Ishtartv.com - rudaw.net
26 July, 2025, Diyar Kurda
WASHINGTON DC - For the first time, a ceremony commemorating Assyrian
Martyrs' Day was held in the United States Congress, honoring victims of the
1933 Simele massacre and calling for full recognition of atrocities committed
against the Assyrian people.
The event was supported by Congressman Abe Hamadeh and attended by Assyrians
and representatives of the Kurdistan Regional Government.
“This is the very first time ever at the US Congress to commemorate the
Assyrian Martyrs Day. We had the support of Congressman Abe Hamedeh in putting
this together. It's very important. We need complete recognition by the US
Congress of all the massacres and genocides committed against the Assyrians,”
Sam Darmo, founder of Assyrians for Justice, told Rudaw on Wednesday.
Assyrians annually commemorate the Simele massacre of 1933, when thousands were
killed by the Iraqi army. Between August 7 and August 11, the armed forces of
the Kingdom of Iraq attacked 63 Assyrian villages located in what are now the
provinces of Nineveh and Duhok. The campaign left around 3,000 Assyrians dead,
according to a 2003 report from the International Federation for Human Rights.
horbishop George Toma, rector of Saint Andrew Assyrian Church in
Illinois, said the commemoration ceremony honors “the holy ones of our Assyrian
nation whose blood was spilled not for crimes, but for their faith, their
heritage, and their very identity.”
Sara Hormuz, an Assyrian American human rights advocate, was among the speakers
at the event, opening with remarks on Assyrian history, genocide, and the
resilience of the community.
“Assyrians are resilient and we're not a dying civilization,” she said.
Assyrians are one of the oldest ethnic groups in Mesopotamia and northern Iraq,
tracing their history back more than 6,700 years. Religiously, they are now
predominately Christian and locally split along Chaldean, Syriac, and Ashuri
sects.
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