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World Blind To Christianity'S Evaporating Roots In Holy Land

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  • World Blind To Christianity'S Evaporating Roots In Holy Land

    WORLD BLIND TO CHRISTIANITY'S EVAPORATING ROOTS IN HOLY LAND
    by Paul Stanway

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    December 28, 2010 Tuesday
    Final Edition

    One of the staples of television news over the Christmas holiday is
    coverage of celebrations in the Holy Land, providing a familiar and
    comforting nod to the ancient roots of Western civilization.

    Even in our increasingly secular society, images of Christians
    worshipping in Nazareth and Bethlehem provide welcome confirmation
    that we have a long and substantial history -- even if we're fuzzy
    on the details. It all looks so traditional and Christmassy.

    Unfortunately this comforting image depends to a large extent on a
    dwindling number of embattled Christian communities. We are, in fact,
    witnessing the twilight of Christianity across much of the Middle East.

    Not so long ago Bethlehem was a majority Christian town -- about
    80 per cent -- and now is down to less than a third. Nazareth, too,
    has seen its Christian population almost halved in recent decades,
    and in Jerusalem itself the Christian community has fallen from a
    slight majority 80 years ago to below two per cent today.

    Christians are leaving the West Bank, in particular, to escape the
    instability and a long-standing Muslim boycott of Christian businesses
    that has ravaged the community's economic foundations.

    Thankfully this modern day exodus is mostly peaceful, which puts it
    in marked contrast to much of the history of Christian depopulation
    in the Middle East.

    This is history the West has largely forgotten and ignored. Your
    average European or North American will certainly be more familiar
    with the story of the Palestinians and the much-publicized grievances
    of the Arab world in general.

    Yet we're not talking ancient history here.

    Many people will have heard something of the Armenian genocide in
    Turkey in the years following the First World War, but few would know
    it was part of a larger religious and ethnic cleansing that also saw
    the mass slaughter of Greek and Assyrian Christians.

    Almost three million Armenian, Greek and Assyrian Christians perished
    in what are now Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. In the first quarter
    of the 20th century Christians represented about one-third of the
    Syrian population, but now they account for less than 10 per cent. In
    Turkey there were about two million Christians in 1920, now reduced
    to just a few thousand.

    Even more recently, the campaign of violence and persecution against
    Iraqi Christians is surely one of the most under-reported stories
    since the invasion of 2003. Iraq's Christians once made up three per
    cent of its population, and now account for half of its refugees.

    About 500,000 Iraqi Christians have fled that country over the past
    seven years, and it's not hard to see why. As recently as the end
    of October, 52 people were killed when security forces tried to free
    more than 100 Catholics taken hostage during a Sunday mass in Baghdad.

    Little wonder, then, at the news that only one church in Baghdad was
    planning to celebrate Christmas this year.

    London's Daily Telegraph newspaper recently quoted Archbishop of
    Canterbury Rowan Williams on the stunning lack of interest in the
    West over the decline of Christianity in its homeland. Most people
    are unaware that it was the faith of millions across the region
    before Islam, and has clung on tenaciously through many centuries
    of persecution.

    "The level of ignorance about Middle-Eastern Christianity in the
    West is very, very high", he said. "A good many people think the
    only Christians in the Middle East are converts or missionaries. I
    have heard some quite highly placed people, who ought to know better,
    saying that."

    Indeed. The notion that Christianity is a foreign, Western implant
    in the Middle East -- and a pretty recent one at that -- is very
    apparent. That also happens to be the excuse used by militant Islam
    to persecute the region's remaining Christians, so they suffer as
    surrogates of a society that barely knows they exist.

    So with time, it seems Christians are destined to effectively disappear
    from the region that produced the faith. As one report puts it,
    "there are today more Christians from Jerusalem living in Sydney,
    Australia, than in Jerusalem itself."

    Perhaps the one place a significant number of Christians may remain is
    Egypt, where Coptic Christians still live in large numbers. Accurate
    figures from the Egyptian government seem deliberately hard to come
    by, but it's likely the Copts -- the Christian remnant of Egypt's
    pre-Islamic people -- still make up somewhere between 12 and 18 per
    cent of the population.

    Apart from Egypt, Christians now make up about five per cent of the
    population in the Middle East, sharply reduced from 20 per cent in
    the early 20th century. At the present rate of decline, the Middle
    East's 12 million Christians will likely drop to six million by 2020.

    With so much of our news and current affairs concentrated on the
    world's embattled minorities, it seems strange indeed that we are so
    unfamiliar with the plight of these ancient Christian peoples of the
    Middle East.

    Perhaps they are inconvenient reminders of a religious and cultural
    past we would rather forget. Except for those fleeting images at
    Christmas.

    Paul Stanway is a veteran Alberta journalist. His column runs every
    Tuesday.




    From: A. Papazian
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