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hmmm, and this is my "hometown.."

🔗Joseph Pehrson <jpehrson@...>

3/26/2003 7:58:48 PM

Saddam Once Received Key to Detroit

By ALEXANDRA R. MOSES
Associated Press Writer

Saddam Hussein donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to a Detroit
church and received a key to the city more than two decades ago, soon
after he became president of Iraq.

The events contrast sharply with the attack Saddam's regime is now
facing from a U.S.-led coalition, reflecting his changed relationship
with the United States since Washington helped Saddam covertly in his
1980-88 war with Iran.

Saddam's bond with Detroit started in 1979, when the Rev. Jacob Yasso
of Chaldean Sacred Heart congratulated Saddam on his presidency. In
return, Yasso said, his church received $250,000.

"He was very kind person, very generous, very cooperative with the
West. Lately, what's happened, I don't know," Yasso, 70, said
Wednesday. "Money and power changed the person."

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick did not immediately return a phone
message seeking comment.

Yasso said that at the time, Saddam made donations to Chaldean
churches around the world.

"He's very kind to Christians," Yasso said.

Chaldeans are a Catholic group in predominantly Muslim Iraq. Among
prominent Chaldeans is Iraq's deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz.

A year later, Yasso traveled with about two dozen people to Baghdad
as a guest of the Iraqi government, and they were invited to Saddam's
palace.

"We were received on the red carpet," Yasso said.

Yasso said he presented Saddam with the key to the city, courtesy of
then-Mayor Coleman Young. Then, Yasso said, he got a surprise.

"He said, `I heard there was a debt on your church. How much is it?'"
Yasso said.

Saddam donated another $200,000.

In the 1980s, Iraq and the United States were allied in their
mistrust of Iran, which held hundreds of Americans hostage under the
regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

Yasso called Saddam an American puppet.

"The job the United States trusted to him is done; now he's no good,"
he said.

There are tens of thousands of Chaldeans among the roughly 300,000
Americans of Middle Eastern descent in the Detroit area. About 1,200
families attend Sacred Heart, said Yasso, who came to the United
States in 1964.

Some church members disagreed that Saddam was once kind.

"When he became president, I leave everything and run away," said
Nadhim Franco, 66. "I came here. I was dishwasher. I came here, I was
happy."