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Creche Without Christians: Christian Persecution in the Middle East

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  • Creche Without Christians: Christian Persecution in the Middle East

    Assyrian International News Agency
    Dec 26 2007


    Creche Without Christians: Christian Persecution in the Middle East


    In the two millennia since the child's birth in a humble manger in
    Bethlehem, the good news of Christianity has spread to every
    continent, inspiring more followers than any other religion today.
    But the lands that once were the cradle of Christianity have turned
    distinctively inhospitable to the faith. Fiercely intolerant variants
    of Islam are taking hold in the region, many of them fueled with
    ideology and funds from Saudi and Iranian extremists.

    >From Morocco to the Persian Gulf, we are seeing the rapid erosion of
    Christian populations, thought to now number no more than 15 million.
    These are the communities that have disproportionately been the
    region's modernizers, the mediators bridging east and west, its
    educators and academics, as the Lebanese Catholic scholar Habib Malik
    observes. For empirical evidence he has to look no further than his
    own father, a principal drafter of the Universal Declaration of Human
    Rights.

    The loss of Middle Eastern Christianity has profound meaning for the
    Church. But it should not be a matter of concern to Christians only.
    These Christian communities, along with a handful of other non-Muslim
    minority groups, such as the Bahais, Mandeans, Yizidis, Jews,
    together with the anti-Islamist Muslims, are the front-line in the
    terrible worldwide struggle taking place today between Islamist
    totalitarianism and individual rights and freedoms. The extinction of
    these ancient church communities will lead to ever more extremism
    within the region and polarization from the non-Muslim world. This
    will hurt us all.

    The new religious survey, Freedom in the World, produced by the
    Center for Religious Freedom shows that while some Muslim governments
    do respect religious freedom, none are to be found in the Middle
    East. Israel is the only "free" country, and their Christian numbers
    are increasing.

    The survey ranks Jordan, Oman, Morocco, and Lebanon as "partly free."
    Here the Christian populations are either miniscule and largely
    foreign, or, in the case of Lebanon, shrinking precipitously from
    majority to about a third of the population in recent decades.

    The rest of the region is further down the freedom scale. In Saudi
    Arabia, Yemen, Algeria, and Tunisia there are virtually no indigenous
    Christian communities left, though some converts there carry out
    religious lives in the catacombs and expats quietly hold services. In
    Saudi Arabia, religious intolerance is official state policy.

    Over half of Iraq's one million Christians have fled since a
    coordinated bombing of their churches in August 2004 was followed by
    sustained violence against them. A Catholic Chaldean bishop raised
    the possibility last month that we may now be witnessing "the end of
    Christianity in Iraq." Anglican Canon Andrew White, who leads a
    Baghdad ecumenical congregation, agrees: "All of my leadership were
    originally taken and killed -- all dead," he asserted in November.

    Iraq's Christian community, which dates from the Apostle Thomas, is
    not simply caught in the cross hairs of a sectarian civil war between
    Shiites and Sunnis. It is targeted for its non-Muslim faith -- a
    reality U.S. policy fails to acknowledge. An extremist Sunni fatwa
    issued to Christians this year in a Baghdad neighborhood could not be
    clearer: "If you do not leave your home, your blood will be spilled.
    You and your family will be killed.'"

    The Christian presence in Palestine may hold out no more than 15
    years, according to Israeli human rights lawyer Justus Weiner, due to
    increasing Muslim persecution and maltreatment. Amidst a Muslim
    population of 1.4 million, some 3,000 Greek Orthodox live in the
    Hamas-run Gaza strip. An extreme Wahhabi-style group wearing
    seventh-century robes recently emerged, calling them "Crusaders" and
    vowing to drive them out. It has succeeded in killing several
    Christians in recent months, including a prominent member of the
    community, Rami Khader.

    The West Bank is hardly better. "No one city in the Holy Land is more
    indicative of the great exodus of Christians than Bethlehem, which
    fell under full Palestinian control last decade as part of the Oslo
    Accords," states Weiner. This town of 30,000 is now less than
    20-percent Christian, after centuries in which Christians were the
    majority. In the West Bank's only all-Christian town, now called
    Taybeh and once known by the Biblical name Ephraim, a Muslim mob from
    a neighboring village torched 14 houses last September to avenge the
    honor of a Muslim woman allegedly impregnated by her Christian
    employer.

    Demographic decline isn't perfectly correlated with religious
    repression. Lower birth rates, conversions, and some voluntary
    emigration also account for shrinking numbers of Christians. Israel's
    barrier fence, erected relatively recently in its history in response
    to terrorist attacks, is a hardship and is commonly blamed for the
    Christian exodus from Palestine.

    But when the decline is so dramatic, when only the Christian and
    other non-Muslim populations are dwindling and when this pattern
    holds in country after country, the facts on the ground deserve a
    closer look. There we see a region-wide, steady, grinding economic,
    legal, and social discrimination, and political disempowerment
    punctuated by horrific acts of terror by social forces that
    governments are unable or unwilling to control. The smaller a
    minority in the brutally sectarian world of the Middle East, the more
    vulnerable it is and the more rapid its decline.

    Egypt, with some ten million Copts, has the region's largest
    Christian minority. The state systematically discriminates against
    them and frustrates their efforts to build and repair churches.
    Fanatical Islamist groups rise up periodically and threaten or kill
    priests and individual Christian believers, especially converts, and
    the state often fails to bring justice in such cases. Earlier this
    month, an Islamist website urged a terrorist attack on the Cairo
    office of the Knights of Malta, a Catholic charitable group founded
    in 1087 to care for poor and sick pilgrims to the Holy Land. Posting
    photos of the Malta office, it exhorted: "Do not stint on your
    attacks, Egyptians, either with car or truck bombs."

    Turkey, where Paul preached to the Ephesians and Galatians, once the
    seat of the Eastern Christianity known as Byzantium, has one of the
    smallest Christian minorities. It is now home to less than 75,000
    Christians, out of a population of 70 million. The persecutions, even
    genocide, of the Assyrians, Pontic Greeks and Armenians, the
    population exchange with Greece and other mass Christian emigrations
    of the last century, all took their toll. Things are quieter today
    for the Christians. To be sure the Orthodox Church is being slowly
    strangled by the state closure of its seminary, but the violence is
    no longer systematic or official. It is more targeted, and carried
    out by zealous young men acting outside the law. Last Sunday, Italian
    Catholic priest, Fr. Adriano Franchini, was stabbed after Mass at a
    church in Izmir. In April three evangelicals were mutilated and
    killed at their Christian publishing house.

    Last June, speaking of Iraq but in words applicable to the region,
    the pope told President Bush of his concerns that "the society that
    was evolving would not tolerate the Christian religion." Chaldean
    Bishop Audo elaborated: "This is very sad and very dangerous for the
    church, for Iraq and even for Muslim people, because it means the end
    of an old experience of living together."

    Christian hearts are filled with joy and wonder reflecting on the
    first Christmas. They should also make room in this season for the
    persecuted faithful of the Middle East.

    By Nina Shea
    National Review Online

    Nina Shea is the director of the Center for Religious Freedom at the
    Hudson Institute.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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