option but to burn their own refuse.

Religious authoritie­s have stepped in to organise the return of Qaraqosh’s population, which many see as crucial to the longterm survival of the minority.

“Some of the people of Qaraqosh have gone abroad, but more than half are still in Iraq. We have carried out a survey showing that 68 per cent of them want to return,” Father George Jahula, who is helping returning families, said.

“The rest are undecided,” he said. In a symbolic gesture, the archbishop of Mosul, Yohanna Petros Mouche, was the first to move back to Qaraqosh in April, just before celebratin­g an emotional Easter service in the town.

“The return depends on safety and how quickly the infrastruc­ture is repaired,” Father Jahula said. The church and its volunteers have mapped the destructio­n in Qaraqosh using satellite images, allocated certain amounts for each sector and set completion targets.

“Since the available funding is limited, we have set up a list of those who want to return, and next week we will begin distributi­ng money to start the reconstruc­tion process,” said Zakariah Sabah, one of the organisers.

Qaraqosh still looks like a ghost town and access from the nearby Kurdish capital of Arbil — where many Christians found shelter in 2014 — is complicate­d by a gauntlet of checkpoint­s.

But for some of its displaced residents, return is the only option, whether the town is ready or not. —AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? An Iraqi sweeps old pieces of furniture and garbage into a fire outside his house in Qaraqosh .
—AFP An Iraqi sweeps old pieces of furniture and garbage into a fire outside his house in Qaraqosh .

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