------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Killing Christians, in the name of the Prophet

MICHAEL COREN

 

The bomb that killed at least 21 Egyptian Christians on New Year's morning
was packed with sharpened metal, iron balls and razor wire.

 

 Many of those that the device didn't rip to death will never see, walk or
function properly ever again. With terrorist bombs, euphemisms such as
"wounded" and "traumatized" are hideously misplaced. These are not, however,
the only banalities being tossed around when this latest attack is
discussed. Words like "rare," "surprise," and "extremist" seem similarly
absurd to those who know anything about the plight of Christians in large
chunks of the Muslim world. Remember, more than 50 Iraqi Catholics were
murdered in November; on Christmas Day in the southern Philippines on a
Muslim-dominated island a church was bombed and parishioners hurt; and in
Pakistan just weeks ago a 45year-old Christian mother of five, Asia Bibi,
was sentenced to death for "defaming the Prophet." Not bad for a little over
a month!

 

It has all become so painfully routine as to appear almost predictable. In
Pakistan, churches have been destroyed, Christians lynched, children
forcibly converted. Catholics and Anglicans have been denied jobs,
government support, housing and the most basic human rights. In Egypt, many
of the eight million Christians face daily harassment in a country of 70
million Muslims, with periodic violence - often deadly - and police
indifference, and even support, for mob attacks. One particularly sinister
aspect to the Egyptian mass persecution is the difficulty Christians now
face in obtaining exit visas, conjuring up dark echoes of previous campaign
against German and Soviet Jews.

 

In January 2000, in El-Kosheh, Egypt, another 21 Christians were killed in
rioting by local Muslims, aided by the police. When authorities eventually
reacted, they arrested more than a thousand local Christians, many of whom
were tortured. There are numerous cases of Christian girls being kidnapped
by Muslim gangs and then being forcibly converted and married to Muslim men.
If they flee these marriages and try to return to Christianity, they are
killed as apostates. Church desecration is common, as are public burnings of
Bibles and Christian literature. There are also documented cases of
Christians being ritually crucified, the rape of Christian girls and the
prolonged beating of children, some of them babies.

 

In Saudi Arabia, it is effectively illegal to be a follower of Christ. In
Iran, Christians face obvious discrimination. In the Gaza strip, they have
been attacked, a Christian bookstore bombed and Christian women threatened
with acid thrown in their faces unless they cover their heads. In Indonesia
in 2005, three Christian schoolgirls were beheaded by an Islamic gang and,
while that nation's government does often attempt to enforce the law, there
is a long history of anti-Christian hostility. Even in traditionally
tolerant Syria, Jordan and the West Bank, an increasing tendency toward
Islamic fundamentalism has made life difficult for the Christian minority.
In relatively moderate Turkey, seminaries have been closed down and priests
and nuns murdered; and in Cyprus, the occupying Turks have destroyed
numerous Christian sites and holy places.

 

Islamic apologists will point to certain Christians in positions of
influence, deny that persecution exists at all, or, more frequently, argue
that the accusations are propaganda lies told by Christians and Jews in
North America and Europe. While this may sound absurd, it is almost
impossible to overstate the degree of paranoia among many Muslims concerning
of Jews and Christians. One of the accusations made against the slaughtered
Christians in Egypt this week was that they were building up arms dumps in
their churches, and that they were agents of the United States and Israel.
Iraqi Christians fleeing to Syria are not trusted because they are seen as
being pro-Western.

 

All this in spite of the fact that Arab nationalism itself often was
initiated by young Christian intellectuals in the early 20th century and
that the Palestinian narrative was for more than a generation formed, and
certainly explained to North America and Europe, by Christians. (Indeed, the
Greek Orthodox were considered the most nationalistic and militant within
the Palestinian community.) Today, Christian towns in the West Bank are
disappearing. And while Israel's occupation has certainly destabilized the
area and made life difficult, it is Muslim discrimination and aggression
that has caused the most distress for Christians since the late 1980s. This,
of course, is far too nuanced a position for most Western supporters of
Palestine to embrace.

 

And here lies one of the main reasons why there is so little international
anger within, for example, the labour movement, social activists and liberal
churches in particular over the way Christians are treated in Islamic
states.

 Added to this is the neurotic smugness of a post-Christian society that
sees Christianity as the religion of mum and dad, power elites and
conservatives. Such people cannot, in the eyes of the typical secular and
radicalized North American, be victims. It simply doesn't fit. 

 

To criticize an Arab government, to condemn the actions of Muslims, to side
with suffering Christians, is seen as playing into the hands of the United
States and Israel. It's a distorted and disturbed logic, but it's
extraordinarily influential. Added to this is the neurotic smugness of a
post-Christian society that sees Christianity as the religion of mum and
dad, power elites and conservatives. Such people cannot, in the eyes of the
typical secular and radicalized North American, be victims. It simply
doesn't fit.

 

In truth, Christianity is far more Middle Eastern than North American.
Egypt, Syria, Palestine and North Africa was the heartland of Christianity.
The fact that conquering Muslim cavalry armies forced people to embrace
Islam does not change the fact that Christianity pre-dates Islam and that
Arab Christians were there, obviously, long before Arab Muslims.

 

It is almost miraculous that Christians still live in the region because,
contrary to what public television and fashionable commentators tell us,
pluralism and diversity are not philosophically or practically Islamic
concepts. Put simply, the less Islamic a Muslim country is, the more freedom
exists for religious minorities. Jews used to live in Egypt and Iraq;
followers of Baha'i used to thrive in Iran; Pakistan before the jihadists
boasted fine Catholic schools and respect for Judaism. We're in denial of
all this because we have a comfortable, even racist, assumption that
everybody thinks like progressive Westerners. Not so.

 

In Cairo, the government has issued its usual official condemnation of what
happened this week, and the Christians of Alexandria will be treated well
for a month or two. Then the campaigns will begin again. Islamic preachers
will describe Christians and Jews as children of pigs and monkeys, young
Muslims will be told that it is impossible to be a good Arab and a
Christian, and the millions of Egyptian Christians who have served their
country loyally and faithfully, and were especially appreciated by Gamal
Abdel Nasser, will feel alone, despised and desperate. The blood of the
martyrs, we are told, feeds the church and makes it grow, but the Christian
body in the Muslim world has so hemorrhaged that it is close to death.

 

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 

 

 

 

Michael Coren. "Killing Christians, in the name of the Prophet." National
Post, (Canada) January 6, 2011. 

 

Reprinted with permission of Michael Coren and the National Post. 

 

THE AUTHOR 

 

Michael Coren (born January 1959 in Essex, England) is a Canadian columnist,
author, public speaker, radio host and television talk show host. He is the
host of the television series The Michael Coren Show. His articles and
speeches often include stories of his own personal spiritual journey. Coren
is half Jewish through his father. 

 

 

He converted to Evangelical Christianity after a conversion experience as an
adult, greatly influenced by Canadian televangelist Terry Winter. In early
2004, he embraced Catholicism. He cites St. Thomas More, C.S. Lewis, Ronald
Knox and his God-father Lord Longford as spiritual influences, but remains
connected to the ecumenical scene in Canada and beyond. He is the author of
twelve books, including Mere Christian: Stories from the Light, Gilbert: The
Man Who Was G. K. Chesterton, C. S. Lewis: The Man Who Created Narnia, J.R.R
Tolkien: the Man Who Created 'the Lord of the Rings'. He is published in
many countries and in more than a dozen languages. He is currently writing a
book entitled Socon, A Handbook for Moral Conservatives. Michael Coren is
available as a public speaker. Visit his web site here. 

 

Copyright C 2011 National Post



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