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  • The Ordeal of Arab Christians

    The Ordeal of Arab Christians
    September 03, 2005 12:53 AM EST

    The Conservative Voice
    Sept 3 2005

    By Magdi Khalil - The recent, simultaneous bombing of six Iraqi
    churches reflects the seriousness of the predicament of Arab
    Christians, who are trapped between the hammer of terrorists groups
    and extremists, and the anvil of fanatic governments that skillfully
    manipulate the issue of religious radicalism for their own benefit,
    while reinforcing religious, ethnic and sectarian discrimination among
    their citizens. Arab Christians live in the bosom of a racist culture
    that claims superiority over non-Muslims, fueled by a legacy mostly
    filled with violence and hatred and a history centered on strife,
    murder and viciousness.

    Obviously, the Christians of the Middle East have lost the demographic
    race to the benefit of their Muslim compatriots. Their numbers
    continue to dwindle not just due to natural factors, but because
    many of them chose, or were compelled, to emigrate. Some fell
    victims to the constant pressures that escalated to fatal attacks.
    And others succumbed to the temptation to renounce their faith. The
    Christians of Southern Sudan were the only ones to maintain their
    place in that difficult contest, and though they paid a dear price,
    they discovered the means to achieve a realistic balance of power
    and face off eradication designs.

    A survey of the present situation of Christians living in the Middle
    East demonstrates a problematic and distressing cycle: Arab Christian
    populations are declining, resulting in an erosion of their political
    power, which in turn causes their conditions to worsen and ultimately
    drives them out of their own homeland. This pattern is repeated
    throughout the region.

    In Lebanon, Christians represented 50-60% of the population prior to
    1975; today this percentage has declined to 25-30%. Most importantly,
    their political influence has severely weakened. The Lebanese
    emigration ministry estimates the number of emigrants at five
    million, more than three and a half million of which are Lebanese
    Christians. In the past Lebanon was known to be a safe haven for
    persecuted individuals who were hunted because of their religious
    or intellectual beliefs. Today, however, it is driving out its own
    children because of the Arab infringement, the Palestinian foolishness
    and the Syrian occupation.

    The Lebanese Patriarch Nasr Allah Safir talked with LBC TV station
    about the Christian situation saying: "The Christians feel left out,
    their presence being clearly unwanted". He commented on the injustice
    committed against Lebanese Christians: "Lebanon was in a state of
    war, and it was the agreement of El Taef that put an end to this war,
    but only a partial and selective implementation of the agreement was
    carried out." The writer Mushee Maouz confirmed this statement in his
    book , with the following words: "Since 1943, and for many decades,
    the Maronite Christians of Lebanon, the Shi'a, and the elite Sunni
    have worked together in a diverse, legal and democratic system that
    was controlled by minorities. However, the shift in favor of Muslim
    communities, Radical Arab nationalism and military Palestinian
    existence, as well as the Syrian and Israeli intervention ended up
    alienating the Maronites and forcing them to take a defensive stance."

    Iraq witnessed an increase in Christian emigration following the
    defeat of Sadam Hussein in the second Gulf War, as the political
    speech took religious tones and the economic situation continued to
    deteriorate. Once Baghdad fell at the hands of the Coalition troops,
    the fanatics came out of their dark caves and began attacking the
    liquor shops owned by Christians. As a result more than two hundred
    shops had to be closed. The attacks became more serious as they then
    targeted Christian women who were not veiled, Christian residences, and
    finally took the lives of a number of innocent Christians citizens. The
    final attacks targeted Christian churches during Sunday services and
    resulted in a large number of casualties and injuries. News reports
    mentioned that thousands of Iraqi Christians were forced to migrate
    to Syria in the aftermath of such attacks, proof enough that the
    so called "resistance" is nothing but another facet of the vicious
    terrorism that assaults innocents and ultimately seeks to ruin the
    new Iraqi experience.

    During a few decades, the percentage of Palestinian Christians
    has dropped from 17% to less than 2% of the total population. The
    Israeli newspaper reported that entire neighborhoods in Beit Gala,
    Beit Lahm and Beit Sahur have been emptied of Christians because of
    the overwhelming Islamic tide that has turned the Palestinian cause
    into an Islamic issue, and the growing power of the fundamentalists
    who are imposing their rules and views on the Palestinian community.
    According to the BBC, the Christian inhabitants of Jerusalem, who,
    in 1920, represented 50% of the population, currently represent a
    mere 10%.

    The Palestinian , under the leadership of Islamic organizations,
    had a detrimental effect on the Christians who were required to pay a
    type of tax to those organizations to support suicide missions. News
    coming out of the Holy Land is disturbing. In Gaza, Christian women,
    in fear of being attacked by Islamic fanatics, have donned the veil.
    During the crisis in the Church of the Nativity, a reporter from
    Los Angeles managed to sneak into the church and indicated that
    the terrorists have raided the church, leaving nothing intact. They
    used the wood of the temple as fire fuel, and the pages of Bibles
    as toilet paper. Another incident that took place in Nazareth City,
    when the fanatics tried to build a mosque right in front of the
    Church of the Annunciation, clearly reveals the intentions of the
    fundamentalist organizations to establish an Islamic state on this
    most sacred Christian ground.

