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Christians in Mosul-area town liberated from Isis celebrate Christmas 'I can’t believe I lived through all this evil': Worshippers celebrate Christmas in a town finally liberated from Isis
(2 days later)
Christians in a recently-liberated town near the Isis stronghold of Mosul have celebrated Christmas for the first time since 2013.  Outside the Saint Shmony Church the bells are ringing over a deserted town. Christmas Eve mass has just finished and the congregation file past the wooden pews, out through large iron doors and into the rainy courtyard. It’s cold but there is a sense of joy and relief to be back.
Hundreds of Iraqi worshippers still living in exile travelled to the main church in Bartella, an Assyrian Christian town just 13 miles east of Mosul, on Christmas Eve.  For the hundreds of worshippers, this is the first Christmas they’ve celebrated in their home town of Bartella since it was captured by the jihadists of Isis two and a half years ago. 
"It is a mix of sadness and happiness," Bishop Mussa Shemani told Reuters. "We are sad to see what has been done to our holiest places by our own countrymen, but at the same time we are happy to celebrate the first Mass after two years." But they cannot stay here it is still too dangerous to come here at night. They will return to Irbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region, 40 miles east where they fled to in panic in the summer of 2014 when Isis advanced across the ancient towns of the Nineveh plain. 
A new cross has been raised up over the Mar Shimoni church, which was desecrated by Isis militants during the occupation of the town. Religious symbols and statues of saints were defaced or destroyed. “They tried to remove us here but we refused,” said Father Sahar Qurkios, a Priest from the nearby St Mary’s church, as the mass came to a close. The mass is a symbolic gesture of defiance. “It is a challenge to the ones who thought we would leave and never come back,” he added.  
The congregants reportedly bore candles as they entered the church, where they sung hymns, prayed and heard a sermon from Bishop Shemani.  Bartella lies in ruins; homes are caved in, looted, surrounded by rubble or blackened with flames. On 22 December Isis targeted the nearby liberated district of Gogjali with suicide attacks, killing 23, showing that they can still penetrate behind Iraqi lines and cause havoc. Black humvees of the Iraqi Counter Terror Forces roll by on the main highway through the town and groups of soldiers stand huddled beside oil drum fires to keep warm.
Housewife Shurook Taqfiq said: "This is the best day of my life. Sometimes I thought it would never come." Isis seized Mosul in a lightning advance in June 2014 and in July, they gave the city’s ancient Christian community an ultimatum: the pay a tax, convert to Islam or face the sword. Instead nearly all of them fled and have spent the years since in exile. Ismail Ibrahim Mattai, 16, from Bartella, failed to escape with the rest of his family when Isis attacked, and was left stranded in Isis territory with his mother, Jandak Bahnan, 55.
But it will be some time before Ms Taqfiq can return to her home.  They were caught by Isis and moved around the city, forced to convert and pray. Ibrahim was imprisoned 12 times and endured regular beatings by Isis fighters using a piece of plastic piping, before finally escaping for good when the Iraqi Counter Terror Services advanced into Mosul at the beginning of November and they were able to sneak across the frontlines. The operation to retake Mosul began on 17 October.
The town was over-run by Isis as they surged northward over the Syrian border in 2016. Non-Sunni Muslims in Isis territory are told they must convert, pay a heavy fine or face execution, and so the population of the Christian town fled to the autonomous Kurdish region of Iraq.  During their initial interrogation by Isis, Ismail and his mother saw their captors executing a Shia Muslim prisoner. Later on, Ismail said his mother, who has epilepsy, was tortured by an Isis fighter who pierced her shoulders, hands and head with needles until the blood ran. “I can’t believe I lived through all this evil,” Ismail said from a shelter in Irbil where he now lives with his mother. “I can’t go back to Bartella now,” he added, “I want to leave Iraq to good care for my mother.”
Though the town was seized by the Western-backed coalition of Iraqi government forces, militias and Kurdish peshmerga forces in the first days of the ongoing operation to retake Mosul, it remains deserted.  This is a common feeling among Iraq’s Christians who left the country in large numbers after jihadist attacks and a general deterioration in security following the 2003 US-led invasion. But despite the pain and sadness of the last two and a half years, Father Sahar said that conversely, Isis has already healed the wounds it inflicted on Iraqi society, by bringing together different groups in defiance of them. 
Bartella is still in a war-zone, and armed guards surrounded the church. Most of the surrounding houses have been destroyed, and the worshippers arrived in a convoy of buses under heavy guard. Many more were unable to make the trip. “Isis made it better, now everyone comes here. We were invaded by Muslims but our town was also retaken by Muslims. Because of Isis, Muslims are coming here, taking pictured with us, looking at the cross and sharing our sorrow Isis did that.” He said.
In his sermon, Bishop Shemani said: "This is a dark cloud over Iraq. But we will stay here no matter what happens. God is with us."