Iraqi Christians celebrate first Easter ‘Holy Fire’

Iraqi Orthodox Christians celebrate orthodox easter saturday night with a flame coming from the Holy Fire from Jerusalem, brought for the first time to Iraq. The flame has been brought from Jerusalem through Jordan and has arrived at Mor Mattai Monastery in the little village of Bashiqa 30 km northeast of Mosul, April 23, 2022. SAFIN HAMED / AFP Mor Mattai Monastery is one of the oldest existing Christian monasteries in the world. Founded in 363, the monastery is currently maintained by the Syrian Orthodox Church

SULAIMANI (ESTA) — thousands of Iraqis celebrated for the first time the arrival of the “Holy Fire” brought from Christianity’s holiest site in Jerusalem to mark Orthodox Easter.

With chanting and prayers, excited crowds gathered Saturday night to greet the flame’s arrival at the Syriac Christian Orthodox Mar Matta monastery of Saint Matthew, about 28 kilometers (17 miles) from the war-ravaged city of Mosul in northern Iraq, according to Iraq.

“It is a message of peace and love for all… a message of resurrection for this bruised country, so that it can regain its strength, its security and its peace,” Bishop Timathos Moussa Shamani, of the Mar Matta monastery, told AFP.

The flame had been taken earlier Saturday from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem — where Christian tradition says Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected.

According to believers, the fire descends from heaven on the eve of Easter, and is a symbol of Christ’s Resurrection.

From Jerusalem it was carried in a special lantern to Jordan, before being flown to Iraq — a method that is used every year to take the flame to other Orthodox communities, including Greece.

For the first time, the flame came directly to Iraq. To calls of “halleluia” and the clanging of cymbals, the lantern arrived carried by a bishop into the church at the monastery.

“It’s a historic day,” said Saad Youssef, a 60-year-old teacher.

The region is home to one of the world’s oldest Christian communities, but believers were hit hard under the onslaught of Islamic State (ISIS), who forced hundreds of thousands of Christians to flee.

Nineveh province, surrounding Mosul, was left in ruins after three years of ISIS occupation which ended in 2017 when an Iraqi force backed by U.S.-led coalition air strikes pushed them out.

Iraq’s Christian population has shrunk to fewer than 400,000 from around 1.5 million before the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.

But monasteries and churches are being slowly restored, and Pope Francis made a historic visit to the region last year.

“What I feel is the best emotion in the whole universe”, said one of the faithful, a housewife in her fifties who gave her name as Ferial.

(Esta Media Network/AFP)

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