Forfølgelsen av kristne - februar 2012

Hans Rustad

Half of Iraq’s indi­genous Chris­ti­ans are gone, due to the unleashed for­ces of jihad [holy war]. Many Chris­ti­ans fled to nearby Syria; yet, as the Assad regime comes under attack from al-Qaeda and others, thejihad now seeps into Syria, where Chris­ti­ans are expe­ri­en­cing a level of perse­cution unpre­ce­den­ted in the nation’s modern his­tory. Simi­larly, some 100,000 Chris­tian Copts have fled their native Egypt since the overthrow of the Muba­rak regime; and in northern regions of Nige­ria, where the jihadi group, Boko Haram, has been slaugh­te­ring Chris­ti­ans, up to 95% of the Chris­tian popu­la­tion has fled.

Mean­while, the “big news” con­cer­ning the Mus­lim world in the month of February—the news that floo­ded the main­stream media and had U.S. poli­ti­ci­ans, begin­ning with Pre­si­dent Obama, fluste­red, angry, and full of regret—was that some written-in [in Islam it is for­bid­den to write any­thing in a Korans] in Afgha­ni­stan were bur­ned by U.S. sol­di­ers because impri­so­ned Mus­lim inma­tes had been using them “to faci­li­tate extre­mist com­mu­ni­ca­tions.”

Cate­go­rized by theme, February’s batch of Mus­lim perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans around the world inclu­des (but is not limi­ted to) the following accounts, listed in alpha­be­ti­cal order by coun­try, not severity.

Church Attacks

Alge­ria: Armed men rai­ded and ran­sacked a church that had been for­mally rec­og­nized since 1958, and dis­mant­led the cru­ci­fix. The pas­tor and his family, trap­ped inside, feared that “they could kill us.” The pas­tor “has been repeatedly threate­ned and attacked since being ordai­ned in 2007. In the sum­mer of 2009, his wife was bea­ten and seriously inju­red by a group of unk­nown men. Then, in late 2011, heaps of trash were thrown over the compound walls while an angry mob shouted death threats.”

Egypt: Thou­sands of Mus­lims attacked a Cop­tic church, and deman­ded the death of its pas­tor, who, along with “nearly 100 ter­ro­rized Copts sought refuge inside the church, while Mus­lim rio­ters were pel­ting the church with sto­nes in an effort to break into the church, assault the Copts and torch the buil­ding.” They did this because a Chris­tian girl who, accor­ding to Isla­mic law, auto­ma­ti­cally became a Mus­lim when her fat­her con­verted to Islam, fled from her fat­her and was rumo­red to be hiding in the church.

Iran: Iran’s Mini­s­try of Intel­li­gence has orde­red the last two offi­ci­ally registe­red churches hol­ding Fri­day Farsi-language ser­vices in Teh­ran — Farsi being the nation’s Per­sian lan­guage — to dis­con­ti­nue the lan­guage: “Fri­day ser­vices in Teh­ran attracted the city’s con­verts to Chris­tia­nity as well as Mus­lims inte­re­sted in Chris­tia­nity, as Fri­day is most Ira­ni­ans’ day off during the week.” Ban­ning church use of Farsi pre­vents most Ira­ni­ans from hea­ring the Gospel.

Kaza­kh­stan: A new report notes that “Churches are being rai­ded, lea­ders fined and Chris­tian lite­ra­ture con­fis­cated as the Kazakh aut­hori­ties enforce new laws inten­ded furt­her to rest­rict reli­gious free­dom in the country.”

Kuwait: A par­lia­men­ta­rian is set to sub­mit a draft law ban­ning the con­struc­tion of churches. Ori­gi­nally, Osama al-Munawer announ­ced on Twit­ter his plans on sub­mit­ting a draft law cal­ling for the rem­oval of all churches in Kuwait. How­e­ver, he later “cla­ri­fied” his state­ment, say­ing that exis­ting churches can remain, but the con­struc­tion of new ones must be banned.

Mace­do­nia: A two-century-old Chris­tian church famed for its valuable icons was set on fire in response to “a car­ni­val in which Ortho­dox Chris­tian men dressed as women in bur­kas and mocked the Koran.” Ear­lier, “per­pe­tra­tors attacked a[nother] church in the nearby vil­lage of Labu­nista, destroy­ing a cross stan­ding out­side” and “also defaced a Mace­do­nian flag out­side Struga’s muni­ci­pal buil­ding, replacing it with a green flag repre­sen­ting Islam.”

Nige­ria: A Mus­lim suicide bom­ber for­ced his way into the grounds of a major church, kil­ling two women and an 18-month-old child during Sun­day mor­ning ser­vice; 50 people were inju­red in the blast. In a sepa­rate inci­dent, Mus­lims deto­nated a bomb out­side a churchbuil­ding, inju­ring five, one cri­ti­cally: “The bomb, plan­ted in a par­ked car, was left by sus­pec­ted mem­bers of Boko Haram, which seeks to impose sha­ria [Isla­mic law] throug­hout Nigeria.”

