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Egypt: The Victorious Islamists

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Posted GMT 6-24-2011 23:47:9


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The forty-year-old Virgin Mary Church on Cairo's al-Wahda Street--the name
means unity, or oneness--looks striking these days. Its cream and white
façade is unscathed by the dust and smog that otherwise blanket neighboring
buildings and the rest of the city, and inside, its walls and floors glisten
with newly laid cappuccino-colored marble. The church, its guardians say,
has never looked better. "Ever, in its entire history."

On May 8, this church, in the impoverished Cairo neighborhood of Imbaba, a
ten-minute drive from Tahrir Square, was a scene of devastation. It had been
ravaged by flames and its insides gutted, smashed, looted, and charred after
clashes broke out between Muslims and Christians over the case of a Coptic
woman named Abeer Fakhri, an alleged convert to Islam whom ultraconservative
Salafis had claimed was being held against her will at the nearby Church of
St. Mina, which was also attacked. Fifteen people were killed in the
violence and almost two hundred injured.

The attack was one of a series against Egypt's Coptic Christian minority in
the weeks since President Hosni Mubarak stepped down on February 11. Since
then, widespread and escalating crime has gripped the country. But the
campaign against the Copts has stood out as by far the most egregious
violence in post-revolutionary Egypt. "Stirring up sectarian tensions," the
Coptic activist Michael Meunier told me the week after the attack, "has
always been the best way to keep the country divided--the Copts always get
the biggest blow," he said. "There are many actors who have stakes in
causing this chaos."

Copts have been outraged at the ruling military council's lenient response
to other recent incidents of violence against them. In March, armed thugs
bulldozed a church on the outskirts of Cairo to its foundations, allegedly
over an illicit relationship between a Coptic man and a Muslim woman. This
led to riots and clashes that left thirteen people dead and 140 wounded. No
arrests were made and no one was charged.

The day after the Imbaba attacks, several thousand Copts from across Cairo
marched to Maspero, the state TV building, setting up tents for what they
planned would be a lengthy sit-in. "We are here to make sure our demands are
met," Father Metias, one of the priests of the Virgin Mary Church, told me
that day. "We want protection. We want the dozens of churches that the
government has closed to be reopened. The people who are causing this
trouble against us must be held accountable."

For almost two weeks, the Copts--who were joined by several hundred Muslims
who came out in solidarity--chanted outside the building, calling for
protection and demanding that Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the
head of the military council and the de facto head of state, step down. They
slept in tents made of nylon and blankets--sweltering in the rising
temperatures of the city's scorching summer heat--and on several nights,
they warded off thugs who attacked them with guns, knives, and rocks.

Eventually, on the thirteenth day--May 21--after statements from the armed
forces that they would "not clear them by force," as they have done in the
past, and that they would reopen three of the dozens of closed churches, the
protesters agreed to pack up and go. One of the young organizers told me
that they did so "to give the ruling military council the chance to act on
demands."

That week, the interior minister promised to clamp down with "an iron fist"
on thugs and the general atmosphere of violence in the city. The prime
minister said he would proclaim a general law covering places of religious
worship; and the military council said it would act with urgency to
prosecute those implicated in both the Imbaba and other recent sectarian
attacks who had escaped disciplinary action.

The police quickly arrested more than two hundred people suspected of
involvement in the Imbaba incident--radical Islamists, thugs, former members
of the ruling party, and many Copts--and also swiftly moved to stop fighting
in Ain Shams, on the outskirts of the city, when Muslims began demonstrating
against the opening of a church in a former garment factory that they
claimed lacked the necessary legal permits.

In the weeks since these promises were made, and since the Copts voluntarily
abandoned their campsite at Maspero, sectarian tensions appear to have been
pacified. The ultraconservative Salafis--whom many blamed for the Imbaba
attacks and who had been staging weekly demonstrations against the Copts
since Mubarak's ouster, often at churches--have been largely quiet. (The
Salafis are organized in several groups and parties outside the Muslim
Brotherhood, such as the al-Nour party, which has just been officially
approved.) YouTube videos of radical Islamists inciting violence against
Coptic churches are no longer circulating widely; and the interim cabinet
has just approved a draft law giving Muslim and Copts equal rights in
establishing places of worship. The Islamist political parties and
movements--which many fear may rise to power and turn Egypt into an Islamic
state modeled on Saudi Arabia--have all denounced violence against
Christians. Although stories of violence and crime are still frequent in the
pages of the local press, none of them, these days, are about attacks on
Copts.

