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Ahead of Pope’s visit, Iraqi parliament formally and unanimously declares Christmas a national holiday…

Ahead of Pope’s visit, Iraqi parliament formally and unanimously declares Christmas a national holiday…

ROME – In a move some have said is already a direct result of Pope Francis’s highly anticipated visit to the country in March, Iraqi parliament earlier this week voted to establish Christmas as an annual national holiday.

The vote, which took place Dec. 16, was unanimous and goes into effect this year, meaning that for all of its woes, 2020 will have at least one silver lining for the Iraqi Christian community.

Previously, Christians had been given the day of Dec. 25 off, but it was not considered a holiday for the rest of the population in the Muslim-majority nation.

In 2008, the Iraqi government declared Christmas a “one-time” holiday, but the provision was not renewed.

In recent years, Christmas has only been a public holiday in the province of Kirkuk.

The decision to formally declare Christmas a national holiday comes after an Oct. 17 meeting between Iraqi Cardinal Luis Raphael Sako, Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans and Iraqi President Barham Salih, during which Sako proposed a recognizing Christmas as a national holiday in Iraq.

At the time, Salih, stressed the important role Christian communities play in the country, despite enduring years of discrimination and jihadist violence.

The decision comes just months before Pope Francis is scheduled to make a March 5-8 visit to the country, stopping in Baghdad, Erbil, Qaraqosh, Mosul, and the Plain of Ur, traditionally recognized as the birthplace of Abraham.

Francis’s visit will mark the first time a pope has traveled to Iraq and takes place after many Christians and other minorities have either left Iraq, or are still displaced within the country, as a result of ISIS’s 2014 invasion of the Nineveh Plain.

The decision about Christmas will also likely be seen as a first step for Christians to feel welcomed in their own country, and to feel like they are closer to enjoying full rights rather than being seen as “second-class citizens,” which has been a general complaint for decades.

In a statement issued after the Iraqi parliament’s decision, Sako thanked Salih, the Speaker of Parliament Muhammad al Halbousi, and all other members of parliament “for their affirmative vote for the sake of their fellow Christians,” asking for God’s blessing and reward to be upon them.

Salih also reaffirmed his commitment to helping Christians displaced by the ISIS invasion to return to their homes.

In comments to Asia News, Bishop Basilio Yaldo, an auxiliary bishop in Baghdad, hailed the establishment of Christmas as a national holiday is “a historic vote, because today Christmas is truly a celebration for all Iraqis.”

“This is a message of great value and great hope for Christians and for all of Iraq and is inevitably linked to the pontiff’s apostolic journey to our country in March,” Yaldo said, adding, “This is one of the first fruits we hope will bring many others in the future.”

In a statement issued last week after news of the pope’s trip was announced, Sako called the papal visit a “new milestone” for Iraqi Christians which will encourage them “to overcome the painful past in order to reconcile and sooth their wounds,” and to work toward a peaceful coexistence with the region’s different ethnic and religious communities.

The visit, he said, should inspire Christians “to respect and appreciate diversity and pluralism, simply because they are different brothers of one family and citizens of a shared home named as Iraq.”

Sako said the papal visit is a chance, not only for Christians to go back to the roots of their identity, but is also an opportunity to “launch a new vision for the Church in Iraq and the region” and to “set up a working plan for it.”

“This visit must be invested to be a major turning point, so that the faith and hope inside us become a commitment,” he said, urging Iraqi Christians to reflect on their contribution to society.

“What is our vision of the future of Christianity and mission in Iraq and the Middle East? Is it immigration or to stay and face challenges with faith, hope and joy?” he asked, adding, “This land is ours, and cannot be imagined without Christians.”

Sako insisted that the Christian presence in Iraq is not “random,” but is rather part of a divine plan and mission which cannot be abandoned “despite all the difficulties.”

“I call on Christians in Iraq and the Middle East to stand by each other to proclaim the Gospel despite Church multiplicity and diversity,” he said, adding, “Since we are one family in essence and brothers with differences, we are called to fulfill our vocation in this ‘tested’ part of the Middle East.”

Follow Elise Ann Allen on Twitter: @eliseannallen

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