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Between the Cross and the Kalashnikov: Iraq's Assyrian Christians(10 images)
Northern Iraq, 2005: The Assyrian Christians find themselves trapped between militant and political Islamists who consider them America’s co-religionists and hence collaborators, and Kurdish nationalists who are increasingly intolerant of difference.

Nearly a million Assyrians live in Iraq. Saddam Hussein made them exiles in their own land when he decreed that there were...
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  • al kosh, northern iraq, january 2005:<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
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  • gandakosa village, northern iraq,january 2005: mourners at the funeral of isaac sheba slewa who was killed by iraqi insurgents/resistance fighters while on his way to mosul.  the christians are considered 'natural' allies of the US occupation forces and have been increasingly targeted by the insurgents/resistance fighters.  they are also being targeted to clens entire cities like mosul, baghdad and kirkuk of their presence prior to the upcoming elections<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    142811.jpg
  • gandakosa village, northern iraq,january 2005: mourners at the funeral of isaac sheba slewa who was killed by iraqi insurgents/resistance fighters while on his way to mosul.  the christians are considered 'natural' allies of the US occupation forces and have been increasingly targeted by the insurgents/resistance fighters.  they are also being targeted to clens entire cities like mosul, baghdad and kirkuk of their presence prior to the upcoming elections<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    142812.jpg
  • dohuk, northern iraq, january 2005: farooq shammon shandu's son Raymond was beheaded by islamic insurgents in the city of mosul.  here he reacts while trying to retell the story of his sons abduction and beheading.  raymond was his eldest son and his loss has effectively destroyed the family and their aspirations for a normal life.  the family fled mosul after it was threatened and a demand for a ranson was made.  they are now in hiding in dohuk<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    162843.jpg
  • dohuk,northern iraq, january 2005: at the secondary school, young girls wait for friends before heading home.  a coeducational system, subjects taught in the assyrian language differentiate these schools from kurdish or arabic ones.  however, a lack of resources and rooms has made it difficult to offer the fundamental resources schools should have; libraries, laboratories etc.  the assyrian community has not been given the funds or access to buildings to expand their schools, unlike kurdish schools in the area that are growing and have access to government funds<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
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  • baghdida, northern iraq, january 2005: the narqurtaya church, dating back 1600 years, is watched closely by assyrian militia forces.  as churches are bombed by islamic insurgents/resistance fights in neighboring cities like mosul, the assyrians have been patrolling and protecting religious sites in cities<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
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  • gandakosa village, northern iraq,january 2005: dozens of assyrian christian families are still looking for their missing family members who had been taken away by Saddan's secret police during the pogroms of 1990.  Margaret Haroon lost her husband and two sons during those years and as yet has no clue as to their whereabouts<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
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  • dohuk, northern iraq,january 2005: on the 3rd day of mourning, traditionally when the family is allowed to grieve the dead, women hold up a portrait of isaac sheba slewa who was killed by iraqi islamic insurgents/resistance fighters while on his way to mosul.<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    142800.jpg
  • balgani, northern iraq, janaury 2005: khanna hamood, mother of Sami Eshu Khoshaba who was killed by islamic insurgents on October 20th 2004, mourns her sons death.  the loss of the main breadwinner has had a devastating economic and emotional impact on her and the family<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    142806.jpg
  • tena, northern iraq, january 2005: the christian settlement of tena, where a few christian families have returned to resettle and rebuild a village that had been destroyed here at in the 1950s.  the assyrian christians are determined to ensure their place in iraq and reclaim their right to be here<br />
 By photographer Asim Rafiqui
    162842.jpg