Pakis­tan: A dozen armed Mus­lims stor­med a church, seriously woun­ding two Chris­ti­ans: one man was shot and is in cri­ti­cal con­dition, the other risks having his arm ampu­tated; anot­her church mem­ber was thrown from the roof, after being struck repeatedly with a rifle butt. “The extre­mist raid was spar­ked by char­ges that [the] church was try­ing to evan­ge­lize Mus­lims in an attempt to con­vert them to Chris­tia­nity. The com­mu­nity seve­ral times in the past has been the sub­ject of assault and the pas­tor and his family the sub­ject of death threats.” As usual, the police, instead of pur­su­ing the per­pe­tra­tors, have ope­ned an investi­ga­tion against the pas­tor and 20 other church members.

Syria: Some 30 armed and mas­ked jiha­dis attacked a Cat­h­o­lic monas­tery—unpre­ce­den­ted in Syria’s modern history—demanding money. Accor­ding to the Cat­h­o­lic Arch­b­is­hop of Dama­scus, “the situa­tion in the coun­try is spi­raling out of con­trol as the armed oppo­sition spre­ads its influ­ence to dif­fe­rent regions of the state.”

Dhim­mi­tude

[Gene­ral Abuse, Debase­ment, and Suppres­sion of non-Muslims as Second-Class, “Tole­rated” Citizens]

Bang­la­desh: Three Ame­ri­can Chris­ti­ans were inju­red after their car was attacked by a Mus­lim mob who sus­pec­ted they were con­ver­ting Mus­lims into Chris­ti­ans: at least 200 angry locals chased the mis­sio­na­ries’ car and threw sto­nes at it, lea­ving three with cuts from bro­ken glass.

Egypt: Rat­her than punish­ing the per­pe­tra­tors who ope­ned fire on and ran tanks over Chris­ti­ans pro­tes­ting the con­stant destruc­tion of their churches, the govern­ment arrested and is try­ing two priests in con­nec­tion to the Maspero mas­sacre. And alt­hough Egypt’s new par­lia­ment has 498 seats, only six are Copts, even though Copts make up at the very least 10% of the popu­la­tion, and so should have approxi­mately 50 seats. Finally, indi­ca­ting how bad the situa­tion is, Cop­tic pro­te­sters orga­nized a demon­stra­tion on Tues­day in front of Par­lia­ment to pro­test “the dis­appea­rance and abduc­tion of Cop­tic girls.”

Indo­ne­sia: The Isla­mist Pro­sperous Jus­tice Party com­plai­ned about the Red Cross’ sym­bol of a cross; they said it was too iden­ti­fi­able with Chris­tian cul­ture and tra­ditions. Red Cross volunte­ers and acti­vists rejected the claim, say­ing that any chan­ges to the logo would be “tanta­mount to giving in to the extremists.”

Iran: A pas­tor of a major house church move­ment began ser­ving a five-year pri­son sent­ence for “cri­mes against the order.” Accor­ding to one acti­vist, “His ‘cri­mes’ were being a pas­tor and pos­sess­ing Chris­tian mate­ri­als.” He is being bea­ten in jail and has grown ill, to the point where his hair has “tur­ned fully gray.”

Israel: A mob of around 50 Pale­sti­nian Mus­lims sto­ned a group of Chris­tian tou­rists atop Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, woun­ding three Israeli police offi­cers in the process. The attack is belie­ved to have been insti­ga­ted by the for­mer Mus­lim mufti of Jerusalem.

Pakis­tan: Yet anot­her Chris­tian woman, a teacher, has been targe­ted by Mus­lims on alle­ga­tions that she bur­ned a Koran. A mob stor­med her school in an attempt to abduct her, but police took her into custody. Also, a Chris­tian stu­dent who mis­sed the grade to get into medi­cal school by less than 0.1% would have earned 20 extra points if he had memo­rized the Koran—although no bonus points for having simi­lar know­ledge of the Bible.

Tur­key: A new report notes that “Chris­ti­ans in Tur­key con­ti­nue to suf­fer attacks from pri­vate citizens, discri­mi­na­tion by lower-level govern­ment offi­ci­als and vili­fi­ca­tion in both school tex­t­books and news media.” The report adds that there is a “root of into­le­rance” in Tur­kish society toward adhe­rents of non-Islamic fai­ths: “The rem­oval of this root of into­le­rance is an urgent pro­blem that still awaits to be dealt with.”

Turk­me­nistan: A 77-year-old Chris­tian man was detai­ned and ques­tio­ned by police for six hours after he tried to print copies of a small book of Chris­tian poe­try. He was for­ced to write a state­ment and ban­ned from tra­vel­ling out­side his home region while the case is being investigated.

