Catholic group sends 15 Virgin Mary statues to Iraq to replace ones destroyed by ISIS – Catholic Herald Online

The moon lights up a statue of Virgin Mary in Erbil, Iraq (Getty Images)

A French Catholic group has sent the new statues from Lourdes to Erbil, where they will be carried through the streets in procession

A Catholic charity has sent 15 statues of the Virgin Mary to the Middle East to replace ones destroyed by ISIS.

The group uvre dOrient, a French association dedicated to helping persecuted Christians, has sent the statues from Lourdes to Ankawa, a suburb of the city of Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan, which has a majority Catholic population.

Aleteia reports that once they arrive, they will be carried in procession through the town by Chaldean and Syriac Catholics, before being blessed and sent to their parishes.

uvre dOrient say the processions will be a testament to Jeremiah 31:17: And here is hope for thy last end, saith the Lord: and the children shall return to their own borders.

In March, a senior aid worker described the Chaldean Catholic population in northern Iraq as on the verge of extinction, warning that the West must help.

Stephen Rasche, legal counsel and head of resettlement programmes for the Chaldean Archdiocese of Erbil, said: The future really does hang in the balance, adding: History could look back on this and say in their time of greatest need, they didnt get the support and the community disappeared. That could happen. We need to be honest about that.

Christian families were forced to flee the Nineveh Plains when ISIS took control of the region in 2014, mainly finding refuge in Erbil. Although the terror group is slowly losing territory, many thousands of Christians remain in the city as IDPs (internally displaced persons).

Since 2003, Iraqs Christian population has collapsed from 1.4 million to 275,000.

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Catholic group sends 15 Virgin Mary statues to Iraq to replace ones destroyed by ISIS - Catholic Herald Online

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