A Syriac priest celebrates mass at a church in Midyat. ALAMY
ishatrtv.com - thetimes.co.uk
Louise Callaghan, Midyat, December 24 2017
The air was rich with incense, and the chanting swelled as
black-robed monks filed into the fourth century Mor Gabriel church, crossing
themselves. A group of boys stood around an open bible, written in classical
Syriac script, and prayed. But almost all the pews were empty.
Just over 100 years ago, this part of Turkey’s southeast was
home to hundreds of thousands of Syriac Christians, descended from the ancient
Assyrians.
Now, depleted over the past century by war, mass killings
and political instability, there are barely 3,000. Soon, they fear, they could
disappear altogether. Christians used to be a fifth of Turkey’s population. Now
they account for 0.2%.
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