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Conservative Nonprofit to Launch $10 Million Campaign to Strengthen Election Integrity

Conservative nonprofit Heritage Action for America is on Monday expected to announce plans to spend $10 million on a wide-ranging election integrity campaign to strengthen voting laws in eight swing states, according to reports.

According to Fox News, the campaign will target Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, Texas, and Wisconsin, with the effort involving such initiatives as digital and television advertisements, as well as direct lobbying of state lawmakers.

“Fair elections are essential for every policy debate in the future,” Heritage Action Executive Director Jessica Anderson told the outlet in a statement. “We are working to help state lawmakers restore trust in our elections, ensure transparency, and protect the rights of every American to a fair election. This is our number one priority, and we are committed to doing whatever it takes.”

Heritage Action, which is affiliated with the right-leaning think tank The Heritage Foundation, seeks to turn “conservative ideas into reality on Capitol Hill,” the nonprofit says on its website.

“We do that by holding lawmakers accountable to their promises to advance the conservative principles of free enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American values, and a strong national defense,” the organization says of its core priorities.

Election integrity came to the forefront in a dramatic way in 2020, with former President Donald Trump and his allies making claims that reduced security measures—primarily around mail-in ballots—led to fraud that cheated him out of victory.

In the broader debate about election security, conservatives—and Republicans in general—have tended to argue that casting a vote is a privilege of citizenship that should be safeguarded with secure processes and restrictions, and that lowering requirements around voting opens the process up to fraud and abuse. Progressives—and their Democrat allies—tend to hold the view that barriers to casting a ballot should be as low as possible and that the kind of security measures pushed by conservatives, such as stricter voter ID or proof-of-citizenship laws, amount to disenfranchisement. Progressives often frame the debate as between voter suppression and expansion, while conservatives tend to see it as election security versus vulnerability to abuse.

In the wake of the 2020 election controversy, Republican and Democrat lawmakers across the country have been pulling in opposite directions by introducing legislation that either reduces barriers—and guardrails—to voting, or seeks to strengthen election integrity, which can also make casting a vote more effortful or burdensome.

The Brennan Center for Justice, an advocacy group that pushes for progressive policies, counted 106 bills in 28 states designed to tighten voting standards so far this year, a significant jump from last year. At the same time, 35 states introduced a total of 406 bills to make voting less restrictive, also up from last year.

BELOIT, WISCONSIN – NOVEMBER 03: Stickers ready to be passed out to residents after they vote at the Beloit Public Library on November 03, 2020 in Beloit, Wisconsin. After a record-breaking early voting turnout, Americans head to the polls on the last day to cast their vote for incumbent U.S. President Donald Trump or Democratic nominee Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

A key law in this regard being pushed by Democrats is H.R. 1, or the For the People Act of 2021. It passed the Democrat-controlled House last week on a largely party-line vote of 220-210, with all Republicans voting against it.

The controversial election reform package, which spans nearly 800 pages, seeks to impose requirements on voting procedures across the entire country. Its provisions include transferring authority over how elections are administered from states to the federal government, mandating automatic voter registration in all 50 states, and legalizing nationwide vote-by-mail without the need to provide photo ID to obtain an absentee ballot.

Heritage Action, in one of its key election integrity policy fights, called H.R. 1 “Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s signature piece of legislation to rig the election system in favor of Democratic politicians by undermining America’s electoral process.”

The organization argues that the bill “interferes with the ability of states and their citizens to determine qualifications for voters, to ensure the accuracy of voter registration rolls, to secure the integrity of elections, to participate in the political process, and to determine the district boundary lines for electing their representatives.”

“The end goal of H.R. 1 is clear—to enshrine into law dubious electoral practices that enable and encourage fraudulent behavior, such as ballot harvesting, false voter registrations, duplicate voting, and ineligible voting,” Heritage Action says.

The Biden administration, which has strongly pushed for the bill, praised its passage, saying the legislation is “urgently needed to protect the right to vote and the integrity of our elections, and to repair and strengthen American democracy.”

Joe Biden
President Joe Biden speaks about his administration’s COVID-19 response, in the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington on March 2, 2021. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Biden has said he would sign the bill into law if it reaches his desk, which may be a tall order since the proposed legislation would need 60 votes to overcome the Senate filibuster, meaning 10 Republicans would have to buy in.

