CCTV video footage
shows several Muslims attacking an Assyrian Christian family in
Turkey’s Mardin village. After the attackers beat the family with
sticks, they set their wheat fields on fire. The Yilmaz family members
are the only remaining Christians living in the area, and the attack
occurred at the end of Sunday service on June 5.
According to
reports, approximately 50 Muslims were involved in the attack. The
incident took place on the same day that priests traveled to the village
to lead mass and inaugurate the Mor Gevargis Church after restoration
work began in 2015. The church had reportedly been closed for 100 years,
a timeline which means that the church was impacted by the genocide
against Christians in Turkey during the early 20th century.
The family told Asia News, “They
threatened us, saying that they would not allow us to live in the
village. But we are not scared. We will continue to stay here.”
A pastor who attended the reopening ceremony shared with local news,
“When we got home, we learned that there was a land dispute with the
Yılmaz family; someone from the family came and this issue was brought
up again in the conversations at home, and a discussion broke out. We
prevented the discussion from escalating, but shortly after the person
in question left the house, there was an attack on the house with stones
and sticks.”
Some observers of the incident related that
the core of this situation is a property dispute. These types of
disputes have a long history in Mardin. The genocide removed most
Christians living in the region, which in turn created new challenges
related to property maintenance and titled ownership of churches and the
surrounding land.
The State Department noted in its 2020 Religious Freedom Report that
“U.S. government officials urged the government to implement reforms
aimed at lifting restrictions on religious groups and raised the issue
of property restitution and restoration. Embassy staff continued to
press for the restitution of church properties expropriated in
Diyarbakir and Mardin.”
In its most recent annual report,
the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
recommended that Turkey be placed on the Special Watch List for
religious freedom violators.
Jeff King, ICC’s president, said, “The
pressures faced by Christians living in eastern Turkey can be quite
significant. Today, many families are the only Christians left in their
village, whereas the village used to be entirely or significantly
Christian before the genocide. As a result, they often come under
pressure from their neighbors. Sometimes, this takes the form of a land
dispute; sometimes, it takes the form of more direct violence.
Regardless, the churches in the area stand as a testimony to the
Christian presence which once thrived. And today, it is clear that
Christians in eastern Turkey are not thriving.”
Friday, June 17, 2022
Muslims revert to mob action in Turkey
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
Since
1995, ICC has served the global persecuted church through a
three-pronged approach of advocacy, awareness, and assistance. ICC
exists to bandage the wounds of persecuted Christians and to build the
church in the toughest parts of the world.
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