Uganda: Not long after a pas­tor was attacked with acid and blin­dedby Mus­lims scream­ing, “Allahu Akbar!” [“Allah is Grea­ter!”], his fri­end,anot­her pas­tor, was shot at by “Isla­mic extre­mists” in what is being descri­bed as “a new wave of perse­cution against Chris­ti­ans in Uganda.”

Mur­der, Apos­tasy Issues, and More

Egypt: Two Chris­ti­ans were kil­led “after a Mus­lim rack­et­eer ope­ned fire on them for refu­sing to pay him extor­tion money.” The local bis­hop “hold[s] security for­ces and local Mus­lims fully respon­s­ible for ter­ro­ri­zing the Copts living there, who are con­ti­nuously being sub­jected to ter­ror and kidnapping.”

Iran: After endu­ring five mon­ths of uncer­tainty in a pri­son, a Chris­tian con­vert who was arrested in her home by security aut­hori­ties has been sent­en­ced to two years in pri­son by the Revo­lu­tio­nary Court in Teh­ran. Aut­hori­ties furt­her arrested six to ten Chris­tian con­verts from Islam while they were meeting for worship at a home in the southern city of Shiraz.

And of course Pas­tor Yousef Nadar­khani awaits exe­cution for refu­sing to renounce Christianity.

Nige­ria: A 79-year-old Chris­tian woman and choir sin­ger was found dead at her home, her throat slit with a note in Ara­bic left on her chest read­ing: “We will get you soon,” a mes­sage belie­ved to be directed at her son, a pas­tor at a local church.

Soma­lia: Al-Shabaab Mus­lims behea­ded a 26-year-old Mus­lim con­vert to Chris­tia­nity who had wor­ked for a Chris­tian huma­ni­ta­rian orga­niza­tion that the ter­ro­rist orga­niza­tion had ban­ned. He is at least the third Chris­tian to be behea­ded in Soma­lia in recent months.

Tur­key: A 12-year-old boy, Hus­sein, pub­licly pro­fessed his Chris­tian faith by wea­ring a sil­ver cross neck­lace in school. Accor­dingly, Mus­lim class­ma­tes began taun­ting and spit­ting on him. When the boy threate­ned to report one of the bul­lies, the bully’s fat­her threate­ned to kill him. His reli­gion teacher beat him severely: “Like in most Isla­mic countries, stu­dents of all fai­ths are requi­red to attend Isla­mic stu­dies in school. Those who refuse to recite the Koran and Isla­mic pray­ers are often bea­ten by the teacher. And so it was for Hus­sein. He said he was punis­hed regu­larly with a two-foot long rod because he wouldn’t say the Isla­mic Shahada.”

About this Series

Because the perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans in the Isla­mic world is on its way to reaching epi­de­mic pro­portions, “Mus­lim Perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans” was devel­o­ped to col­late some—by no means all—of the instan­ces of Mus­lim perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans that sur­face each month. It ser­ves two purposes:

  1. To docu­ment that which the main­stream media does not: the habi­tual, if not chro­nic, Mus­lim perse­cution of Christians.
  2. To show that such perse­cution is not “ran­dom,” but sys­te­ma­tic and interrelated—that it is rooted in a world­view inspi­red by Sharia.

Accor­dingly, whate­ver the anecdote of perse­cution, it typi­cally fits under a spec­i­fic theme, inclu­ding hatred for churches and other Chris­tian sym­bols; sexual abuse of Chris­tian women; for­ced con­ver­sions to Islam; apos­tasy and blasphemy laws that cri­mi­na­lize and punish with death to those who “offend” Islam; theft and plun­der in lieu of jizya (finan­cial tri­bute expec­ted from non-Muslims); over­all expecta­tions for Chris­ti­ans to behave like cowed dhim­mis, or second-class, “tole­rated” citizens; and simple vio­lence and mur­der. Some­ti­mes it is a combination.

Because these accounts of perse­cution span dif­fe­rent eth­ni­cities, lan­gua­ges, and locales—from Morocco in the West, to India in the East, and throug­hout the West wher­e­ver there are Mus­lims — it should be clear that one thing alone binds them: Islam — whether the strict appli­ca­tion of Isla­mic Sha­ria law, or the supre­macist cul­ture born of it.

Ray­mond Ibra­him is a Shill­man Fel­low at the David Horowitz Free­dom Cen­ter and an Associate Fel­low at the Middle East Forum.

Pre­vious Reports:

January, 2012

Decem­ber, 2011

Novem­ber, 2011

Octo­ber, 2011

Sep­tem­ber, 2011

August, 2011

July, 2011

 

 

Opp­rin­ne­lig:

Mus­lim Perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans: February 2012
by Ray­mond Ibra­him
March 16, 2012 at 4:00 am

http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2949/muslim-persecution-of-christians-february-2012

 

 


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