Republicans have roundly denounced the bill, with governors and state legislators across the country saying it would kneecap election integrity efforts.

A previous version of the bill had passed the Democrat-controlled House 234-193 at the beginning of the 116th Congress in 2019 but ultimately did not get taken up in the Republican-controlled Senate.

Follow Tom on Twitter: @OZImekTOM

Eritrea releases 21 female Christian prisoners amid accusations of church attacks in neighboring Ethiopia

Eritrea has freed 21 female Christian prisoners but the country’s forces stand accused of attacking churches in the troubled Tigray region of neighboring Ethiopia.

The women, all reportedly young mothers, had been held in an island prison on the Red Sea since last August.

They were arrested in 2017 after a series of raids on underground churches by the Eritrean authorities. Many of their husbands were conscripts, leaving their children without anyone to care for them, human rights group Release International reports.

They are the latest Christians to be freed from prison in a string of unexpected prisoner releases over the past half year.

Last month, 70 Christians from evangelical and orthodox backgrounds were freed, and another 27 last September. In total, 171 Christians have been freed since last August.

There are still around 130 Christians in Eritrean prisons and an unknown number of Army conscripts locked up for practicing their faith. A further 150 Christian prisoners are believed to be detained by the Army, but little is known about them, Release said. 

Although the charity has given a cautious welcome to the prisoner releases, it warns that this good news is being overshadowed by attacks on churches in Tigray by Eritrean forces.

A massacre in the sacred city of Axum killed an estimated 800 people, including many priests and church members.

The attack involved the Church of St Mary of Zion in Axum, which Ethiopians traditionally believe is home to the Ark of the Covenant, which held the Ten Commandments.

Eritrea has denied involvement in the fighting in Tigray, but local witnesses have reported troops in Axum identifying themselves as Eritrean. They also claim to have seen Eritrean forces hoisting their flag and distributing Eritrean identity cards to Ethiopians under their control.

“Despite the prisoner releases in Eritrea, these horrific church attacks suggest it’s far too soon to suggest a change of heart toward Christianity,” said Release CEO Paul Robinson.

“The attacks on churches in Tigray are appalling, and Eritrea continues to hold many senior pastors who have been detained indefinitely — some for up to 17 years.

“Until all are set free and the killing of Christians stops it’s too soon to talk of lasting change.

“Any such change would have to be proven by giving full freedom of religion to all Eritrea’s citizens.”

Local Release partners believe the prisoner releases might have been carried out in order to curry favor with Ethiopia’s prime minister, who is a Christian.  

“Our partners believe Eritrea is trying to extend its influence in the Horn of Africa,” said Robinson. 

Release International partner Dr Berhane Asmelash believes the assault on Tigray churches is more about power than religion. 

“Religion is power. Every village has a church. The church is the center of the community. Remove the church and the community will be left without leaders,” he said.

“The Eritreans believe if they kill the priests and leaders, they can easily manipulate the people. So wherever they go, if they see a priest they will kill him.”

Originally published at Christian Today.

DHS begs for volunteers to rush to the border, admits surge of migrants is ‘overwhelming’

The Washington Times reports:

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas begged Monday for volunteers from agencies within his department to rush to the border to help with an “overwhelming” surge of illegal immigrants.

In an email to department employees, Mr. Mayorkas said he was copying an idea the Trump administration used in 2019, during the last surge.

The email is another indication that despite public pronouncements to the contrary, the Biden administration believes it is facing a crisis at the border.

“Today I activated the Volunteer Force to support Customs and Border Protection (CBP) as they face a surge in migration along the Southwest Border,” Mr. Mayorkas wrote in his note. 

He pointed to the 900 employees that stepped forward in 2019 and asked for a similar effort this time.

“I also realize these are uncertain times and being away from home may be concerning. But today your colleagues need assistance carrying out their mission to help others, and DHS is going to support you while deployed,” Mr. Mayorkas wrote.

He didn’t say exactly what that meant, but said “your health and wellbeing will remain priorities.”

Mr. Mayorkas has declined to label the surge of migrants a “crisis,” instead calling it a challenge.

