Muslim Persecution of Christians: February 2012 (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Raymond Ibrahim 03/21/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/21/muslim-persecution-of-christians-february-2012/
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The following article was originally published by the Stonegate
Institute.
Half of Iraq’s indigenous Christians are gone due to the unleashed
forces of jihad, many of them fleeing to nearby Syria; yet, as the
Assad regime comes under attack by al-Qaeda and others, the jihad now
seeps into Syria, where Christians are experiencing a level of
persecution unprecedented in the nation’s modern history. Likewise,
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 copies of the Koran in Afghanistan were
burned by U.S. soldiers because imprisoned Muslim inmates were 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 formally recognized
since 1958, dismantling the crucifix above the premises. The pastor
and his family, trapped inside, feared that “they could kill us.” The
pastor “has been repeatedly threatened and attacked since being
ordained as pastor 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, demanding 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 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 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,” 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; some 50 people were injured in the blast. In
a separate incident, Muslims detonated a bomb outside a church
building, 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 “Tolerated” Citizens]
Bangladesh: Three American Christians were injured after their car
was attacked by a Muslim mob that 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, though Copts make up at
the very least 10% of the population, and so should have
approximately 50 seats. Finally, evincing how bad the situation is,
Coptic protesters organized a demonstration 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, saying it is 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 beat in jail and getting sick, to
the point that his hair has “turned fully gray.”
Israel: A mob of some 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 due to 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—though 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,” adding 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 blinded
by “Allahu-Akbar” screaming Muslims, 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 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
apostate to Christianity 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:
Intrinsically, to document that which the mainstream media does not:
the habitual, if not chronic, Muslim persecution of Christians.
Instrumentally, 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; theft and plunder
in lieu of jizya (tribute); overall expectations for Christians to
behave like cowed “dhimmis” (barely tolerated citizens); and simple
violence and murder. Oftentimes it is a combination thereof.
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. (Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 03/21/12)
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