Archbishop Bashar Matti Warda of Erbil, Iraq, speaks with “EWTN News Nightly” anchor Veronica Dudo on March 3, 2026. | Credit: “EWTN News Nightly”/Screenshot
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By Madalaine Elhabbal
Archbishop Bashar Matti Warda of
Erbil, Iraq, shared the situation on the ground for the Iraqi Christian
community with “EWTN News Nightly” as the prospect of broader regional war
looms.
An Iraqi Catholic archbishop said
his flock is frightened and communication with Tehran’s archbishop has been
impossible as the Iranian conflict escalates.
Archbishop Bashar Matti Warda of
Erbil, the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq, told “EWTN News Nightly” that the
situation is “quite frightening” because the Christian community is once more
asking: “Will it reach us? Will we have to really leave again? Will our
children have a future?”
Warda said the situation is
particularly sensitive for Iraq’s Christian population, which has seen “almost
50 years of continuous violence,” including eight years of war with Iran,
followed by the first and second Gulf wars, as well as sectarian violence.
“All of these memories,” he said,
are “still there.”
Warda said schools and
universities in the region have been closed for nearly a week, and “the economy
is collapsing.” All the while, he said, there is fear that “around every three,
four hours, Erbil would be hit by either rockets or drones.”
“The fear is there,” he said.
“And the scope of violence is just getting bigger, because following the news,
we see new countries being attacked and new places being attacked.”
“Erbil [has been] targeted a few
times so far,” he said, “and we know the largest Iraqi Christian gathering is
in Erbil, and this might be another reason for the Christians to say, ‘There is
no future.’”
In Iraq, regional and local
reporting said drones attempted to target Erbil International Airport and
were intercepted.
Warda said his “biggest fear” is
that Christian families who were previously committed to remaining in Iraq will
decide to flee the region due to ongoing instability. “These types of wars and
conflicts will shake everything,” he said, regardless of what has been done to
“really build something for the Christian community to stay.”
Regarding efforts to get in
contact with Archbishop Dominique Joseph Mathieu of Tehran, Iran, Warda said:
“We have tried several times. But there is no communication whatsoever.”
Warda said he asked one of the
Chaldean religious sisters currently working in his diocese about her family,
who live in Iran, but she has not been able to reach them.
“Sadly enough, there is no
communication whatsoever with that part of the world,” he said, noting loss of
power and communication lines in Iran.
“We are praying for the community
there,” he said.
Amid the conflict, Warda said
attendance at morning Mass and evening prayer in the community has been “really
great.” The community has canceled its weekly catechism classes, however, as
well as its annual Ankawa Youth Gathering, the largest gathering of young
people in Iraq.
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