Officials on the border, though, say they have little doubt the surge in numbers, and the return of catch-and-release policies, is a crisis.

Arizona Dept. of Education reviewing ‘equity’ toolkit that suggests babies are racist

The Arizona Department of Education has launched an internal review in response to revelations that it promoted a number of controversial claims in its “equity” toolkit, including the notion that babies as young as 3 months old can be racist, according to filmmaker and City Journal contributing editor Christopher Rufo.

What are the details?

Rufo posted a statement from the state education department on Twitter, in which the department announced the review while suggesting the resources were part of a “school improvement process” and were “intended for use by school leaders as they work closely with the families they serve.”

In the statement, the department noted that it “recognizes the need for resources that explore equity and inclusion issues” in order “to ensure that every student has access to an education that allows them to achieve their full potential,” but admitted it is “currently conducting an internal review” of certain resources in light of the recent scrutiny.

What’s the background?

Rufo broke the news last week that some of the resources recommended for educators and parents on the department’s website advanced controversial claims associated with the critical race theory agenda.

He took screenshots of a number of the resources and posted them in a Twitter thread. One of the resources included an infographic entitled, “They’re not too young to talk about race!” which cites a study claiming, “At birth, babies look equally at faces of all races. At 3 months, babies look more at faces that match the race of their caregivers.”

Another resource suggested that babies are not “colorblind” and that parents must instill “antiracist attitudes and actions” starting at birth in order to prevent their children from “absorb[ing] bias from the world around them.”

Still, additional resources reportedly recommended by the department suggest to white parents that they “can have a black friend, partner, or child and still be racist” and claims that white people deny their own racism to “alleviate some of their white fragility.”

Rufo discussed the troubling toolkit with Fox News host Laura Ingraham over the weekend.

What else?

The news is only the latest example of critical race theory and progressive identity politics making their way into classrooms across the United States.

Rufo discovered last month that Buffalo Public Schools in upstate New York had woven similar ideas into its “woke” new curriculum, which teaches students that “all white people play a part in perpetuating systemic racism” and that American society was designed for the “impoverishment of people of color and enrichment of white people.”

Last week, TheBlaze broke news that a public school system near St. Paul, Minnesota separated a class full of middle schoolers into “privileged” and “targeted” groups in order to demonstrate how oppression is carried out against minorities in the U.S.

Biden Approves Release of $3 Billion in Iranian Funds President Trump Had Frozen

Obama’s appeasement of the largest state sponsor of terrorism officially returns as American foreign policy under Biden

InfoWars reports:

Joe Biden has released $3 billion of Iran’s funds in Iraq, Oman and South Korea that were tied up by President Trump’s sanctions.

Despite the fact Iran was likely behind the attack on a U.S. air base in northern Iraq last month, Biden has reportedly approved access to billions of dollars for Iran without any known preconditions.

From Al Arabiya:

US sanctions imposed by former President Donald Trump have prevented Iran from accessing tens of billions of its assets in foreign banks.

Iranian frozen assets in Iraq amount to more than $6 billion, according to Iranian officials.

The head of the Iran-South Korea Chamber of Commerce said in October Iranian frozen funds in South Korea are worth $8.5 billion and added that their release depended on the outcome of the US presidential election.

Iranian officials have not commented on the value of Iran’s frozen assets in Oman.

Iran’s economy has been hit hard since 2018 when Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers and reimposed sweeping sanctions on the country.

Iran’s chances of gaining access to billions of dollars of its frozen assets abroad have risen significantly since Trump, who pursued a policy of “maximum pressure” against Tehran, left the White House.

Biden’s renewed policy of appeasement toward Iran is similar to Barack Obama’s, who had sent Iran a pallet of $1.7 billion in cash in 2015 to coax them into the Iran nuclear deal.

Notably, Iran put an $80 million bounty on Trump’s head last year after he ordered the airstrike against Gen. Qassam Soleimani, leading some to wonder if Obama’s payment was used to fund the bounty against Trump.

Supreme Court Refuses to Hear Trump’s Last Remaining Election Challenge

The Supreme Court dismissed former President Donald Trump’s final remaining challenge to the 2020 presidential election results this morning, a lawsuit challenging the results in the state of Wisconsin.

