Forfølgelse av kristne i mars

Raymond Ibrahim

The war on Chris­tia­nity and its adhe­rents in the Mus­lim world rages on. In March alone, Saudi Arabia’s hig­hest Isla­mic legal aut­hority decreed that churches in the region must be destroyed; jiha­dis [holy war­riors] in Nige­ria said they “are going to put into action new efforts to strike fear into the Chris­ti­ans of the power of Islam by kid­nap­ping their women”; Ame­ri­can teachers in the Middle East were mur­de­red for being Chris­tian or tal­king about Chris­tia­nity; churches were ban­ned or bom­bed, and nuns ter­ro­rized by knife-wielding Mus­lim mobs. Chris­ti­ans con­ti­nue to be attacked, arrested, impri­so­ned, and kil­led for allegedly “blasphe­ming” Islam’s prop­het Muhammad; for­mer Mus­lims con­ti­nue to be attacked, arrested, impri­so­ned, and kil­led for con­ver­ting to Christianity.

The extent of this perse­cution is vir­tually unk­nown in the West, due to the main­stream media’s well-documented bia­ses: the main­stream media knows that if they do not ignore or at best whi­tew­ash the non­stop perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans under Islam, their nar­ra­tive of Islam as the “reli­gion of peace” would be quickly under­mined. Last month alone, the New York Times ran an anti-Catholic ad, but refu­sed to pub­lish a nearly iden­ti­cal ad directed at Islam; the BBC admit­ted it mocks Jesus but will never mock Muhammad; and U.S. sit­coms have been expo­sed as bashing Chris­tia­nity, but never Islam.

Cate­go­rized by theme, March’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:

Apos­tasy, Blasphemy, and Pro­se­ly­tism: Death and Prison

Egypt: A Chris­tian man accu­sed of insul­ting Islam’s prop­het Muhammad was sent­en­ced to six years in pri­son. Alt­hough under Egyp­tian law “defa­ma­tion of reli­gion” is a mis­deme­anor, punis­hable by a pri­son sent­ence of one month to three years, the judge doubled the sent­ence to appease Mus­lims, inclu­ding an angry 2,500-strong mob that ter­ro­rized the cour­troom, and deman­ding death for the Chris­tian. Simi­larly, an “anti-Christianization course” was ini­tia­ted by an orga­niza­tion “spec­ia­li­zing in the resi­stance to Chris­tia­nity,” so that Mus­lims will not be “throw[n] under the feet of the Cross.” Accor­ding to an instruc­tor, “Recur­ring attempts at the uni­ver­sity in Aswan to con­vert Mus­lims to Chris­tia­nity or pro­voke them with mis­le­ad­ing infor­ma­tion was the impe­tus behind the course.”

India: A young woman was attacked and thrown out of her home “for daring to give thanks for hea­ling in Christ’s name” in a pre­do­mi­nantly Mus­lim vil­lage; “her parents hel­ped Isla­mic extre­mists to beat her nearly uncon­scious”: In a vil­lage where “hard-line Mus­lims have threate­ned to kill the 25 fami­lies who initi­ally showed inte­rest in Christ, lea­ving only five fright­e­ned Chris­tian fami­lies,” the woman was attacked when retur­ning from church, and cal­led “pagan, among other ver­bal abu­ses.” The mob also har­assed and threate­ned the Chris­tian woman who had allegedly “lured” her to con­vert to Christianity.

Iran: In a rare crackdown on a con­cen­trated area, in what is seen as a tac­tic to dis­courage Mus­lims from atten­ding offi­cial churches, aut­hori­ties have arrested 12 more con­verts to Chris­tia­nity living in the country’s third lar­gest city of Isfa­han, Among the latest known Chris­tian con­verts detai­ned in the Isfa­han area is a man who was reportedly taken into custody on March 2 while retur­ning home from his work: “Security aut­hori­ties rai­ded his home and seized him wit­hout explanation.”

Iraq: An Ame­ri­can teacher was shot to death by an 18-year-old stu­dent at a pri­vate Chris­tian aca­demy. He “was a devout Chris­tian who fre­quently praised Chris­tia­nity and prayed in the class­room, and his fri­ends in Wash­ing­ton said his evan­ge­lism is what moti­vated him to teach in Iraq.” Accor­ding to stu­dents, “Mr. Jeremiah’s hands were still fol­ded in prayer when he fell;” others say a day before the shoo­ting [there was] “a heated discussion…during which the pupil threate­ned to kill the teacher because of con­flic­ting reli­gious views.” In an inter­view, the fat­her of the pupil condemned Chris­tian evan­ge­lists, por­tray­ing them as “more dan­gerous than al-Qaeda.”

