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#0, Chaldean Catholic Church
Posted by The Assyrians on Nov-09-2000 at 00:31 AM

Chaldean Catholic Church

As early as the 13th century, Catholic missionaries — primarily Dominicans and Franciscans — had been active among the faithful of the Assyrian Church of the East. This resulted in a series of individual conversions of bishops and brief unions, but no permanent community was formed.
In the mid-15th century a tradition of hereditary patriarchal succession (passing from uncle to nephew) took effect in the Assyrian church. As a result, one family dominated the church, and untrained minors were being elected to the patriarchal throne.
When such a patriarch was elected in 1552, a group of Assyrian bishops refused to accept him and decided to seek union with Rome. They elected the reluctant abbot of a monastery, Yuhannan Sulaka, as their own patriarch and sent him to Rome to arrange a union with the Catholic Church. In early 1553 Pope Julius III proclaimed him Patriarch Simon VIII "of the Chaldeans" and ordained him a bishop in St. Peter's Basilica on April 9, 1553.
The new Patriarch returned to his homeland in late 1553 and began to initiate a series of reforms. But opposition, led by the rival Assyrian Patriarch, was strong. Simon was soon captured by the pasha of Amadya, tortured and executed in January 1555. Eventually Sulaka's group returned to the Assyrian Church of the East, but for over 200 years, there was much turmoil and changing of sides as the pro- and anti-Catholic parties struggled with one another. The situation finally stabilized only on July 5, 1830, when Pope Pius VIII confirmed Metropolitan John Hormizdas as head of all Chaldean Catholics, with the title of Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans, with his see in Mosul.
The Chaldean Catholics suffered heavily from massacres during World War I (1918) when four bishops, many priests, and about 70,000 faithful died.
The location of the Patriarchate shifted back and forth among several places over the centuries, but gained a measure of stability after it was set up at Mosul in 1830. In 1950 it moved to its present location in Baghdad after substantial migration of Chaldean Catholics from northern Iraq to the capital city.
The Chaldean Catholic Church's relationship with the Assyrian Church of the East has improved dramatically since the signing of a joint christological agreement between the Pope and the Assyrian Patriarch in Rome in November 1994. In August 1997 the Holy Synods of the two churches formally instituted a commission for dialogue to discuss pastoral cooperation at all levels .
Chaldean candidates for the priesthood study at St. Peter's Patriarchal Seminary in Baghdad. It no longer grants advanced degrees. There are centers offering courses in theology for the laity in Baghdad and Mosul. A proposal to set up a Catholic university in Iraq is being considered.
Today the largest concentration of these Catholics remains in Baghdad, Iraq. There are ten Chaldean dioceses in Iraq, four in Iran, and four others in the Middle East. The Chaldean (or East Syrian) liturgy is in use, with the addition of a number of Latin customs. The liturgical language is Syriac.
The approximately 65,000 Chaldeans in the United States have 12 parishes in the diocese of St. Thomas the Apostle of Detroit of the Chaldeans, under the leadership of Bishop Ibrahim Ibrahim (25585 Berg Road, Southfield, Michigan 48034). In other areas of the diaspora, Chaldeans are under spiritual supervision of the local Latin ordinaries. In Australia the Catholic Chaldean Chaplain is Fr. Emmanuel Khoshaba. He resides at 39 Major Road, Fawkner, Victoria 3060.
LOCATION: Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, Israel, Egypt, France, USA
HEAD: Patriarch Raphael I Bidawid (born 1922, elected 1989)
TITLE: Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans
RESIDENCE: Baghdad, Iraq
MEMBERSHIP: 304,000