Also on March 8, the high court declined to hear an emergency petition for mandamus brought by pro-Trump lawyer L. Lin Wood who on Dec. 30, 2020, asked the court to block the Jan. 5, 2021 runoff elections for Georgia’s two U.S. Senate seats. The races were won by Democrats who unseated two incumbent Republicans, handing control of that chamber to Democrats as President Joe Biden began his term of office.

The court, as is its custom when refusing to hear petitions, did not explain its actions March 8. No justices indicated they were dissenting from the dismissal orders.

In the case at hand, Trump v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, court file 20-883, Trump argued the commission violated the U.S. Constitution when it established rules for mail-in voting inconsistent with state law.

The commission and local election officials “implemented unauthorized, illegal absentee voting drop boxes, compelled illegal corrections to absentee ballot witness certificates by poll workers, and encouraged widespread voter misuse of ‘indefinitely confined’ status to avoid voter ID laws, all in disregard of the Legislature’s explicit command to ‘carefully regulate’ the absentee voting process,” Trump’s petition stated.

In the petition, Trump challenged the rules under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Article II of the U.S. Constitution, which states that “Each State shall appoint [electors for president and vice president] in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct.”

The dismissal came after the Supreme Court threw out a series of legal challenges on Feb. 22 to voting processes and results in several states left over from the recent presidential election cycle, as The Epoch Times previously reported.

Those cases concerned the presidential elections held in the battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

Good Government Starts With Self-Governance

The American Spectator reports:

We should foster the inner strength and responsibility that upholds the Founders’ vision.

Words spoken from the heart enter the heart.

When we try to win the hearts and minds of our fellow citizens for the cause of free self-government, we need to communicate that we have considered the real issues that concern them and we are not just reciting a manifesto or a bunch of approved talking points. When we try to sound the alarm about big government and the ever-more-intrusive state, many people still suspect that we ourselves may simply wish to be unaccountable to our fellow citizens.

What then is the persuasive idea that we have to communicate? It is a near-universal recognition that in order to have an ordered nation, one needs to have first individuals who rule themselves.

We can look at this idea in great civilizations around the world. Paraphrasing Plato’s thoughts on politics, Professor W. J. Korab-Karpowicz writes, “The best government can be founded only on beautiful and well-ordered souls.” A good government is not the result of a program or of the best employment of rhetoric, but on knowledge of the deepest sort, knowledge of our identity reflected in God.

Head east by a few thousand miles to hear the words of Lao Tzu, the revered mystic thinker and author of Tao te Ching:

He who would administer the kingdom, honoring it as he honors his own person, may be employed to govern it, and he who would administer it with the love which he bears to his own person may be entrusted with it.

The Biblical tradition teaches this idea with its own special emphases. The Book of Proverbs (16:32) teaches:

Better one who is slow to anger than one with might, one who rules his spirit than the captor of a city.

The Bible here sees force and anger as inferior to patience and self-governance. And here, we see that self-governance is meant in a very simple, straightforward way — a person’s mastering their own inner life, so that it is characterized by patience and coherent spiritual order.

Commenting on this verse, the medieval French-Jewish philosopher, scientist, and rabbi Gersonides asked a simple question:

How can someone who does not govern his own desires govern others?

And in the classic rabbinic work known as Ethic of the Fathers, a teaching from about 1900 years ago is recorded that cites this verse from Proverbs as well:

Ben Zoma would say: Who is wise? One who learns from every man. As is stated (Psalms 119:99): “From all my teachers I have grown wise, for Your testimonials are my meditation.”

Who is strong? One who overpowers his inclinations. As is stated (Proverbs 16:32), “Better one who is slow to anger than one with might, one who rules his spirit than the captor of a city.”

In this teaching, Ben Zoma is connecting the idea of self-governance with the Biblical concept of humanity being created in the image of God. Every person has something to teach, every person has a contribution, because every person is created in the image of the source of all knowledge and power.

This is the base for the step that is at the root of our republic — because each person has something to offer, and we become wise through learning from each person, then our government, which should be wise, should reflect what each person has to offer.

