Former Congressman Calls for Safe Haven for Mideast Christians
By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service answritermike@gmail.com
FALLS CHURCH, VA (ANS, Feb.17, 2015) – A former U.S.
congressman, who has been a champion of persecuted Christians around
the world, has urged Congress to implement six additional steps to
protect Christians and other religious minorities from genocide,
including creation of a safe haven in Nineveh, northwest Iraq, according
to a report by Timothy C. Morgan and Ruth Moon in Christianity Today
(CT) www.christianitytoday.com .
CT reports that in a letter to Congress on Feb. 11, President Obama
said, “If left unchecked, ISIL [otherwise known as Islamic State and
ISIS] will pose a threat beyond the Middle East, including to the United
States homeland. I have directed a comprehensive and sustained strategy
to degrade and defeat ISIL. As part of this strategy, US military
forces are conducting a systematic campaign of airstrikes.”
On the same day, former Congressman Wolf, who recently retired after
34 years in Congress, said in a statement that Christians and other
groups are on the “edge of extinction” due to terrorism and
policy-makers must do more.
“If
the Islamic State is not defeated and ultimately destroyed, there will
be no future for these ancient faith communities who now face an
existential crisis and genocidal onslaught in lands they have inhabited
since antiquity,” Wolf said. The retired Virginia congressman recently
co-founded the 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative (www.21wilberforce.org/home.html ) and accepted an appointment to a newly endowed chair for religious freedom at Baylor University.
CT reports that in January, Wolf and several others from the
Wilberforce Initiative traveled to northwest Iraq to meet with refugees
from the region. The Wilberforce delegation said they were within 1.5
miles of the Islamic State frontline. They spoke with dozens of
Christians and Yazidis (another at-risk minority group) and met with top
officials in the Kurdistan Regional Government, religious leaders, and
humanitarian groups.
On return, the Wilberforce group developed six proposals to secure the future of Christians, Yazidis, and others. They are:
**Create the Nineveh Plains province in Iraq to shelter Christians and other minorities.
**Establish the Nineveh Protection Unit, a defensive National Guard. (This is already in formation.)
**Allow faith-based relief and development groups to operate openly in the region.
** Require the return of property, especially churches and monasteries, confiscated by the Islamic State.
**Require the Kurdistan regional government to insure religious freedom for all groups.
**Prosecute terrorists for crimes against humanity, war crimes, and if needed, for genocide.
Randel Everett, Wilberforce Initiative president and a former Texas
pastor, said: “A decade ago, Iraq's Christian population numbered 1.5
million.”
He added: “Today, roughly 300,000 remain, and most have no jobs, no
schools, and no places of worship. The Nineveh Plains had been one of
the last relatively safe havens for Christians, Yazidis, Shabak, Turkmen
and other minority groups. With the fall of Mosul and surrounding areas
last summer, Iraq’s minorities want to remain in their homeland, but
have no place to go.”
CT said that in Wolf’s new role in the new position at Baylor, he
will be responsible for outreach on Christianity’s role in addressing
social issues and will collaborate on international projects and how to
integrate religious freedom in foreign policy. Funding for the new job
came from Jerry and Susie Wilson, a Dallas couple who donated $2 million
to the school in December.
“Congressman Frank Wolf has been widely recognized as the
‘conscience’ of the Congress and a champion of religious freedom in both
US domestic and foreign policy,” said Baylor president and chancellor
Ken Starr. “This appointment represents a remarkable opportunity to
advance the study and protection of the essential right of religious
freedom and to vigorously address the profound issues of religious
liberty and Christianity’s contributions to human flourishing throughout
the world.”
In its article, CT previously noted how Wolf, then 74, announced in
2013 that he would not seek reelection after serving in Congress for 34
years. He was lead sponsor for the Religious Freedom Act (which led to
the creation of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom)
and ambassador-at-large and special adviser for international religious
freedom in the State Department. During his time on Capitol Hill, Wolf
traveled to Africa, Asia, and the Middle East to raise awareness of
religious persecution and human rights abuses, Roll Call reports.
Wolf called on the US church to advocate for Iraqi Christians in a
2008 CT interview. He later articulated his thoughts about the role
American government should play in human rights and religious freedom in
a 2011 interview with CT. In that interview, Wolf said: “I think
America has lost much of its influence partially because our leaders
aren't articulating human rights as a driving issue… Our Declaration of
Independence and Constitution should stand as a covenant not only
between American citizens, but also between America and a Chinese
dissident in Beijing, a Coptic Christian in the upper Nile, or a
Chaldean who is being gunned down in Iraq. By maintaining economic
ability to deal with issues of persecution, America can still be the
dominant power to defend human rights and religious freedom.”
CT says that same year, he challenged Gary Locke, the President's
nominee for ambassador to China, to “publicly identify with the
persecuted” by visiting an unregistered house church in China.
“I am looking forward to working with colleagues at Baylor University
to advance the case for religious freedom,” Wolf said in a press
release from Baylor. “I have been involved in promoting religious
liberty for many years in Congress, and now I look forward to
collaborating with scholars, religious leaders, and the laity in what I
believe is one of the most important struggles of our time.”
Photo: The 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative Logo
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