Ishtartv.com – asianews.it
03/09/2026
by Dario Salvi
Speaking to AsiaNews, the
Chaldean prelate described a situation on hold, with schools and universities
closed amidst great instability. Iraqi Kurdistan is once again impacted by
foreign wars. People are concerned about the future and are trying to avoid
being dragged into the conflict between Israel, the United States and Iran.
Christians pray for peace, remember Francis’s visit to Iraq, and receive
support from Pope Leo XIV.
Milan (AsiaNews) – Archbishop
Bashar Warda of Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, spoke to AsiaNews.
His diocese is in one of the areas most affected by the escalating war that
followed the attack by Israel and the United States on Iran on 28 February.
The region is in a limbo with
life that “has just stopped” with “schools and universities” closed, a
situation that is "unstable” in which “everyone is worried about the
future.”
The new war is inflaming the
Middle East, directly affecting the Christian community, after Iran
launched an attack from across the border striking two Church buildings that
belong to the Archbishopric of Ankawa (pictured).
“When it comes to attacks,” the
prelate said, “like missiles and drones, we have six, seven, eight a day at
different times. And that really makes it quite difficult for the people,
[with] the feeling of uncertainty, worries.”
From the Gulf countries and
Lebanon to Iraq and the shores of the Mediterranean, the new war between Israel
(and the United States) and Iran is causing havoc in the region, even as the
Iraqi government and the leaders of the autonomous Kurdistan Region try to
avoid direct involvement.
Both the Iraqi and Kurdish
governments have issued statements to that effect, reiterating their intention
to remain neutral from the two warring sides, expressing their opposition to
any ground operations involving Kurdish forces.
Iraqi experts note that the war
represents an "existential threat" to Iraq and endangers the very
future of the country, which is at risk of becoming a place where external
powers settle heir scores.
"For our generation,"
Archbishop Warda noted, “old wounds have begun to bleed again. Living eight
years of war with Iran, the first Gulf War, the sanctions [for] 13 years, then
the second [Gulf War] (with the US invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein), and
ISIS (Islamic State group).”
"All of these memories are
just there," he warns. “What we call fear, uncertainty, worries, concerns:
You can name all of these feelings.”
For this reason, there is a
strong desire to stay out of the war and not get involved in military
operations, in any capacity.
“The reality is that the Kurdish
people and the Kurdish government have made it quite clear they would not get
involved in this messy situation; it’s quite chaotic," the prelate said.
“They will not be used by any forces because the whole case is quite
complicated".
“The message from the Kurdistan
government” is that “they do not want to get involved”; in fact, “they are
working for stability, an end to violence, an end to the war. That," he
stressed, “is the message, and that is the reality.”
Fear of direct involvement in the
war is more than justified given the repeated launches of missiles and drones
from Iran into Kurdistan, which have also hit Christian buildings.
“Ankawa is attached to the
airport," Bishop Warda explained. “As you know, there is a military base
for coalition forces," both of which are sensitive targets for Iran.
“That's why all these missiles and drones are attacking the airport and that
base.”
Parts of a drone struck the roof
of the nuns' convent, at 8 pm on 4 March, and a Katyusha rocket struck the
chapel of the Chaldean complex.
“Luckily, the damages were on the
chapel, the first roof, seven cars, the cleaning system supply (sic), the
sewage supply (sic), [and] one of the generators also was damaged.”
At present, the Chaldean Church
has suspended youth meetings, external activities, catechism, and other
non-essential initiatives; however, "Its Lent season so we have morning
and evening Masses, which people attend. The Way of the Cross every Friday
morning and evening, and the people usually attend that.” For the rest, “it is
just quiet.”
Some schools have brought forward
the Nowruz holiday, which guarantees at least two weeks of vacation; other
schools, such as the International School, are nearing the end of the academic
year because they have completed their programme.
Communications with Iran are
currently cut. “I tried to contact our Bishop Imad (Khoshaba Gargees,
Metropolitan Archeparchy of Tehran for the Chaldeans). We couldn’t really get
through because all the communications are being stopped,” the prelate noted.
Conversely, the war and tensions
have strengthened ties between different Churches, denominations, and Christian
leaders. First and foremost, between Catholics and Orthodox, among whom
ecumenism remains strong, nurtured by the memory of Pope Francis's visit in
March 2021, with his message of peace, coexistence, and tolerance entrusted to
the Iraqi people.
The troubled situation in “The
Middle East is not going to be settled,” Archbishop Warda lamented. Yet, “We
hope that this time there will be a final settlement. People will come and
agree on not just peace, but also coexistence, a way of living together.”
With respect to ecumenism, the
message remains one of hope that “would be felt one day,” he said. “As
Christian communities, we are in a way collaborating, working together, walking
together to pass this difficult time."
Finally, the archbishop of Erbil makes an appeal
to Catholics in the West and around the world: "I would like everyone to
keep us in their prayers, thanking his Holiness for reminding continuously the
world that there is a need for peace in the Middle East and the world.”
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