Still, within Egypt's Christian-minority community--which accounts for some
10 percent of the country's 82 million people--the fear of further incidents
of violence and persecution has not subsided, and daily life remains
strained. Many Copts I have spoken to say they are considering emigrating to
the US or Canada and seeking political asylum on the basis of religious
persecution, though many also feel they have an obligation to stay in Egypt
to "look after the churches and monasteries." "The media quiet is
deceptive," Father Sarabamon--the pastor of Imbaba's Virgin Mary
Church--told me on June 5 as I sat with him on the ground floor of the
church. Final touches of reconstruction were being put in place, among them
a new protective metal fence surrounding the building. "There are no sizable
attacks," he said,

but each week there are incidents of women having the cross grabbed from
their necks as they walk in the streets. In this very neighborhood people
are still being insulted as they leave church; and we still have young girls
disappearing, kidnapped, being harassed for what they are wearing or for
bearing the cross tattooed on their wrists.

As Father Sarabamon--who has been a priest at the church since the
1970s--spoke, men and women streamed in, kissing his hand, offering
donations. Many shed tears at the sight of the renovated church. The father
told some young women to cover themselves up or remove their crosses. "There
are hungry, angry people outside," he warned them.

Of those arrested for the attacks in the Imbaba quarter, many have been
released without sentences--including Salafis who had been seen on videos
inciting violence against the churches. One had said about the Coptic
Church, "It's a mafia that harbors weapons." Of those still under
investigation, forty-eight have recently been referred to the Supreme Court
for trials--among them many Copts. Only two of sixteen people arrested for
attacking the Copt protesters during their thirteen-day sit-in received
sentences--two years, with bail. "It's telling. These are all simply
gestures," Father Sarabamon told me between his conversations with
well-wishers. "The government has made the gesture of arrests, of trials,
but when you look at action, nothing has happened. Even the churches they
promised to reopen have not been opened."

In the case of the Ain Shams church, which remains closed, two Copts were
sentenced to five years in jail--for violence, possession of weapons, and
trying to turn a factory into an unlicensed church. When I visited the
neighborhood in early June, even Muslim residents said there had clearly
been bias in this case. "There were thugs who should have been sentenced
too," one eyewitness to the violence told me.

Although the military council commissioned the district's governor to
oversee the church renovations in Imbaba, at a reported cost of close to $1
million, Father Sarabamon points out that some of that budget has gone
elsewhere--across the street, to a mosque that is being refurbished too. "At
our expense," he said. The construction workers, sent by the governor's
office, can be seen moving back and forth between the mosque and the church.
"The portion of the budget that has gone toward the mosque would have
covered the electrical goods and equipment that are needed, but I don't ask
any questions," the Father told me. The construction workers themselves
wouldn't reply when asked if they had formal instructions to work on the
mosque. "There are definitely biases in how the military is handling
things," the former Coptic MP Mona Makram Ebeid told me recently.

Since its rise to power, the ruling military council, headed by Mubarak's
close friend Field Marshal Tantawi, has increasingly been criticized for its
biased and repressive handling of the country's affairs. Youth protesters
and bloggers have been prosecuted and given jail sentences of several years;
yet Tantawi's regime has repeatedly stalled trials for corrupt government
officials, who are sent to civilian courts with private lawyers or released
on bail. The trial of Mubarak, and his transfer to Tora Prison where his
sons are, have consistently been postponed, allegedly due to his fluctuating
health. Few believe the trial--now set for August 3--or the transfer will
happen.

