British Assyrians

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British Assyrians
Fr Habib.jpg
Fr Habib, the Chaldean Catholic Priest in London
Total population
3,000-4,000 [1]
Regions with significant populations
London
Languages
English · Syriac
Religion
Mainly Christianity
(majority: Syriac Christianity; minority: Protestantism)

British Assyrians are British people of Assyrian descent or Assyrians who have British citizenship.

They are indigenous to present-day northern Iraq, southeast Turkey, northwestern Iran and Syria. They speak Syriac and are predominately Christian.

Concentrations of Assyrians are found in Greenford and in Hanwell, both towns within the London Borough of Ealing.[2] Assyrians in the UK and other western countries mostly migrated from Iran, Iraq, Jordan, and Syria. Migration was largely triggered by long standing ethnic and religious persecution in their homeland.

Religion, ethnicity and culture[]

This is the Latin rite Church used by the Chaldean Catholics

Assyrians today still Aramaic as a mother tongue. They descend from the ancient Arameans. They are the indigenous population of their ancestral Assyrian homeland in what is today northern Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran.

Assyrian people are mostly Christian; they fall into a number of Eastern Rite Churches whose services are conducted in classical Syriac, the most common being the Ancient Church of the East, the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church and Syriac Orthodox Church.

A Chaldean Catholic Church is rented in Acton, London.[3] The Assyrian Church of the East have its own church, The Ancient Church of the East rent a hall and one Club exist [4][5] are owned by the Assyrians in South Ealing. The priest of the Chaldean Church is currently Father Habib al-Noufaly.[3] The former Chaldean priest was Father Andreas, now a bishop, ordained in Rome by the Pope in 2004.[6]

Immigration history[]

The earliest recorded Assyrian in the UK was Hormuzd Rassam the famed archaeologist and politician. He became a diplomat in the UK in the mid-19th century and settled in Brighton. The theologian Louis Cheikho spent time in the United Kingdom in the late 19th century also. The theologian and orientalist Alphonse Mingana was also a notable early arrival in the Edwardian period. Assyrians have traditionally migrated to Britain from their ancestral homelands in northern Iraq, south eastern Turkey, north eastern Syria and north western Iran.

World Wars[]

TheLethbridgeHeraldAugust181933.JPG
Agha Petros and his Assyrian levies remained undefeated in the First World War despite a lack of formal military training

As a result of the Great Game, a diplomatic struggle and "cold war" between the Tsardom of Russia and the British Empire, the Assyrians, Armenians, Arabs and Kurds became involved in the political interference of the Great Powers. All groups sought independence from the aged Ottoman Empire, where the Assyrians and Armenians in particular had suffered centuries persistent ethno-religious oppression and indeed massacres. With the outbreak of the First World War, the Assyrians sided with the British, in the hope of receiving a promised independence.

The Assyrians suffered greatly for this, and up to 750,000 were massacred during the Assyrian genocide of World War I at the hands of the Ottoman Turks and their Kurdish and Arab allies, leading to an Assyrian war of independence. However, at the Treaty of Versailles, the Assyrian delegates were refused entrance; in 1933 the Assyrians suffered a further persecution when thousands were wiped out in the Simele massacre by the Iraqi Army.[7] This was in retaliation for assisting the British in the First World War, who occupied Iraq.

Ironically, the Arabs and Kurds had also assisted the British, but only the Assyrians remained loyal to the British as levies. During the British Mandate of Mesopotamia Assyrian Levies were used by the British to protect their interests and to put down Arab and Kurdish insurrections. The outbreak of the Second World War found 40,000 Assyrian soldiers fighting for the British.[8] In the Anglo-Iraqi War, the Assyrians played a decisive role in providing Britain with the much needed manpower to defeat the pro-Nazi Arab rebel forces in the region;[9] another example of Assyrian participation in the war was a mission in Sarandë, Albania in 1945,[10] when 75 per cent of a paratrooper attack was composed of Assyrian troops, the rest being Kurds.[citation needed]

Modern times[]

Many more Assyrians fled Iraq for the UK during the rule of the Baathist regime from 1963-2003 due to racial persecution, the Baathist Arabs pursuing a policy of forced Arabisation upon the Pre-Arab Assyrians, together with bouts of Ethnic Cleansing and forced relocations. A further influx occurred as a result of the al-Anfal Campaign against Iraqi minorities in the 1980s, and again after the Gulf War (1990–91).

Following the Invasion of Iraq in 2003, more Assyrians fled to the UK in the face of increased religious and ethnic persecution from Arab Islamists and Kurdish Nationalists, including bombing of churches, random killings, violent harassment, death threats and kidnappings.[11]

In recent years, the Assyrians have received support from a number of parliamentarians, in particular MP Steven Pound of Ealing and Lord Hylton. Issues raised included the racial and religious persecution of Assyrians by both Kurds and Arabs, and a brief outline of their history since the "Great Game".[12] Assyrians received increased media coverage with the kidnapping and death of a Chaldean Catholic Bishop in Iraq.[13]

Other groups of Assyrians have fled Iran due to religious persecution, Syria and northern Iraq due to ethnic discrimination and the recent civil war, where they are violently targeted for ethnic cleansing by the Islamists of ISIL, and also Turkey due to both ethnic and religious discrimination.

Assyrians in London have formed a football club, .[14]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "This figure is an estimate from the Assyrian Cultural and Advice Centre" [1] at Iraqi Assyrians in London: Beyond the 'Immigrant/Refugee' Divide; Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford, 1995
  2. ^ http://www.bethsuryoyo.com/currentevents/AprimAssyriac/AssyriacDenied.html
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Watts, Greg (2005-02-05). "At your service". The Times. London. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  4. ^ http://newsweaver.co.uk/visitingarts/e_article000311909.cfm?x=b11,0,w Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine mentions an Assyrian club
  5. ^ "Assyrian Society of Great Britain, London (Temple Road)".
  6. ^ http://www.kaldaya.net/2009/01/Jan27_09_E1_ChaldeanChurch_Vatican2009.html, on the Pope's right
  7. ^ "Modern Aramaic Dictionary & Phrasebook" By Nicholas Awde. Page 11.
  8. ^ 40,000 Assyrians fought in the Levies
  9. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-20. Retrieved 2009-01-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-10-05. Retrieved 2009-03-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ http://www.christiansofiraq.com/bombed.html
  12. ^ http://www.christiansofiraq.com/report.html
  13. ^ [2]
  14. ^ https://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/eafc2001/news.htm&date=2009-10-25+21:35:38
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