Is a ‘safe zone’ for Christian Iraqis a good idea?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 15:43

Iraqi Christians, Yazidis, and other religious minorities gathered in Washington two weeks ago and proposed for there to be a safe zone created for them in the Nineveh Plains, which are northeast of Mosul in northern Iraq, Christian Telegraph reports according to Mission Network News. The idea would be for the safe zone to potentially become a sovereign state in the future.

The proposal hasn’t gained much traction, but a lot more would need to be answered first, says Todd Nettleton of Voice of the Martyrs, USA.

“It just raises so many questions. How would this happen? Who would defend it? Would the governments in that area allow such a thing to exist? And who all would be welcome there?”

Nettleton continues, “Typically when we are talking in this context about Christians, we’re talking about traditional Christians, people who were born into a Christian family. What does this proposal mean for Muslim converts, those who were born in a Muslim family but have made the decision to follow Christ? How would they be affected by this?

“The other thing that immediately comes into my mind is the Kurds, and the fact that the Kurds in that area have been pushing for some type of autonomous Kurdish region or even a Kurdish nation that would be carved out of some of the surrounding nations for decades. So how would this affect their call for statehood?”

The biggest point of note – if Christians pull out of their communities in Iraq and other nearby countries, it would be a detriment to the spread of the Gospel in the Middle East.

“If you separate out all of the Christians and put them in one area and you put all the Muslims in a different area, who’s going to go to the Muslim area and share the Gospel? How are Muslims going to encounter Christ through the example and testimony of their neighbors and coworkers and friends?” Nettleton asks.

“Obviously it would take active, God-ordained mission to go and reach out across those lines if you create a separate area, if you draw those lines so clearly. Obviously, as Christians, we want somebody to go across those lines and share the Gospel with those who don’t know.”

It should be a challenge to Christians everywhere, especially Western Christians. How often do we sacrifice having an impact for Christ on the altar of our personal safety and comfort?

“It certainly is not easy for [Iraqi Christians],” says Nettleton. “Many thousands of Christians have left that area completely. They have moved to Europe or they’ve moved to Canada or the United States. So the statistics are that what was once a body of Christians that was 1.5 million is now less than 300,000. There’s already a lessening of that Christian example and influence.”

One thing is certain: Iraq’s Christians need encouragement if they are to stay and be a light for the Gospel.

That’s why Voice of the Martyrs is actively supporting persecuted Christians all over the world, including Iraq.

“We have a very active ministry in this region actually working with Christians who have been displaced by ISIS, not only in northern Iraq, but also in some of the other surrounding countries, helping them with aid in terms of humanitarian aid – food, shelter, medicine, that type of thing.”

Nettleton says it’s not just physical aid, “But also helping them with spiritual aid, with Bibles, with other Gospel materials and equipping them to reach out to Muslims around them – to reach out with the Gospel, to share God’s Word, to share some of that humanitarian aid as a way of ministering, as a way of saying, ‘The Christians are helping us. Jesus loves you. That’s why I’m helping you with this.'”

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