Turkey closes border to Syrian refugees

Syrians who are looking to find safe refuge in Turkey will find that they are no longer allowed to enter the country.

According to the Catholic News Agency (CNA), several families, among which are Christians, are currently stranded on the Syria-Turkey border when Turkish authorities decided last week to close the border after the Islamic State took more Syrian hostages.

"There are 200 families who were running away and trying to escape to Turkey, but the border is closed for Syrians. No Syrian can cross into Turkey," Archbishop Jacques Behnan Hindo of the diocese of Hassakeh told CNA in a phone interview.

Last week, the number of Syrians held hostage by ISIS increased to 250 following sustained attacks on villages and cities in the Al-Hasakah region. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Tuesday last week that 90 of these hostages were Assyrian Christians and were kidnapped in two villages inhabited by Christian minorities near the city of Tal-Tamr.

Nineteen of these Assyrian Christian hostages were released over the weekend after the Islamic State "processed" them through the Sharia court, Reuters reported.

The Archbishop said that the Islamic State appears to target villages that are inhabited by Christians. He told CNA of an attack on two Christian villages at 4:00 am last Thursday in which more hostages were taken by ISIS.

Archbishop Hindo said that ISIS took the abducted families to their Syrian stronghold in Sheddadi, 25 miles south of Hassakeh.

Islamic State fighters eventually managed to seize eight more villages by the end of last week, CNA reported.

The hostage taking comes as the Syrian Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) and its Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga allies make steady advances on ISIS-held positions. The YPG and the Peshmerga, with air support from United States-led coalition bombers, have so far retaken 19 more villages since expelling the Islamic State presence in the border town of Kobani in January. 

News
The first Christmas song to be sung in churches
The first Christmas song to be sung in churches

Every Christmas, people sing the song “While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night”. Unlike many other songs and carols that include elements of non-biblical tradition and myth, this song is pure Scripture. It was the first Christmas song authorised to be sung in the Church of England. This is the story …

The story of the Christmas Truce of 1914
The story of the Christmas Truce of 1914

On Christmas Eve in 1914, many men were in the trenches fighting the war, but the spirit of Christmas halted the conflict for a brief period. This is the story …

Report highlights injustices experienced by Christians in the Holy Land
Report highlights injustices experienced by Christians in the Holy Land

Jerusalem Church leaders have released a report detailing the struggles and challenges currently faced be Christians living in the Holy Land.

Have you lost the wonder of Christmas?
Have you lost the wonder of Christmas?

For you who have been followers of Jesus Christ for a long time, maybe the pain and suffering of this world and the darkness you have had to live through this past year has gotten you down to the point of complete and utter discouragement. But all is not lost.