July 24,
2011
The Chaldean Renaissance:
Basic Outline of a Vision
By
Bishop Sarhad Y. Jammo
I- Dialectic of the
Contemporary Situation:
1)
Observing the Chaldeans Themselves:
A fair
observer must conclude that Chaldeans of our generation are enduring
a situation of regress and fragmentation; the main reason and cause
is the general Chaldean attitude toward themselves, reflected
particularly by their own leaders and hierarchs in their guidance to
their flocks. Humanly, it is much easier to follow the current
waves, submit to the tyrants, lapse into laziness, becoming
followers of the mighty, beggars from the rich, and mercenaries to
the rulers. In concrete terms: having ourselves neglected our
forefathers’ cultural and ecclesial treasures, the dignity of our
call, the greatness of our civil and religious heritage, resorting
to borrow concepts and practices from nations and churches, we have
become available to the outsiders' conquest.
This is where we stand today:
a) Ecclesiastically:
Our Patriarchal Seminary, our monasteries and convents, our clergy
and parishes, our liturgies and religious culture are heavily
Latinized, Arabized, Syrianized, Kurdishized, or anything else
except being genuinely and proudly Chaldean.
b) Civilly: Our
people and lay institutions, by their own weakness and under the
influence of our ecclesiastic hierarchs and institutions, have
chosen to a large extent to neglect and disregard their national
identity, their language, their rights and their dignity. For many
Chaldeans, enlisting and serving as Arab, Kurd, Communist...etc. was
and remains a practiced endeavor.
c) The Assyrian Factor:
Assyria is an important region of Mesopotamia, and for several
centuries succeeded in becoming a mighty empire, with Nineveh as its
capital. As such, Assyria is an important segment of Mesopotamia at
large and of the Chaldean heritage which succeeded it. Recognizing
that solid historic fact and appreciating it should be the obvious
attitude of every knowledgeable Chaldean. The point is that the
colonial offices of the British Empire, in collaboration with the
missionaries of the Archbishop of Canterbury, misused this historic
reference, cutting it from its context, and employed it to
consolidate the split inside the Chaldean church and people, by
promoting an "Assyrian" identity, distinct and separate from the
Chaldean, for their own imperial purposes.
In the past three decades, while the Chaldeans were
presenting their services to the ruling parties of Iraq, Assyrian
political parties and organizations were offering their zealous
loyalty to different regional powers, mostly to Kurdistan, ending up
with the adoption of a formula ("Chaldean Syriac Assyrian") that
dilutes substantially any serious national meaning and claim,
reducing it to the acceptance of submission to the mighty in
exchange for protection and personal gain.
2)
Observing the Arab-Muslim majority of Iraq:
They regard Chaldeans with official respect and appreciation, but an
activist fanatic minority of them persist in persecuting Chaldeans,
and other Christians, for the past several decades, pushing them to
flee their ancestral land in continuous waves of exodus, ending up
with the majority of Chaldeans settling in western countries,
200,000 of them in the USA alone.
3)
Observing the Kurdish sizable minority of
Iraq: While providing physical security to Chaldeans and
other Christians in the Kurdistan Region, they deny Chaldeans their
basic national rights, submitting them to serve the Kurdish national
agenda. They have already succeeded in making many Chaldean and
Assyrian parties and activists their own mercenaries.
II- Who are the Contemporary Chaldeans?
Contemporary Chaldeans are: a) the descendants and
main remnant of the ancient inhabitants of Mesopotamia: the
Sumerians, the Akkadians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians, and most
of all the Chaldeans. b) Their language is the Chaldean, i.e. the
vernacular, Aramaic of Mesopotamia, being in continuous use for the
past 3000 years until the present time. c) They are the heirs of
successive Mesopotamian civilizations, particularly of its spiritual
heritage, as represented by the Patriarch Abraham of Ur of the
Chaldeans, and as frequently referred to in the Holy Scriptures both
the Old and the New Testament, as embodied as well, in regard to
Christian heritage, in the Chaldean Catholic Church of the East.
The
authenticity of the Chaldean nomenclature and its substance are
based on the following historic facts:
a)
The Aramaic linguistic form,
used commonly by the Chaldeans up to date, and only by them, was
until modern times a spoken but unrecorded dialect, i.e. a
grammatical vernacular taught solely by parents to children. While
the ancient Assyrian language is the Akkadian dialect of the Nineveh
region, which ceased to exist, the Chaldean, ancient and recent, is
not the Akkadian of Babylon that disappeared, but the Aramaic
vernacular of Mesopotamia which constitutes the cultural continuity
and the vital core of national identity up to our day.
b)
The Chaldean Empire is the last
and most glorious indigenous state that ruled over all Mesopotamia
(612 BC to 538 BC), before it fell under the successive invading
foreign powers. With that 74-year rule, Nineveh gradually became
deserted ruins and Assyria became a region within the Chaldean
Empire. This historic and documentable fact means for the following
history that Assyria, with its great heritage, was absorbed by the
succeeding Chaldean nationality and culture.
c)
The City of Babylon, famous
capital of the Chaldeans, was the historic core and international
center of Mesopotamia through the millennia, where after the
Chaldean rule, Qurish the Persian reigned, where Alexander the Great
died, in whose vicinity the Parthians had their imperial court,
etc., ending with Baghdad as the splendid capital of the Abbasids,
and continuing to be the central city of Twin-River-Land for many
centuries until modern-day Iraq. Even the ecclesiastic center of the
Church of the East settled on the Patriarchal title of Babylon.
d)
Commonly and Constantly through the centuries, before Christianity
and after, the Chaldean name has been the
ethnic and cultural expression used by historians to
indicate national identity of indigenous Mesopotamians; thus did the
liturgical Hudhra, the Greek writers, the Arab hagiographers, the
European travelers, and the Christian hierarchy of the Church of the
East in all of its branches, including the last Patriarch Shimun
XXIII of Qochanis, as shown by his inherited patriarchal seal.
