Bp. Michael Nazir-Ali: The West Must Face the Evil that has Revealed Itself in the Iraq Genocide

From The Telegraph online.

bishopSo will the world just stand by and watch this unprecedented onslaught on freedom or will we do something beyond airdropping food and medicines and protecting our own personnel who may be caught up in the conflict?

Along with many others, I have been saying for sometime now that Iraqi minorities need internationally protected “safe havens”. Until recently, the obvious place for Christian safe havens were the plains of Nineveh. For years, the West
operated no-fly zones over Saddam’s Iraq to protect Kurds in the North and the Marsh Arabs in the South. What can be done to protect those under threat now?

I recognise that American or British “boots on the ground” is asking for the moon, but a UN-authorised international force, drawn from a variety of countries, is desperately needed to prevent multiple genocide. This can go hand in hand with whatever air action is deemed practical in consultation with the Kurds and with Baghdad. If the UN cannot prevent this genocide, hard questions will have to be asked about its utility at all.

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Vicar of Baghdad: We Need Military Action NOW

From Mail Online.

People say to me: ‘Is it really as terrible as this? Can these atrocities be real?’

I tell them: ‘Yes. It is as real and terrible as this.’

Qaraqosh has become a place of terror. Its people were shot and some – already dead – were ‘crucified’, a final humiliation and an outrage against the individual, and the faith they had refused to abandon. I am sorry to say that I have seen the pictures printed on these pages, and am sickened.

…Yet it feels that we are alone. Where is the response of the British Government? We have seen nothing on the ground.

Members of the worldwide Anglican Communion are praying over this devastating situation. But there is a desperate need for practical action, too: these people need mattresses, clothes, blankets and food. Children are starving. Families are crammed into churches to sleep on the floors.

We must also ask: ‘What next?’ Iraq’s Christians can’t stay in Kurdistan forever. At some point they must be rescued and relocated. They will flee to Turkey, then Canada, Australia or America. Britain has said it will not take one Iraqi refugee.

The people of this region have had their homes burned and destroyed before. Each time the Christians have survived and fought back, returning to rebuild desecrated churches and their lives. It is hard to see, however, that this will happen this time.

Where is their protection? It is a terrible thing to wish, but I now believe that military action of some sort is necessary, if only to reduce the movement of IS tanks, their soldiers, and their power and authority on the ground.

Even this is not the solution in the long run. We need money, and we need prayer. Without those we have nothing.

Those wanting to donate can do so at the website of the Foundation For Relief And Reconciliation In The Middle East: frrme.org

Read the whole sad thing.

Bishop Stephen Kewasis Nyorsok: God’s Sovereign Care

Sermon delivered on Trinity 8A, Sunday, August 10, 2014 at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church, Columbus, OH. Today our guest preacher is Bishop Stephen Kewasis Nyorsok from the Diocese of Kitale, Kenya. Bishop Stephen is Fr. Philip’s bishop and we are honored and delighted to have the bishop preach today. Welcome Bishop Stephen!

Lectionary texts: Genesis 37.1-4, 12-28; Psalm 105.1-6, 16-22; Romans 10.5-15; Matthew 14.22-33.

Listen to the audio podcast of the sermon. There is no written text.