Issued by the Catholic Center for Studies and Media - Jordan. Editor-in-chief Fr. Rif'at Bader - موقع أبونا abouna.org

Published on Sunday, 25 June 2017
Efforts under way to save Chaldean Christian culture from destruction

By Felix N. Codilla III/ ankawa.com :

The dwindling number of Chaldean Christians in Iraq has raised concerns about the need to preserve the culture of the once thriving religion which the ISIS has been bent on wiping out. Dr. Shawqi Talia, a lecturer on Semitic and Egyptian Languages and Literatures at the Catholic University of America is on the quest to preserve the history and culture of Chaldeans Catholics before it completely vanishes so that their meaning can be passed on to the succeeding generations.

This he does by asking the community to share their memories and descriptions through the rich Middle Eastern tradition of storytelling delivered in their own native Arabic and Neo-Aramaic languages — some of them singing and speaking the same language Christ himself used.

Talia, who is himself a Chaldean, wanted young people “to know how life was and what life was all about for the Christians – not just up north but in Iraq as a whole – in the 1950s and the1940s and the 1930s, and to know that our history goes back for 2,000 years.”

This will be done by putting together materials and records of various kinds of the life of Christian communities in the Middle East. The objective is to let Chaldeans, who are now beginning to scatter around the world, to still be able to see the stories, songs, histories and memories of the faith that they observed in their home country.

Iraq’s Chaldeans are considered one of the oldest communities. About 1.5 million of them thrived at the time of Saddam Hussein’s overthrow. In the wake of church burnings, kidnappings and the slaughter of Christians by Muslims, their numbers have shrunk to 300,000. They now account for 40 percent of Iraq’s refugees.

Talia’s team has begun interviewing Iraqi Christians communities in Washington D.C. where some 150,000 Chaldeans live. They plan to do the same to communities in Europe and elsewhere. The interviews will be compiled in a documentary which will be funded by the Michigan Humanities Council.