Malay­sia: After reli­gious police rai­ded an event at a Met­ho­dist church over “fears that Mus­lims were being con­verted,” Mus­lim offi­ci­als created a semi­nar cal­led “Strengt­he­ning the faith, the dan­gers of libe­ra­lism and plu­ra­lism and the threat of Chris­tia­nity towards Mus­lims.” After the title of the con­fe­rence was cri­ti­cized, a law­ma­ker said the refe­rence to Chris­tia­nity would be rem­oved, but the seminar’s con­tent would remain unchanged: “The semi­nar is part of the right of Mus­lims to defend the faith of its practitio­ners from any action which may lead to apos­tasy. It is our respon­s­i­bi­lity,” he said.

Pakis­tan: A Mus­lim mob attacked a 60-year-old Chris­tian womanwho con­verted to Islam, only to recon­vert back to Chris­tia­nity six mon­ths later: she “was tortured—her head shaved—and para­ded through the stre­ets, gar­lan­ded with shoes.” Soon after, she rece­i­ved more threats of “dire con­se­quen­ces” from Isla­mic cle­rics, fle­eing region with her family. Likewise, a 26-year-old Chris­tian woman, mot­her to a five-month-old girl, was falsely accu­sed of “blasphe­ming” Muhammad and arrested. A few days prior, some of her rela­ti­ves who had con­verted to Islam pressed her to do the same: “She refu­sed, tel­ling them that she was ‘satis­fied with Chris­tia­nity and did not want to con­vert,’ and was arrested of blasphemy soon thereafter.”

Yemen: Al-Qaeda gun­men fatally shot an Ame­ri­can teacher. The ter­ror network’s affi­li­ate in Yemen issued a mes­sage say­ing, “This ope­ra­tion comes as a response to the cam­paign of Chris­tian pro­se­ly­ti­zing that the West has laun­ched against Mus­lims,” cal­ling the teacher “one of the big­gest Ame­ri­can pro­se­ly­tizers.” He was shot eight times on a Sunday.

Church Attacks

Bethle­hem: One week after the prime minis­ter of the Pale­sti­nian Aut­hority [PA] told an audience of Evan­ge­li­cal Pro­tes­tants that his govern­ment respec­ted the rights of its Chris­tian minori­ties, the PA decla­red a Bap­tist Church ille­gal, adding that birth, wed­ding, and death cer­ti­fi­ca­tes from the church were no lon­ger valid. A pas­tor noted that “ani­mo­sity towards the Chris­tian minority in areas con­trolled by the PA con­ti­nues to get increas­ingly worse. People are always tel­ling [Chris­ti­ans], ‘Con­vert to Islam. Con­vert to Islam. It’s the true and right religion.’”

Egypt: Some 1,500 Muslims—several armed with swords and kni­ves and shou­ting Isla­mic slogans—terrorized the Notre Dame Lan­guage School in Upper Egypt, in response to false claims from local mos­ques that the pri­vate school was buil­ding a church: “Two nuns were besieged in the school’s guest­house for some eight hours by a mur­derous mob threate­ning to burn them alive;” one nun suf­fe­red a “major ner­vous break­down requi­ring hos­pi­ta­liza­tion… The entire pro­perty was ran­sacked and looted. The next day the Mus­lims retur­ned and ter­ro­rized the child­ren. Con­se­quently, school atten­dance has drop­ped by at least one third.”

Iran: The Arme­nian Evan­ge­li­cal Church in Teh­ran is the latest church to be orde­red to cease hol­ding Per­sian ser­vices on Fri­days. The offi­cers ser­ving the notice threate­ned church offi­ci­als, say­ing that “if the order is ignored, the church buil­ding will be bom­bed ‘as hap­pens in Iraq every day.’” As anot­her report sum­ma­rizes, “Chris­ti­ans and Churches in the Isla­mic Repub­lic of Iran are now ban­ned from preaching the Gos­pel to non-Christians, hol­ding Per­sian lan­guage ser­vices, teaching and dis­tri­bu­ting the Bible, or hol­ding Chris­tian classes.”

