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Christian aid groups vow to stay to help after US sudden withdrawal from Syria

(RNS) — Earlier this month, the pastor of a Kurdish Christian church in northeastern Syria gathered his congregation to decide whether to leave or stay as Turkish forces pressed into the region after U.S. troops had suddenly withdrawn. In an area threatened for years by both the Syrian civil war and the international fight against the Islamic State group, the church was now in the  path of a new offensive against the Kurdish militias that Turkey had branded as terrorists.

Syria, red, located in the Middle East (image by Addicted04, CC 3.0)

Just eight families told the pastor they planned to leave, according to Open Doors President and CEO David Curry, whose organization supports persecuted Christians in the region. Most decided to stay.

“The rest are staying to try to be salt and light and love in this community. So that kind of courage is the thing that sticks out to me,” said Curry.

Other stories have emerged from Syria: missiles falling on communities, churches attacked by ground forces and a feared resurgence of the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS, and other extremist groups, according to Curry.

Destruction in Homs, Syria (photo by Freedom House, CC 2.0)

Children have been injured and killed in bombings in towns along the border with Turkey, according to The Washington Post.

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