[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 15 (Monday, January 27, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H1253-H1254]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SYRIAN CHRISTIANS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Wolf) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WOLF. Mr. Speaker, last week the Drudge Report featured an
article with a striking headline, ``The World's Most Ancient Christian
Communities Are Being Destroyed--and No One Cares.'' This sentiment was
expressed in no uncertain terms yesterday at an event in my district at
St. John the Beloved in McLean, Virginia.
People from around the Greater Washington, D.C., area gathered to
hear directly from five senior Syrian Christian leaders, part of a
delegation from the war-ravaged country and the first of its kind that
I know of to visit the U.S. since the hostilities began. These men will
speak at The Heritage Foundation at 1 p.m. today and will meet with
Members of Congress tomorrow. Their story and that of their communities
bears telling not only to policymakers, but to the American church at
large, for they represent the very cradle of Christendom. They spoke
movingly of their identity as Syrian Christians with ancient roots
predating the apostle Paul.
Today these communities face violence, kidnapping, sexual assault,
displacement, and more. According to the Barnabus Fund, which is
hosting this delegation, an estimated 600,000 Christians in Syria have
already fled the country or lost their lives. Of course, general
violence plagues Syria, but this ancient Christian community finds
itself targeted by Islamist elements in the country, including a
significant number of foreign jihadists who have flocked to the
battlefield.
Several messages emerged at the talk yesterday, but one held
particular relevance for the faith community in America. These Syrian
Christian leaders made a plea for engagement from the church in the
West. Specifically, they sought for American churches to ``adopt''
specific Syrian churches--to commit to praying on their behalf and
advocating for them when possible. The need is great, but so too is the
opportunity.
The plight of Christians in Syria, while horrific, is in some
respects a
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similar story. Time and again, Syrian Christians remark that they fear
their fate that befell their brethren in Iraq, where hundreds of
thousands fled after being targeted by rival Islamist groups. Today,
Iraq's Christian population has fallen from as many as 1.4 million in
2003 to roughly 200,000 today. In fact, throughout the Middle East,
Christian communities are increasingly under siege and imperiled.
Christianity is at risk of being ripped from the very fabric of the
Middle East when, for centuries, it has been part of the rich tapestry
of that region.
Will we permit it to happen on our watch? Will we answer their pleas
for help, or will their cries fall on deaf ears? I pray it is not too
late.
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