    The situation of Egypt's Copts is definitely not promising, as
    they are now more marginalized then ever. The reports issued abroad
    refer to them as "an isolated minority", "a minority under siege",
    "a persecuted Church" and "an oppressed minority". To quote Mushee
    Maouz: "The Copts' participation in political life is minimal. The
    peaceful integration of the Copts into their society started in the
    middle of the 19th Century, but was regularly interrupted by the
    militant Islamic movement that disconcerted the Copts and created
    tensions between Muslims and Christians. The Copts continued to
    swing back and forth between integration and rejection throughout
    the 20th Century, and isolation became the common pattern under
    the rule of autocratic regimes." This dismal situation propelled a
    million and half Christians to emigrate to the United States, Europe
    and Australia. The exact number of the Christian minority living in
    Egypt remains a well guarded government secret.

    Of all the Arab regimes, the Syrian and Jordanian regimes are deemed
    the best in their dealings with Christian citizens. Nevertheless,
    the Islamist movement and the deteriorating economic situation have
    badly affected the Christians in these two countries. Since the events
    of September 11, tensions are running high in the region, and hatred
    towards all that is related to the West is growing almost to the point
    of triggering a collision between the East and West. To quote the
    British reporter Martin Buckley: "The Christians in Jordan feel that
    they are being pushed into a difficult corner, either to belong to
    the Western World or to the Arab World." Growing suspicions surround
    the Christians, falsely accusing them of being "a fifth column" or an
    "inside enemy" - another example of a prevalent mindset that constantly
    casts doubts about the Christians' loyalty and patriotism. It seems
    that Christians are sadly destined to pay the price whenever tensions
    or conflicts arise between the Arab World and the West.

    Throughout the ages of Arab invasion and Ottoman occupation,
    Christians of the Middle East: the Copts, Armenians, Syrians,
    Maronites, Assyrians, Chaldeans, and Aramaeans have suffered from
    persecution along with other minorities like the Shi'a, Kurds and
    Druz. Their situation improved, however, when the modern state was
    founded after the collapse of the Ottoman rule and at the onset of
    Western colonization, becoming more engaged in their societies in
    response to the emergent concept of citizenship. Unfortunately, at
    the escalation of militant regimes and fascist religious movements,
    a relapse occurred costing the minorities most of their justly earned
    citizenship rights.

    The bleak situation of the Christian Arabs has caught the attention
    of honorable men who chose to confront the sinister tide that has
    overtaken the region, and some of them paid dearly for their courage
    such as Dr. Farag Fouda and Prof. Saad Eddin Ibrahim; the former
    who was assassinated in 1991, and the latter who was jailed during
    2000-2003.

    A number of Arabic writers have recently produced candid articles and
    other publications calling attention to the ordeal of Arab Christians.

    Saudi Prince Talal Ben Abdelaziz wrote an article entitled "The
    Survival of Christian Arabs", in , a Lebanese newspaper, stating
    the following: "The Christian Arabs' situation is the product of
    an environment overwhelmed by fanaticism and a violence level which
    can trigger disasters of historical proportions, and, most of all,
    the product of an environment strongly disposed to eliminate the
    different other. The continued existence of the Christian Arabs in
    their homelands will reinforce the foundations of the modern state, the
    cultural diversity and democracy, and put an end to the continuous loss
    of scientific, intellectual and cultural abilities in our region. Their
    emigration is a mighty blow that will prove detrimental to our future."

    Mr. Muhammad Hasanayn Haykal wrote the following words in the
    magazine entitled : "I personally feel, as others certainly do,
    that if we do not address the issue of Christian emigration, if we
    continue to overlook it or neglect it on purpose, then we will face
    an Arab scene that will not just be different from the current one,
    but one that would have definitely lost part of its assets on a human
    and cultural level. It would be such a loss if the Eastern Christians
    leave believing that there is no future for them or their children
    here, Islam would then be left alone in the East, with only the
    company of Zionist Judaism - and most specifically that of Israel."

    As for Mr. Galal Amin, he wrote the following enlightening words:
    "Evidently, the issue of Muslims and Copts is not a religious issue,
    it stirs up all our issues: education, freedom, rational thinking,
    justice, ethics and development. If this argument is valid, then it
    is obvious that if we want to see Muslims freed, we need to free the
    Copts first".

    Mr. Tarek Heggy wrote the following comment: "Progress and
    modernization are infectious! And it is up to the minorities of the
    Middle East to pass on these notions into our region".

    There were many other inspiring words, in addition to a significant
    visit from Pope John Paul II, who wished to support and encourage the
    Middle East Christians. However, no matter how important the words
    and visits are, neither of them is capable of achieving significant
    results. Only when the foundations of the modern state are firmly
    set in place, can we dare hope that this situation will change.
    Democracy, liberty and citizenship - the basics of a modern state -
    were the factors that initiated the integration of Christians within
    their societies in the first half of the last century; and it was the
    absence of these factors during the second half of the last century
    that sent them back into the dark ages of isolation and persecution,
    where they still abide.

    Magdy Khalil is an Egyptian writer and analyst residing in the USA.
    You can contact him at: [email protected]

    http://www.theconservativevoice.com/articles/article.html?id=8004
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