We learn further that the exercise of force is an inferior way to govern. External control can never equal the control that emerges from within, when each person internalizes the virtues that bring their soul to shine.

What we can bring uniquely to politics is a personal commitment to this kind of patience and the unshakeable conviction in the inability of outer force to properly govern a country. While might and force may be a temporary expedient, it is not the source and core of real political success. That can only come from the loving allegiance that is given fully and freely by those who come to know themselves as they truly are and care for the others in their state, and in their world, as they care for themselves.

All the other points we have to make come after this core realization. The Great Society cannot possibly substitute for the freely given love of the family and church structures that it unwisely tried to replace. Political correctness is as inferior in guiding education as the Inquisition was when it punished Galileo and tried to establish Aristotle as the final authority in all things. Intersectional theory can never capture hearts and minds and overcome bigotry in the way that a preacher’s impassioned words of truth do when he said, “I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Dr. Seuss’s book The Sneetches will continue to enchant as it teaches its lesson of transcending bigotry long after the lockstep cancel-culturistas have pulled down their own homes and moved on to saner concerns.

The common thread, the key insight lying behind all these secondary points flows from the first insight set forth above. From whichever angle it is seen, the core point is that most meaningful place to find true and good governance is within.

This is what moved the Founders. They embraced the idea that humanity at last would have a chance to really not rely on external order, but to actually build a nation on the truth of self-governance.

We embrace this along with them. With patience, with consistency, with courage, we must continue to teach with words and examples that try not to coerce from without but to touch that Godly spark within each of our fellow citizens.

Read the full article here.

Supreme Court sides with students in free speech case against Georgia college

The Supreme Court ruled Monday to allow students to sue for monetary damages against a Georgia college that blocked the distribution of religious pamphlets, giving new ammo for campus free-speech lawsuits.

The ruling increases the potential of liability and legal costs for schools if they are found to have infringed students’ First Amendment rights.

The high court held in an 8-1 ruling that the students could sue for nominal damages if the college violated a constitutional right. Nominal damages, sometimes valued as low as $1, are awarded as a form of punishment to show a party engaged in wrongdoing.

“Nominal damages provide the necessary redress for a completed violation of a legal right,” wrote Justice Clarence Thomas in the court’s 12-page opinion.

In the case, Chike Uzuegbunam claimed Georgia Gwinnett College restricted his pamphlet distribution to a designated area on campus and then stopped him altogether with claims he was “disturbing the peace.”

Another student, Joseph Bradford, decided not to proselytize on campus after witnessing Mr. Uzuegbunam’s ordeal with school officials.

They sued the college for violating the First Amendment. The college settled the litigation, agreeing to change its policy.

Lawyers for the former students then brought the legal battle to the high court, arguing they should be able to pursue nominal damages against the college — even in the amount of $1 — as a form of punishment and a declaration that the school acted unlawfully.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. dissented, saying the case should be dismissed as moot because the students no longer attend the school.

“There are just a few problems: Uzuegbunam and Bradford are no longer students at the college. The challenged restrictions no longer exist. And the petitioners have not alleged actual damages,” Justice Roberts wrote.

Kristen Waggoner, an attorney for Alliance Defending Freedom that represented the students, said the Supreme Court was right to hold officials accountable. 

“When public officials violate constitutional rights, it causes serious harm to the victims,” she said. “When such officials engage in misconduct but face no consequences, it leaves victims without recourse, undermines the nation’s commitment to protecting constitutional rights, and emboldens the government to engage in future violations.”

Top New York Lawmaker Calls for Gov. Cuomo’s Resignation

Newsmax reports:

The Democratic leader of New York’s Senate called for Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign Sunday amid mounting allegations of sexual harassment and undercounting COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins added her voice to a growing number of Cuomo’s foes and allies who believe the three-term Democrat should step down.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, also a Democrat, stopped short of echoing Stewart-Cousins but said in a statement that “it is time for the Governor to seriously consider whether he can effectively meet the needs of the people of New York.”

On Saturday, another woman who worked for Cuomo publicly accused him of inappropriate behavior, on the heels of other allegations in recent weeks.