The council has also come under fierce attack for its management of the
constitutional referendum in March, which had been designed as a yes/no vote
on a package of amendments to nine articles in the constitution--mainly
those dealing with presidential powers. A yes vote would approve the
amendments and reinstate the suspended 1971 constitution until the
parliamentary elections in September, at which point a new constitution
would be drafted by a committee elected by the new house of representatives.

Although the amendments were approved by a wide margin--the yes votes
largely representing the Muslim Brotherhood and other conservative movements
and groups that were aligned with the army--in the weeks since then, the
members of the military council have all but ignored the 1971 constitution.
Without a public vote they drafted an addendum of over fifty articles that
give them powers to govern beyond those established by the constitution.
(The liberals have criticized and protested against this; the Islamist
groups have remained largely silent.)

The referendum, which had set the military and the Muslim Brotherhood--the
largest organized movement--against the liberals, exposed the first
significant division in a movement for change that had otherwise united
protesters during the eighteen days in Tahrir Square. In many ways it served
as a harbinger of what was to come. Since then, the army has acted with
leniency toward Islamists, and has moved forward in step with the Muslim
Brotherhood, with which it has cut deals. As the longtime backbone of the
regime, with its own broad economic interests to maintain, the army--so it
is widely believed--wants to consolidate a status quo that it will dominate
in years to come. It will do so in part by manipulating a parliament ready
to cooperate with it. A retired general recently repeated to me what he has
been saying during the past few months:

With the Brotherhood they [the military] know what they are getting, with
remnants of the former regime they know what they are getting, but with
revolutionaries and liberals, they don't. The Brotherhood needs their
approval just as the army needs the Brotherhood right now. 

Of all the organized political movements and groups, the Muslim Brotherhood,
its Freedom and Justice party, and its loose alliance of similarly
conservative political entities--such as the recently approved Islamist
al-Wasat party--are the only ones pushing for elections in September.
Liberal opposition groups have called for their postponement, citing the
need for more time to organize, but the military, so far, has said it will
not change the date.

It is in part this growing influence of Islamist thinkers over Egypt's
political life--and the army's apparent collusion with them--that is
troubling the Coptic community as well as liberals. The Muslim Brotherhood,
which has long been viewed as the greatest threat to a democratic regime,
has increasingly stayed away from any attempts at unified action. It did not
participate in the National Conference meeting on May 8--which gathered over
one thousand participants from every other party and movement--claiming
"work not talk" needed to be done ahead of the elections. It was later
revealed that the Brotherhood hosted a joint conference with Salafis that
same day; some 50,000 people reportedly showed up.

Then on May 27, when activists called for a "day of rage" and a "second
revolution"--in large part in protest against the military's handling of
national affairs--the only groups absent were the Islamists, some of whom
released statements calling the participating protesters sinners. The Muslim
Brotherhood said that the protest was "against the people of Egypt." Of the
estimated 30,000 protesters who did show up--among them many Copts--one of
the most popular chants was "Here are the people of Egypt, where are the
Muslim Brotherhood?" Many people there that day said they were coming out
for the first time in weeks. "I'm here to prove to the Brotherhood that we
can do it without them. This has become about us and them."

Since the attack on the Imbaba churches on May 7 and 8, the Islamist groups
have made gestures toward more inclusive policies. At the opening of the new
headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party on May
21--a gaudy multimillion-dollar building in the suburbs of Cairo--Essam
el-Erian, the party's deputy president and longtime spokesperson, boasted
that its membership included over nine hundred women and almost one hundred
Copts. He was also quick to speak about the appointment of a Christian,
Rafiq Habib, to the party's upper ranks. Many say Habib likes to provoke his
father, a conservative Christian preacher. Although these attempts at
inclusiveness are a media-savvy move on the part of the Brotherhood, for
many, they are too little too late.

The Brotherhood made scathing statements against women and Copts soon after
Mubarak's ouster. Its leaders are now openly calling for an Islamic state,
something they had previously denied was among its goals. "They will never
change," the outspoken newspaper editor Abdel Halim Qandil told a friend and
me recently. "I don't trust them. They are deceptive." In a press report,
the political analyst Nabil Abdel Fattah described the Brotherhood's recent
appointments of Coptic members as "just for show…like flowers on the
Brothers' jackets."

