Scholarships for Poor Christian Students in Iraq
For young Christians in Iraq, the inevitable question is this: Is it is really worthwhile to stay in my homeland? Many have already emigrated, and the number of Christians continues to decline, because so many families and young people can no longer see any future for themselves in their home country. But since 2015, the Catholic University in Erbil has been something of a “beacon and symbol of hope,” as Archbishop Bashar Warda puts it.
They started with just 11 students. Today, there are almost 800. This Catholic University has been established with the help of ACN, which, for example, funded the construction of one wing of the building, furnished the lecture halls and medical laboratories, and supplied computers for the library. ACN also helped cover the running costs while the university was becoming established.

To this day – and thanks to your help – students from poorer backgrounds are helped with scholarships and study grants. The many different courses offered include such subjects as pharmacy, laboratory medicine, English, computers and IT, economics, and architecture. The students – the majority of whom, but by no means all, are Christian – are able to gain an excellent academic formation, which also includes Christian social teaching. In this way, it is hoped not only to provide a future in Iraq for the young people themselves, but also to promote a spirit of social cohesion in a nation that, for so many years, has been marked by violence, and where thousands of Christians were ethnically cleansed by ISIS.
George is studying IT and thanks to your help, already benefiting from a scholarship. He says, “A good education is important everywhere, and not only in Iraq, but here, it can
help contribute to a better and brighter future. My experience has been very positive, and my goal is to achieve something, however little. Thanks to your help, I no longer need to worry about how to pay my university fees.”
For the next four years, we are hoping to support another 50 young Christians from poorer families, most of them from the Nineveh Plains region, who were expelled from their homes by the terrorists of Islamic State. This will cost $149,013 per year – nearly $3,000 per student for a full academic year. Please help us to give these young Christians in Iraq a future, so that they can become heralds of hope and peace in their own homeland!
211-02-79