Displaced Iraqi Christians Identify Their Most Treasured Material Possession

ERBIL, IRAQ - DECEMBER 13: (Editor's note: Image has been processed using a digital filter) Iraqi Christian, Khidhir Badry, poses for a photograph in his tented home erected in the grounds of Mazar Mar Eillia (Mar Elia) Catholic Church, that has now become home to hundreds of fellow Iraqi Christians who were forced to flee their homes - many with less than an hour to do so - as the Islamic State advanced earlier this year, on December 13, 2014 in Erbil, Iraq. Asked, after his family what was the one thing he could not leave behind as ISIL advanced on his home, the tractor driver from Qaraqosh said his picture of Jesus and Mary. Although the autonomous Kurdistan region of Northern Iraq was already a refuge for an estimated 250,000 Syrian refugees, since the Islamic State began its onslaught on Iraq in June, Kurdistan has also taken in a more than one and a half million displaced people. Many have been placed in purpose-built refugee camps but the huge numbers mean thousands of others are forced to live in un-finished buildings or inadequate, makeshift shelters and as winter in the region closes in, there are growing concerns for the welfare of the refugees who, while their homes are still in ISIL controlled territory, have no realistic prospect of returning to them. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
ERBIL, IRAQ - DECEMBER 13: (Editor's note: Image has been processed using a digital filter) Iraqi Christian, Khidhir Badry, poses for a photograph in his tented home erected in the grounds of Mazar Mar Eillia (Mar Elia) Catholic Church, that has now become home to hundreds of fellow Iraqi Christians who were forced to flee their homes - many with less than an hour to do so - as the Islamic State advanced earlier this year, on December 13, 2014 in Erbil, Iraq. Asked, after his family what was the one thing he could not leave behind as ISIL advanced on his home, the tractor driver from Qaraqosh said his picture of Jesus and Mary. Although the autonomous Kurdistan region of Northern Iraq was already a refuge for an estimated 250,000 Syrian refugees, since the Islamic State began its onslaught on Iraq in June, Kurdistan has also taken in a more than one and a half million displaced people. Many have been placed in purpose-built refugee camps but the huge numbers mean thousands of others are forced to live in un-finished buildings or inadequate, makeshift shelters and as winter in the region closes in, there are growing concerns for the welfare of the refugees who, while their homes are still in ISIL controlled territory, have no realistic prospect of returning to them. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
Displaced Iraqi Christians Identify Their Most Treasured Material Possession
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Credit:
Matt Cardy / Stringer
Editorial #:
460486564
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
13 December, 2014
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Getty Images Europe
Object name:
83080745
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