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  Letter from Nuhad Tomeh in Jordan  
             
 

March 20, 2006

But I trust in you, O Lord; I say, “You are my God.” My times are in your hands; deliver me from the hand of my enemies and persecutors.
Psalm, 31: 14-15.

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ Jesus, the Lord of all,

Lenten greetings from Amman, Jordan.

Last year about this time Alexa Smith of the Presbyterian News Service was here in Amman writing a series of articles about Iraqi Christians in Jordan who came here as refugees, seeking security and a safe place. They left their families, friends, and homes, hoping for a better future. Not only Christians came, but also Muslims.

Some are well-off and can rent or buy a new home, but the majority are needy. Many were allowed to enter Jordan, but others were stranded on the Iraq-Jordan border. The Middle East Council of Churches has started an assistance program to those on the borders because they were the most unfortunate.

Until this month, MECC was able through ACT International to provide food and non-food items to those refugees. Unfortunately, this program will have to stop due the shortage of fund.

 
             
  Photo of about 15 children and two women. Tents can be seen in the background.
Ms. Wafa Goussous (back row, center) is the director of the Middle East Council of Churches' relief efforts in Amman, Jordan.
  I am here in Amman as the coordinator of the MECC Ecumenical Relief Service program to work with the MECC staff to find ways to continue this program, and especially to help the children in this camp. Of 700 persons, almost 300 are children between 5 and 18. They all hope to be resettled in another country. After three years there is now hope that they may be accepted by another country. Pray with us that this will happen soon.  
             
 

MECC in Amman is also working with Iraqi Christians inside Jordan who have desperate needs, including food, clothing, rent, health care, and education for their children. MECC was able to get funding from a Christian agency to support them.

Several churches in Amman are ministering to these Iraqis, but their resources are very limited and diminishing. I worshiped with them at one of the churches and was very much impressed by the number of people. The church was full, and people were standing outside—over 300 persons gathered in a small chapel. They were all singing and praising God in Aramaic, the language our Lord spoke. Most Iraqis Christian still speak Aramaic.

 
             
  I did not understand the language (though it is similar to Arabic, my native language), but I felt the spirit working in the lives of those people. I thought they would be depressed, frustrated, or angry at God, since they have been waiting for years for peace and security to be restored in their country. If they cannot go back, they at least deserve a better life, either in Jordan or in another country. Most of them would like to emigrate and start a new life for their children in another country.   Photo of four children. In the background Nuhad Tomeh is seen talking with a man.
Iranian Kurdish refugee children at the Jordan-Iraq border. Nuhad Tomeh is in the background (far right).
 
             
  I myself was challenged by their faith, their joy, and their trust that God will not leave them. I learned as I talked to some of them that their faith and belief is stronger than despair, and their hope is stronger then depression. They believe that the words of the prophet Jeremiah are alive:  
             
  Photo of people worshiping.
Iraqi Christian refugees at worship in Jordan.
  Blessed are those who trust in the Lord, whose trust is in the Lord. They shall be like a tree planted, by water, sending out its roots by the stream. It shall not fear when heat comes, and its leaves shall stay green; in the year of drought it is not anxious, and it does not cease to bear fruit
(Jeremiah, 17: 7-8 ).
 
             
 

As we go together through this Lenten season, let us fast and pray over Psalm 31 for the Iraqis Christian and others—that they may experience the resurrection after all the suffering they have been through. This is the story of the Iraqi Christian refugees in Jordan (there are at least 10,000 of them). There are also many others in Syria, Lebanon, and other surrounding countries.

May the Lord of us all, the one who went through all the suffering, put an end to the suffering of the Iraqis.

Nuhad Tomeh
PC(USA) Regional Liaison
Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and the Gulf

For more about Iraqi Christian in Jordan, read Alexa Smith’s articles in the Presbyterian News Service in March and April 2005.

The 2006 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 168

 
             
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