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Adventist Church
Attacked in Baghdad
On the eve of Saturday September 11,
2004, a car bomb exploded outside the Virgin Mary Seventh-Day
Adventist Church in the Al-Sa'doun Park in the center of the
Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
According to eyewitnesses, it was difficult
to know firsthand whether the explosion was an act of a suicide
bomber or the car exploded by remote control. The explosion caused
a great deal of damage to the church shattering glass windows,
but harming no one, according to the priest and an Interior Ministry
spokesman. Many of the surrounding buildings as well as a number
of cars parked nearby the Church were damaged. Sources in the
Iraqi police attempted to downplay this new attack on the Iraqi
Christians by suggesting that the actual target was the building
of the Swedish embassy across from the church, especially since
the church was closed at the time of the explosion.
"Nobody was injured, thank God,"
Fr. Uwaida Wahba, the priest of the Church, told Reuters. "It
was a cowardly act." Later in his comments, Fr. Wahba mentioned
that the explosion forced the community to cancel the Mass to
be held on Saturday.
Many Assyrians believe that the attackers
were targeting the Christian community in this terrorist attack.
The terrorists seemed to know the Christian community very well.
Last month, the attacks on 5 Churches in Baghdad and Mosul were
staged on Sunday during the time when worshippers gathered in
the Churches for Sunday's Mass. However, this recent attack targeted
the Adventist Christians on the eve of Saturday rather than Sunday.
Saturday is regarded as the sacred day for Seventh-Day Adventists
and their main weekly Mass is always held on Saturday rather
than Sunday. It is such well-thought out attacks that have caused
over 40,000 Iraqi Assyrian Christians to flee to Syria and Jordan.
Assyrian Christians in Iraq have continued
to be marginalized, whether under Saddam Hussein's rule or the
newly formed Iraqi government. Iraqi Christians are estimated
to be 6-8% of the Iraqi population, yet of 36 government and
ministry positions, only 1 seat was given to the Assyrian Christians.
The Minister of Emigration and Displacement, Pascale Isho Warda,
is the only Assyrian Christian minister in the newly formed Iraqi
government.
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