“Every day there is another account that is drawing away from the business of government,” Stewart-Cousins said in a statement. “New York is still in the midst of this pandemic and is still facing the societal, health and economic impacts of it. We need to govern without daily distraction. For the good of the state Governor Cuomo must resign.”

Her push for his resignation came shortly after a Sunday press conference where Cuomo said it would be “anti-democratic” for him to step down.

“They don’t override the people’s will, they don’t get to override elections,” Cuomo said during a conference call with reporters when asked about members of his own party calling for him to step down. “I was elected by the people of New York state. I wasn’t elected by politicians.”

Cuomo said the next six months will determine how successfully New York emerges from the coronavirus pandemic. “I’m not going to be distracted because there is too much to do for the people,” he said, noting that the state must pass a budget within three weeks and administer 15 million more COVID-19 vaccines.

Asked about Ana Liss, who told The Wall Street Journal in a story published Saturday that when she worked as a policy aide to the governor between 2013 and 2015, Cuomo called her “sweetheart,” kissed her hand and asked personal questions including whether she had a boyfriend, Cuomo said such talk was “my way of doing friendly banter.”He acknowledged that societal norms have evolved and noted: “I never meant to make anyone feel any uncomfortable.”Liss told the Journal she initially thought of Cuomo’s behavior as harmless and never made a formal complaint about it, but it increasingly bothered her and she felt it was patronizing.“It’s not appropriate, really, in any setting,” she said. “I wish that he took me seriously.”Cuomo’s workplace conduct has been under intense scrutiny in recent days as several women have publicly told of feeling sexually harassed, or at least made to feel demeaned and uncomfortable by him. The state’s attorney general is investigating.Former adviser Lindsey Boylan, 36, said he made inappropriate comments on her appearance, once kissed her on the lips at the end of a meeting and suggested a game of strip poker as they sat with other aides on a jet flight. Another former aide, 25-year-old Charlotte Bennett, said Cuomo asked if she ever had sex with older men and made other comments she interpreted as gauging her interest in an affair.Another woman, who did not work for the state, described Cuomo putting his hands on her face and asking if he could kiss her after they met at a wedding.In a news conference last week, Cuomo denied ever touching anyone inappropriately, but apologized for behaving in a way that he now realized had upset people. He said he’d made jokes and asked personal questions in an attempt to be playful and frequently greeted people with hugs and kisses, as his father, Mario Cuomo, had done when he was governor.

Pope Francis visits Iraqi Christian town overrun by ISIS: Death never has the ‘last word’

Pope Francis visited the ruins of Mosul and a Christian community damaged by the Islamic State during the third day of his historic visit to Iraq Sunday. The day earlier, the pontiff visited the birthplace of Abraham, met with a prominent Shia cleric and gave a sermon in Baghdad. 

“How cruel it is that this country, the cradle of civilization, should have been afflicted by so barbarous a blow, with ancient places of worship destroyed,” the 84-year-old pope said Sunday, according to Reuters, as he met with Muslim and Christian residents in a destroyed portion of Mosul Sunday. 

Pope Francis flew into Mosul by helicopter and saw the ruins of homes and churches in a part of a town that used to thrive before the Islamic State’s takeover in 2014. Thousands were killed and millions were displaced by the brutal terror group. The Islamic State was accused of genocide against religious minorities and occupied Mosul from 2014 to 2017. 

In addition to visiting Mosul, Pope Francis also met with Christians in the Church of the Immaculate Conception in the predominantly Christian town of Qaraqosh, which was destroyed by the Islamic State but efforts have been made to help restore the town. The church itself was also damaged by the extremist group. 

“How much has been torn down! How much needs to be rebuilt! Our gathering here today shows that terrorism and death never have the last word,” Pope Francis said. “The last word belongs to God and to his Son, the conqueror of sin and death. Even amid the ravages of terrorism and war, we can see, with the eyes of faith, the triumph of life over death.”

The night before, Francis spoke on the Beatitudes, part of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount in the Gospel of Matthew, in a packed Chaldean cathedral in Baghdad. He said the blessed are not the wealthy, powerful or famous, but “the poor, those who mourn, the persecuted.”

