he'll give preference to christian refugees. evelyn and her family get by on an income from their simple shop. she isn't jumping at the offer. i don't want to go abroad, she says. i love iraq. my country. it's the country of our parents. camp residents have nailed crosses and iraqi flags to their temporary homes, eager to stress they are iraqis first, christians second. some of the people here have been in this camp for the last two and a half years. it's a fairly bleak existence, but despite that, some of them say even given the chance as christians to move to the united states, they still wouldn't go there. evelyn's husband samir shares her skepticism.