FILE -- July 4, 2015: A 27-year-old Yazidi woman, who escaped from captivity by Islamic State (IS) militants, is pictured at Sharya refugee camp on the outskirts of Duhok province. REUTERS/Ari Jala
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foxnews.com
By
Carl Anderson, April 28, 2016
The
world’s greatest humanitarian crisis since World War II is unfolding in the
Middle East.
Hundreds
of thousands of people in Syria and Iraq have lost their lives, and entire
communities have been displaced or wiped out, while neighboring communities and
cultures strain to accept millions of people fleeing years of war and
terrorism.
We
face the very real prospect of the extinction of many communities indigenous to
the region.
This
crisis implores all people of good will to unite to build a worldwide effort to
save these historic, indigenous minority communities regardless of race,
ethnicity or religion.
The
Knights of Columbus is committed to this great cause. We submitted to the
State Department on March 9 and subsequently to members of Congress, a
nearly 300-page report that documented the atrocities and laid out the legal
analysis supporting the conclusion that genocide is occurring.
Our
recent fact-finding mission to Iraq found evidence of widespread rape,
kidnapping, forced conversions, slavery, murder, property confiscation and
forced expulsion. Many of the incidents had not been previously reported.
The
State Department’s declaration of genocide on March 17 marked only the second
time that such a determination has been made by the U.S. government while the
crime is ongoing.
It
is our impression that what we know today is likely to be only the tip of the
iceberg. A concerted, sustained effort now needs to be undertaken to
document the extent of this tragedy.
ISIS
and the victims we interviewed agree on one thing. Many of those targeted were
targeted because of their Christian faith. The predecessors of ISIS--the
Islamic State in Iraq and Al Qaeda in Iraq—also targeted Christians.
We
know that ISIS has killed thousands of Christians in Iraq, Syria, and Libya.
Mass graves have been reported in Syria, and the desert between Mosul and Erbil
was littered with bodies as Christians there fled too quickly to bury neighbors
and family members.
Churchmen
from the region, including Syriac Catholic Patriarch Ignatius Joseph
III Younan, and archbishops from Aleppo, Erbil, and Mosul, have all
called what is happening to their people genocide.
Genocide
has special meaning for Christians in the Middle East. Almost a century ago,
Raphael Lemkin formulated the concept he would later call genocide to address
the killing of Christians in the region during and after World War I.
Today
the stakes are even higher. The number of Christians in Iraq has plummeted from
more than 1.5 million to as few as 200,000. In Syria, the Christian community
has been reduced by two thirds, from 1.5 million to 500,000.
These
people are among the longest-standing ethnic and religious communities, not
only in the region, but in the world.
The
United Nations must act to ensure that these ancient and vulnerable indigenous
groups do not face extinction.
We
cannot accept one standard for human rights in this region and another standard
for the rest of the world.
If
Christianity disappears in this region, so does the opportunity for pluralism;
and the likelihood of majoritarian theocracy, or something worse, is increased.
We
have a unique opportunity to change things for the better. Never before
has the world’s attention been so focused on the suffering of these minorities.
Never has their plight been so high on the agenda of the world’s governments,
the vast majority of the world’s Muslims, and all people of good will.
The
United Nations can play a vital role by protecting the victims and refugees, by
ensuring the survival of these ancient indigenous and religious communities, by
punishing the perpetrators and by supporting the establishment of
internationally agreed-upon standards of justice, equality, rule of law and
religious freedom.
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