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  • No Retreat - Pope More Determined In 'Reciprocity' Challenge To Isla

    NO RETREAT - POPE MORE DETERMINED IN 'RECIPROCITY' CHALLENGE TO ISLAM
    By John L. Allen Jr.

    Catholic Online, CA
    Oct 11 2006

    National Catholic Reporter (www.ncronline.org)

    VATICAN CITY (National Catholic Reporter) - If anyone wondered whether
    the heartache of the last few weeks would persuade Benedict XVI to
    dial down his challenge to Islam on "reciprocity," Vatican argot for
    the religious freedom of Christians and other minorities in Muslim
    nations, Sept. 25 showed the pope instead more determined than ever.

    On that day, Benedict met with ambassadors from Muslim nations, along
    with representatives of Italy's tiny but growing Muslim community,
    at his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo. It was a carefully
    choreographed damage control exercise, designed to turn a corner
    following his controversial Sept. 12 remarks on Islam. Even in this
    atmosphere of made-for-TV harmony, however, the pope could not resist
    laying down a marker on reciprocity, the one issue above all that has
    driven a more assertive line toward Islam within the Catholic Church.

    In his brief talk, the pope hit all the anticipated notes: dialogue,
    peace, mutual respect. He also, however, pointedly quoted John Paul
    II's 1985 address to Muslim youth in Casablanca: "Respect and dialogue
    require reciprocity in all spheres, especially in that which concerns
    basic freedoms, more particularly religious freedom."

    Benedict did not elaborate. But the fact that he singled out this
    lone quotation from John Paul's vast body of speeches and messages
    on Islam, in a session carried live on Al Jazeera and widely seen as
    his best chance to quell anger in the Muslim street, indicates there
    were will be no retreat from the reciprocity challenge.

    In reality, at least on reciprocity, almost no one disputes that the
    pope has a point. The imbalance between the basic freedom of Muslims
    in the West to worship as they choose versus a range of de jure and
    de facto restrictions on Christians and other groups in many Muslim
    nations is abundantly documented.

    Bishop Thomas Wenski of Orlando, Fla., who has testified about
    reciprocity issues before the U.S. Congress as chair of the bishops'
    International Policy Committee, said that the recent crisis offered
    a wake-up call to both Muslims and Christians regarding the urgency
    of talking about such matters.

    "It's put the need for dialogue on the radar screen," he told National
    Catholic Reporter.

    The real question, experts on both sides of the Muslim/Catholic divide
    said in interviews, is not whether there's a problem to discuss, but
    whether Benedict - or the Catholic church generally - is equipped to
    be part of the solution.

    Clear challenges

    Even a cursory review illustrates the challenges in the Islamic world.

    In its annual report on religious freedom, the U.S. State Department
    flagged eight "Countries of Particular Concern," four of which are
    majority Muslim states: Iran, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Eritrea. (The
    others are Burma, China, North Korea and Vietnam.) The nonpartisan
    U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom cited another
    three countries, all Muslim states: Pakistan, Turkmenistan and
    Uzbekistan. The commission's "watch list" adds an additional seven
    nations as problem areas, including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Egypt,
    Indonesia and majority Muslim areas of Nigeria.

    Likewise, the Washington-based Center for Religious Freedom lists seven
    countries as "completely un-free," four of them Muslim: Turkmenistan,
    Iran, Saudi Arabia and Sudan. (The others are Burma, North Korea
    and China.)

    No Western government, and no majority Christian nation other than
    Cuba, makes either list. Of the 46 predominantly Muslim nations on
    earth, not one ranks in the top tier of religiously free states.

    When the Italian branch of Aid to the Church in Need, an international
    Catholic charitable group, began producing an annual report on
    religious freedom in 1998, its first edition was focused on countries
    with a Muslim majority.

    Experts caution that such findings, taken in the abstract, can be
    misleading. In many Muslim nations, they note, the most repressed
    groups are not Christians but other Muslims, such as non-Wahabbi forms
    of Islam in Saudi Arabia, or the Ahmadiyya movement in Pakistan,
    Bangladesh and Indonesia. Moreover, Saudi Arabia's reasons for
    repressing religious expression (adherence to a strict form of Islamic
    doctrine) are different from Turkey's (commitment to Western-style
    secularization), even if in practice they can translate into similar
    policies.