Stéphane Lacroix, a scholar of Wahabism and Islamist movements, spent a
large part of last year in Egypt researching the Salafi movement, and he has
close relations with prominent Islamists. In early June he described
intimate meetings and dinners he'd just had with some of the Salafist
leaders. "In many ways the Salafi battle has been won," he said. "Certainly
the conservative one has. To people like Abou Elela Mady"--the leader of the
al-Wasat party--"it's a question of which of the conservatives can win more
votes."

Despite disagreements with its younger members, the Muslim Brotherhood seems
confident that it will emerge victorious in September's parliamentary
elections. In February it said it would win no more than 20 percent of the
seats; it is now--officially--aiming for 50 percent. Essam el-Erian recently
told me, "But of course we want a majority or the largest percent we can
get." Through a coalition agreement with other Islamist groups, Lacroix
said, this "seems increasingly likely." With its outreach programs that
offer free and subsidized food and services in the poorer neighborhoods, the
Brotherhood's popularity will likely only grow--in particular as inflation
rises and prices go up. "They know they are in the strongest position,"
Lacroix said. It is not unusual for those who are not keen on an Islamic
state modeled on Saudi or Iran to point out that, with 40 percent of the
population living beneath the poverty line, the Brotherhood's previous
slogan, "Islam is the answer," has strong appeal.

At the end of May, in a public library in Imbaba, not far from the Virgin
Mary Church, a group of Salafis--who call themselves "Salafyo Costa" after
Costa Coffee, which they like to drink--held an open meeting, intended "to
begin a dialogue with liberals and help cast aside this idea of us as
devils," as Mohamed Tolba, one of the group's organizers, told me. He asked
the gathered group to mix: "Let's sit together," he said, "Salafis next to
non-Salafis, come on." Mohamed, who had recently returned to Egypt after
years in Sudan because "of persecution against bearded men that look like
me," said that he wanted to create dialogue and unity, "just like in
Tahrir." Mohamed is funny, lighthearted, and quick to poke fun at the Salafi
stereotype. "I know you are scared of us," he said, addressing the row of
women in jeans and exposed hair that had come to listen in. "Tell us your
fears, let us answer to them. We know you have Salaphobia, but we won't
bite."

A lively debate went on for five hours, ending with a recurring question to
Mohamed and his colleagues: Are you representative of most of the Salafis
out there? The answer was "no," but since the meeting--which was reported in
the local press--Mohamed and his colleagues (their group has a Facebook page
with almost five thousand members) have, he says, been receiving phone calls
from ultraconservative party leaders and more radical sheikhs. "I don't want
to mention names," he told me yesterday, "but some sheikhs who said we were
crazy, even sinners, now want to work with us. So do the emerging political
parties. I've received so many requests for collaboration--they see our
method is a more effective one."

After the meeting, one of the Salafist wives approached me, inviting me to a
women-only gathering at her house. "You're so young," another said, before
proceeding to explain how she slowly converted from being uncovered to
wearing a full-face veil. "It just takes time," she said reassuringly. "You
get used to it."

That night, one of the two politically knowledgeable friends with whom I
attended the meeting called me. "I'm not convinced," he told me.

All the men's wives wore the niqab. They all said that in another context
they would wear the short galabiya like the Prophet. They want Egypt
governed by the Sharia. I bet they will slowly turn, just like the
Brotherhood has, constantly changing its position. Before we know it we'll
be like Saudi Arabia. They shouldn't be trusted. It's no coincidence the
Saudis gave us such a big loan.

Sitting in the Virgin Mary Church with Father Sarabamon, I told him about
the invitation of the Salafi women. He smiled. "They want to convert you,"
he told me. "I fear the worst. You know already that they don't teach Coptic
history in schools. It will take time, but I see the direction we are moving
in."

By Yasmine El Rashidi
www.nybooks.com


© 2011, Assyrian International News Agency.  All Rights Reserved. Terms of
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