Iraq: Even though Kirkuk’s church was recently resto­red after an ear­lier bomb attack that kil­led a 13-year-old Chris­tian boy, the “reope­ning cele­bra­tion was but a brief respite in the ongo­ing suf­fe­ring of Iraq’s Chris­tian com­mu­nity, sig­na­led by two furt­her attacks”:Anot­her church in Bag­h­dad was bom­bed, kil­ling two guards and woun­ding five, and the body of a Chris­tian was “found ridd­led with bul­lets in Mosul. He had been shot nine times at close range. The free­lance pho­to­grap­her had been kid­nap­ped four days ear­lier. Iraqi Chris­ti­ans are often targe­ted by kid­nap­pers for ransom.”

Kenya: A band of Mus­lims laun­ched a gre­nade attack on a crowd of 150 Chris­ti­ans atten­ding an out­door church meeting, kil­ling two and woun­ding more than 30. “Human-rights groups say that the Mus­lim attack­ers were hyped into action by a mili­tant Mus­lim preacher hol­ding an alter­nate rally only 900 feet from the Chris­tian gat­he­ring. Furt­her reports say that the Mus­lim preachers were slan­de­ring Chris­tia­nity and that mem­bers of the Chris­tian group could hear the Mus­lim speakers.”

Nige­ria: A Boko Haram suicide car bom­ber from the Isla­mist group Boko Haram [Ara­bic trans­la­tion: “Western Edu­ca­tion is a Sin”]attacked a Cat­h­o­lic church, kil­ling at least 10 people. The bomb deto­nated as worship­pers atten­ded Mass at St. Finbar’s Cat­h­o­lic Church in Jos, a city in which thou­sands of Chris­ti­ans have died in the last decade as a result of Boko Haram’s jihad, and

where, less than two weeks before, anot­her church was attacked, kil­ling three.

Saudi Ara­bia: The Grand Mufti of Saudi Ara­bia, one of the Isla­mic world’s hig­hest reli­gious aut­hori­ties, decla­red that it is “neces­sary to destroy all the churches of the region.” He made his assertion in response to a ques­tion posed by a dele­ga­tion from Kuwait, where a par­lia­ment mem­ber recently cal­led for the “rem­oval” of churches: the dele­ga­tion wan­ted to con­firm Sharia’s position on churches with the Grand Mufti, who “stressed that Kuwait was a part of the Ara­bian Pen­in­sula, and the­re­fore it is neces­sary to destroy all churches in it,” basing his ver­dict on a say­ing (or hadith), of Muhammad.

Sudan: Sudanese aerial stri­kes were aimed at church buil­dings in some regions. Churches in the Nuba Moun­tains are hol­ding worship ser­vices very early in the mor­ning and late in the evening to avoid aerial bom­bar­d­ments inten­tio­nally targe­ting their churches. The Khar­toum regime is “doing eve­rything pos­sible to make sure they get rid of Chris­tia­nity from the Nuba Mountains—churches and church schools are the tar­gets of both the Sudanese Armed For­ces and its militias,” said an aid worker.

Dhim­mi­tude

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

Den­mark: In a Mus­lim ghetto in Copen­ha­gen, a refugee from Africa had his door kicked in seve­ral times and was threate­ned by a group of “youths” who accu­sed him of being “both black and Chris­tian,” and who then tried to extort money from him. Police said they could not gua­rantee his safety; he was even­tually found in tears living in the streets.

Egypt: Chris­tian fami­lies in the Minya pro­vince are “living in ter­ror:“Sala­fis threate­ned to kid­nap any Chris­tian girl not wea­ring the hijab. Parents are kee­ping their daugh­ters indoors, and mis­sing school. Simi­larly, a Chris­tian boy was abducted; his kid­nap­pers were deman­ding a large ran­som from his family. Furt­her, a court in Edfu sent­en­ced the pas­tor of a church that was tor­ched by Mus­lims to six mon­ths in pri­son for vio­la­ting the height of the church -- which had rece­i­ved a license and was still under con­struc­tion when it wastor­ched by a Mus­lim mob in Sep­tem­ber – and he was orde­red to rem­ove the allegedly excess height.

Iran: After com­pla­ints about the dis­play of Chris­t­mas trees and Santa Clau­ses in the stre­ets of Teh­ran during the Chris­t­mas sea­son, an offi­cial warned that the muni­ci­pa­lity will begin to seize such sym­bols: “Buil­ding faca­des in Teh­ran should be con­trolled by the muni­ci­pa­lity and the dis­play of such sym­bols should not be allowed.”

