SPIEGEL ONLINE - March 30, 2006, 12:33 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,408781,00.html 

Christians in Afghanistan
 
A Community of Faith and Fear

By Matthias Gebauer in Kabul 

Afghan converts to Christianity lead dangerous lives and must keep their
faith secret to avoid persecution by police, Islamists or even their own
neighbors. Members of this secret society have to constantly keep looking
over their shoulders. 

 An Islamist demonstration in Afghanistan: Christians have no voice here.
<http://www.spiegel.de/img/0,1020,602240,00.jpg>        

REUTERS
An Islamist demonstration in Afghanistan: Christians have no voice here.
Hashim Kabar is nervous. The 36-year-old is fidgeting with the plastic chair
in his small office, looking repeatedly at his watch. His mobile phone keeps
ringing and every few minutes he stands up and goes to the door of the small
building. "Everything OK?" he asks the armed guard there, who is crouching
next to the heavy steel door that has a small slit he can look out of. The
guard nods and Kabar comes back. "I don't have a good feeling about this
today," he says, rubbing his eyes. "Something tells me we're going to have a
visit." 

It's difficult arranging meetings with people like Kabar. Time and again he
postponed the appointment, then he asked that the location be changed.
Finally the meeting takes place in his office. Brochures are lying about and
a computer hums in the background, but nothing would indicate the subject of
the conversation. There are no crucifixes on the wall, no Bibles on the
shelves. Anything that could out him as a Christian has been put out of
sight, out of fear. He is afraid that what happened to Abdul Rahman, another
convert to Christianity, might happen to him. 

The case of Rahman serves as proof to Afghan Christians that they live in
extreme danger, simply because of their beliefs. Despite the fact that
international pressure prevented Rahman from being sentenced and perhaps
executed by Afghanistan's justice system, Rahman's story illustrates the
extreme stress that those who turn away from Islam experience every day. "We
must recognize that freedom of religion, as promised by the Afghan
constitution, does not exist," says Kabar, sadly. "But maybe it's good that
the international community is now aware of that." 

Persecution under the Taliban 

Kabar converted to Christianity 20 years ago, when such a thing was not as
taboo as it is today. "There were a lot of churches, both in Kabul and in
the country," he says. "Back then the two religions coexisted here almost
peacefully." But that all changed when the Taliban came to power in the
mid-1990s. Taliban Supreme Leader Mullah Omar ordered his men to raze
churches to the ground, to lynch Afghan Christians and to kill or drive out
foreigners who followed Jesus Christ. 

Many of Kabar's friends lost their lives during this period. "They tortured
prisoners until they got them to tell them the names of other Christians.
Then the Taliban would kill them and go in search of new victims." Why he
himself survived, he doesn't know. He was taken prisoner twice and
interrogated for hours at a time, but his persecutors could find no proof.
"I knew the suras and the prayers from the Koran by heart. So I pretended to
be a good Muslim," he said, with something like pride in his voice. 

But the disappearance of the Taliban has not made much of a difference for
people like Kabar. Converts continue to be hunted down, thrown into prison
or even killed by their neighbors. The West was largely unaware of the
situation, and it was only by coincidence that Rahman's case captured
international attention. Afghanistan's 2004 constitution, which guarantees
freedom of religion, is of little use to Christians. "Many in power in the
judicial branch are imams or clerics who have little interest in the
constitution," says Kabar. 

Hide and seek 

Kabar is forced to renounce his core identity every day. There is an Islamic
name on his business card, although privately he carries the name of one of
the apostles. Only his family and his closest friends know his secret.
Sometimes, he says, he has to act as if he is praying to Allah. "If business
associates come to my house and suddenly want to pray, I have to go along,"
he says, adding that he only hopes his God understands. 

No one knows how many Afghan converts there really are. Because there are no
churches, there are also no records. Everything is carried out in secret;
only Christians know other Christians. Kabar says he knows a couple of
hundred in Kabul and in many other Afghan cities, estimating that there are
probably in total between 1,000 and 2,000 people of the Christian faith in
Afghanistan, against a Muslim majority of nearly 20 million. Christian Web
sites put that number at 10,000, a figure which seems exaggerated. 



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Even Christian foreigners in Afghanistan feel the oppression brought down by
the larger Islamic society. While Christians in Kabul, who mostly come from
the Philippines, can hold masses in Kabul, they have to do so in secret. The
head of a small foreign congregation, an ophthalmologist from the United
States, declined to talk about the issue last week. Christian groups are
often suspected of being missionaries; therefore it's better to keep a low
profile. His own church is completely unrecognizable as such, apart from a
(relief of a) fish on the outer wall. 

The persecution and the constant danger have turned the community of Afghan
converts into a closely knit underground organization. Ironically, the
oppression has strengthened the faith of many. 

Nothing can happen in the open, and Kabar and his fellow believers hold
their worship services on different days of the week. "It would be too
dangerous to do it on Sunday, because it would be easy for them to observe
us." Converts are contacted just before a service is to take place, often by
innocent-sounding mobile phone text messages. "We're having tea at 11
o'clock," is one that Kabar reads. 

The locations of services change constantly as well, and they are always
held in private homes, where everything has to be prepared well in advance.
The household staff must be away; neighbors mustn't notice anything; and
everyone has to have the 100 percent trust of everyone else. It is too
dangerous to even have a Bible at most services, says Kabar, who knows his
prayers by heart. Police have come and searched his house three times
already, but failed to find anything incriminating. "They know I'm a
Christian," he says. "But I won't give them any reason to put me on trial." 

Even though Afghanistan has dismissed its case against Abdul Rahman, this is
a cold comfort for Kabar. He and his friends fear that anger among Islamists
over Rahman's release could spur them to take matters into their hands and
act even more brutally toward converts. "Abdul Rahman's release is a good
thing," he says. "But the international community needs to keep its eyes
open." 

According to Kabar, the worst thing would be if the resolution of the case
leaves the impression that everything is now OK for converts living in
Afghanistan. If that happens, he says, the case would have done more harm
than good. "We are going to stand by our faith," he adds on parting. "Any
kind of support would help us a lot." 

*Due to the danger of persecution, the convert's name has been changed and
his picture is not shown.



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