III-
What is the Chaldean particularity among the nations?
The comprehensive history of humanity might be
traced back hundreds of millennia and to different regions of the
earth. Nevertheless, the philosophical and
theological birth and early formation of that history is
traced to Mesopotamia proper, the cradle of civilization. As
narrated in the Book of Genesis, in the Epic of Gilgamesh, in the
archaeological records of the cities of Ur, Uruk, and Babel, located
in middle and south Mesopotamia, the foundation of human
civilization was pioneered remarkably in that region, including the
description of a primordial paradise, the audacious attempt to reach
heaven by the Tower of Babylon, the awareness of evil in human life,
the yearning for immortality, the formation of moral conscience, and
the belief in one God, creator of the universe and master of
history, as reported in the call of Abraham to become the vehicle
for universal divine favor and salvation.
This entire endeavor has been accomplished by the
dwellers of South Mesopotamia, whose legacy was inherited by the
Chaldeans, who themselves dwelt and ruled the same land. Jesus
Christ, the Son of David, the son of Abraham, is the fulfilling core
of that Providence or Plan of God for redemption. Contemporary
Chaldeans must be aware of their permanent connection to that divine
call and its actual implications. Obviously, any noble prince,
shying away from the obligations of his status, will end up losing
it. Contemporary Chaldeans are able, if sensitized, to recognize the
divine call addressed to their forefathers, and therefore to their
nation, then claim it, accept it, and be enriched by it, making it a
blessing for many.
IV- Middle and South
Mesopotamia as the geographic sphere of the Chaldeans’ historic
achievement and perpetual reference.
A clarification, from the Chaldean point of view, is
needed in regard to the meaning of the term Mesopotamia. Obviously,
the general meaning is the land of the Twin Rivers Tigris and
Euphrates. Nevertheless, only Middle and Lower Mesopotamia
--contained roughly in today's borders of Iraq-- maintained through
history a continuous historic, cultural, and administrative unity,
as the basic reference of enduring identity. Upper Mesopotamia,
including Edessa and Nisibis, belonged in ancient times, up to
modern periods, to the Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Arab, Mongolian, and
Turkish empires and cultures. East and Northeast of Mesopotamia, the
land of the Medes and the Persians, were ruled since ancient times
by different mighty empires with a different language and culture.
Therefore, Middle and Lower Mesopotamia, with Babylon and Nineveh as
its major cities, are the historic spheres of achievement and
concrete references for Mesopotamian national identity. Most of all,
the glorious city of Babylon remains for all Chaldeans the glorious
perennial symbol of their ancestors.
A clarification also is due regarding the Aramaic
language, spread to many areas in the Near East and Middle East,
between the 10th Century BC and 7th Century AD, including Upper
Mesopotamia in modern Turkey and Western Persia in modern Iran. The
Aramaic Vernacular of Mesopotamia Proper (Middle and South) is
remarkably different, up to date, from the dialects used in the
Tur'Abdin area (Turkey) or in Urmia (Iran). Therefore, this
linguistic difference should be taken into serious consideration, in
addition to other historic, geographic, and political factors,
whenever we deal with the issue of a Mesopotamian identity and
related belonging, as applied to these regions and their communities
with due respect to all.
V- What is the goal of
the Chaldeans and how to reach it?
1)
The goal of the Chaldeans is to
survive and thrive while preserving their identity and growing in it
civilly, culturally and spiritually:
a)
Civilly, by claiming and
pursuing the recognition of their national rights in their homeland,
lraq, and everywhere in the world, in order to grow in it.
b)
Culturally, by promoting their
Chaldean language and art, adapting them to modern times, using them
as the international communication medium and joint among all
Chaldean communities.
c)
Spiritually, by accepting the
divine call to minister a pivotal role in the history of divine
salvation as entrusted to Abraham, their national hero and
vocational symbol. Thus, to claim the perennial Scriptural and
Apostolic heritage of the Church of the East, make it a powerful
legacy, and share it with many thirsty souls.
2) How do we Reach that Goal in Today's
Situation?
By
enacting a process of Chaldean Renaissance, through a fresh
response to the historic divine call; Let
us build a new Babylon (Bab'el):
1) By
relying basically on their inner conviction, free and noble
Chaldeans, wherever they are in the world, do and shall reclaim
their Chaldean national identity with all of its civil rights and
duties. This reclaim is the Chaldeans' historic right and native
prerogative.
2) By
nourishing awareness of the Chaldean cultural and spiritual
components of identity, particularly of the call to respond to the
divine plan of salvation, revealed and made known in the Holy
Scriptures, following the example of Patriarch Abraham.
3) By
appreciating our Mesopotamian Chaldean language in both of its forms
the Classic and the Vernacular --which is neither Syrian nor
Syriac-- liberating its grammar and pronunciation from foreign
distorting applications, then teaching and adopting them for all
sectors of life.
4) By
establishing an international institution to gather together
representatives of our dispersed communities, uniting them to
understand themselves and their call, and design a course of action
accordingly.
5) By
establishing free media to proclaim genuine Chaldean identity and
culture.
6) By
being ready, in the name of common Mesopotamian heritage, to deal
with all free, noble and willing Assyrians wherever they are and the
Syriacs of Iraq, to forge a common national front, based on mutual
recognition and appreciation, in the prospect of a united future.
7)
Being open to all genuine Iraqis to share with them the authentic
civil, cultural, and spiritual legacy of ancient Mesopotamia.