IraqChris­ti­ans are run­ning out of havens as rising security con­cerns and eco­no­mic hardship cause them to leave the places of refuge they had found in the country’s Kurdish north. The sort of attacks that ini­tia­ted a mass exo­dus of Chris­ti­ans from Bag­h­dad and Mosul are increas­ingly occur­ring in the auto­no­mous region of Kur­dis­tan, “which wel­comed Chris­ti­ans and was rela­tively safe.” A Chris­tian who fled there from Mosul seven years ago after retrie­ving his son from kid­nap­pers said it is like his­tory “repea­ting itself.”

Nige­ria: The Isla­mist orga­niza­tion Boko Haram decla­red “war” on Chris­ti­ans, say­ing it aims to “anni­hi­late the entire Chris­tian com­mu­nity living in the northern parts of the coun­try.” Accor­ding to a spo­kes­man, “We will create so much effort to end the Chris­tian pre­sence in our push to have a pro­per Isla­mic state that the Chris­ti­ans won’t be able to stay.” Along with con­stant church bombings—most recently on Eas­ter, kil­ling nearly 50—one of the groups new stra­te­gies is “to strike fear into the Chris­ti­ans of the power of Islam by kid­nap­ping their women.”

Pakis­tan: Two Chris­tian hos­pi­tal emp­loy­ees were abducted by “Isla­mic extre­mists”: “Such cases are on the rise, as ban­ned Isla­mist groups and other cri­mi­nal gangs are tur­ning to kid­nap­ping for ran­som in order to sur­vive and procure weapons and ammu­nition,” said a senior investi­ga­tor, adding that most Isla­mist groups believe that Chris­tian NGOs are involved in evan­ge­li­zing “under the guise of charity,” a belief that pro­vi­des Mus­lims with an even grea­ter incen­tive to be abusive.

Sudan: Over half a mil­lion people, mostly Chris­tian and ori­gi­nally from South Sudan, have been strip­ped of citizen­ship in response to the South’s seces­sion, and for­ced to relo­cate: “Sudanese Chris­ti­ans, who have barely a month to leave the north or risk being treated as for­eig­ners. are star­ting to move, but Chris­tian lea­ders are con­cerned that the 8 April dead­line set by the Islamic-majority Sudan is unrea­li­s­tic. ‘We are very con­cerned. Moving is not easy … people have child­ren in school. They have homes … It is almost impos­sible,’ said a Cat­h­o­lic bishop.”

Syria: The nation to which many Iraqi Chris­ti­ans fled as a haven isslowly becoming like Iraq, as thou­sands of Syrian Chris­ti­ans con­ti­nue to flee to nearby Leba­non. “Al-Faruq Bat­ta­lion, which is affi­li­a­ted with the oppo­sition Free Syrian Army (FSA), is impos­ing jizya (an extra tax impo­sed on non-Muslims living under Mus­lim rule) on Chris­ti­ans in the Homs Governo­rate” and “armed men … threa­ten to kid­nap or kill them or mem­bers of their fami­lies if they refuse to “pay Isla­mic taxes”—precisely the same form of extor­tion that has been taking place in next door Iraq.

Tur­key: For­merly hai­led for its free­doms, the U.S. Com­mis­sion on Inter­na­tio­nal Reli­gious Free­dom named Tur­key as “one of the world’s worst vio­la­tors of reli­gious free­dom,” based on Turkey’s treat­ment of Chris­ti­ans and other minority groups. The report stated that rest­ric­tions on non-Muslim com­mu­nities, such as limi­ting their right to train clergy and own places of worship, “have led to their decline, and in some cases, their vir­tual dis­appea­rance,” furt­her noting “an increased num­ber of attacks, ran­ging from har­ass­ment and van­da­lism to death threats, against Pro­tes­tant churches and indi­vi­duals in 2011 com­pared to 2010.”

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 perse­cution 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:

February, 2012

January, 2012

Decem­ber, 2011

Novem­ber, 2011

Octo­ber, 2011

Sep­tem­ber, 2011

August, 2011

July, 2011

 

Mus­lim Perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans: March, 2012
“It is neces­sary to destroy all the churches of the region.” Saudi Grand Mufti
by Ray­mond Ibra­him
April 25, 2012 at 5:00 am

http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3033/muslim-persecution-of-christians-march-2012


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