Pope Francis (C) delivers a sermon at the Syriac Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Salvation (Sayidat al-Najat) in Baghdad at the start of the first ever papal visit to Iraq on March 5, 2021, accompanied by Cardinal Louis Raphael I Sako (C-R), Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans and head of the Chaldean Catholic Church, and Ignatius Joseph III Yunan (C-L), Syriac Catholic Patriarch of Antioch and all the East of the Syriacs. – In an address to the faithful in Baghdad, Pope Francis expressed his gratitude to his fellow clergy for supporting Iraq’s Christians, whose population has dwindled due to conflict. (Photo by Ayman HENNA / AFP) (Photo by AYMAN HENNA/AFP via Getty Images)

“Love is our strength, the source of strength for those of our brothers and sisters who here too have suffered prejudice, indignities, mistreatment and persecutions for the name of Jesus,”the pope said, according to a transcript posted by the Vatican.

“Such inequality, which has increased in our time, is unacceptable,” he said, adding that “the lowliest may be pardoned in mercy, but the mighty will be mightily tested.”

The more powerful are “subjected to rigorous scrutiny, while “the least are God’s privileged ones.”

He also explained that adversity confronts us with two temptations: “to run away” or “to fight.”

He then referred to Jesus’ disciples in Gethsemane, who fled while Peter drew his sword. 

“Yet neither flight nor the sword achieved anything,” the pope contended.

On Saturday afternoon, Pope Francis met with a prominent Iraqi Shia leader on the second day of his historic trip, the first by a Pope to Iraq. He also visited the ancient city of Ur, where Abraham was believed to have been born. 

The leader of the Catholic Church met with Iraq’s top Shiite cleric in the holy city of Najaf, after which the Shia-majority country declared March 6 as National Day of Tolerance and Coexistence. 

The pontiff met with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, a spiritual authority for Shiite Muslims in Iraq and other countries who is renowned for his promotion of peace.  

Vatican News reports that the pontiff and the grand ayatollah “were able to share perspectives and draw attention to the importance of friendship, mutual respect and dialogue, so that all people, no matter their ethnic, cultural or religious tradition, may live together in brotherhood and peace.”

Earlier during the day, Francis attended an interfaith meeting in the ancient city of Ur, urging Iraq’s Muslims, Christians and people from other faith communities to end their historic animosities and work together for peace and unity.

According to the Bible, Abraham, to whom Jews, Christians and Muslims trace their origin, was born in Ur.

“This blessed place brings us back to our origins, to the sources of God’s work, to the birth of our religions,” he said, according to the text of his remarks obtained by the Catholic News Agency. 

“Here, where Abraham our father lived, we seem to have returned home. It was here that Abraham heard God’s call; it was from here that he set out on a journey that would change history. We are the fruits of that call and that journey.” 

He added that “the greatest blasphemy” was “hating our brothers and sisters.”

“Hostility, extremism and violence are not born of a religious heart: they are betrayals of religion,” he stressed. “We believers cannot be silent when terrorism abuses religion; indeed, we are called unambiguously to dispel all misunderstandings.”

While Pope Francis has described his first travel to Iraq as a “pilgrimage of peace,” some radical militant groups have reportedly opposed his visit, which they say amounts to Western interference, according to BBC.

On the first day of his visit on Friday, the pope brought focus on the country’s dwindling Christian population that suffered mass killings by the Islamic State terror group and a mass exodus.

“The age-old presence of Christians in this land, and their contributions to the life of the nation, constitute a rich heritage that they wish to continue to place at the service of all,” said Francis after arriving in Baghdad, addressing Iraqi President Barham Salih and other officials and diplomats at the Presidential Palace on Friday.

“May there be an end to acts of violence and extremism, factions and intolerance! May room be made for all those citizens who seek to cooperate in building up this country through dialogue and through frank, sincere and constructive discussion.”

Pope Francis declared that it is “essential” to “ensure the participation of all political, social and religious groups and to guarantee the fundamental rights of all citizens.”

“May no one be considered a second-class citizen,” he told the authorities. 

There were about 1.5 million Christians in Iraq in 2003, and the number has reduced to roughly 250,000, according to estimates. 

Even after the defeat of the Islamic State in December 2017, many of Iraq’s Christians haven’t found their homeland livable. They have either not returned home or continued to leave the country.