    Further, experts note, while there may be little de jure discrimination
    against Muslims in majority Christian states, de facto life can be
    just as hard. In the overwhelmingly Catholic Philippines, for example,
    Muslims worship legally, but in some parts of the country they live
    in fear of death squads.

    Even in Europe, Muslims face difficulties.

    "In France, it's hard to get a permit to build something that looks
    like a mosque, with minarets and the rest," said Mohammad Fadel,
    an Egyptian scholar at the University of Toronto. "It's OK for
    Muslims to worship in warehouses, but not in identifiably Islamic
    structures." Recent explosions of rage in both France and England
    testify to the second-class citizenship young Muslims often feel in
    the West.

    Finally, experts say, Islam has no monopoly on repressive behavior.

    Anti-conversion laws in majority Hindu India or in majority Buddhist
    Sri Lanka are just as appalling by Western standards, to say nothing of
    totalitarian states such as China or North Korea. In fact, Muslims in
    the Western China region of Xuar often bear the brunt of antireligious
    crackdowns by communist authorities.

    A dismal record Even so, the situation facing religious minorities
    in many Islamic countries, based on data collected from the U.S.

    Commission on International Religious Freedom, Aid to the Church in
    Need, and other sources, still makes for dismal reading:

    ~U Saudi Arabia: The Quran is officially the country's constitution,
    with public religious expression other than the Hanbali school of
    Sunni Islam prohibited. This ban is backed up by the mutawaa, or
    religious police. In 2005, the mutawaa conducted at least four raids
    of Christian "house churches," according to the Center for Religious
    Freedom. Christians cannot import Bibles or wear religious symbols,
    and clergy cannot wear religious dress. Capuchin priests charged with
    pastoral care of several hundred thousand Catholics, mostly Filipino,
    Vietnamese and Korean guest workers, cannot minister openly.

    ~U Iran: The constitution proclaims Shiah Islam the official religion.

    It recognizes Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians as protected
    minorities, but all face discrimination in education, government and
    the armed services. Common law applies the death sentence for trying
    to convert Muslims. Over the past 13 years, at least eight evangelical
    Christians have been killed by government authorities, and more than
    20 are reported "disappeared." Last year, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati,
    secretary general of the powerful Council of Guardians, stated that
    "non-Muslims cannot be described as human beings, but as sinning
    animals come to earth to disseminate corruption."

    ~U Sudan: Everyone in the north of the country, Muslim or not,
    is subject to Islamic law. Although permits are regularly granted
    to build mosques, permission to build churches is denied. The death
    penalty for apostasy from Islam remains the law, even if it's rarely
    enforced. Converts typically cannot remain in Sudan. Since President
    Omar El Bashir came to power in 1989, alcohol has been forbidden,
    which makes use of wine illegal even in the Catholic Mass.

    ~U Egypt: The constitution guarantees freedom of worship, but Islam
    is the official religion and Shariah the main source of legislation.

    Coptic Christians, who represent 15 percent of the population, are
    limited to roughly 1 percent of positions in parliament, military
    and police academies, the judiciary and diplomatic corps, and teaching.

    Family law is also an issue. If a Christian father converts to Islam,
    his minor children must follow. The mother's custody rights, which
    otherwise take precedence, are ignored. Recently, a civil court
    ruled that the Coptic church must remarry a divorced person, despite
    church teaching to the contrary. Another court ruled that polygamy
    is permissible in Christianity.

    ~U Nigeria: Since October 1999, 12 northern Nigerian states have
    extended Shariah into the state's criminal courts. Some states have
    sanctioned quasi-official Hisbah, or religious police, to enforce it.

    Christians suffer discrimination in building or repairing churches,
    access to education and media, representation in government, and
    employment. In August 2005, the Hisbah forced 15 Christian churches
    to close in one state alone.

    ~U Turkey: Although officially tolerance is the law of the land,
    religious services without authorization are illegal, and religious
    communities cannot own property. The government often deposes religious
    leaders not to its liking. Seminaries of the Armenian Apostolic and the
    Greek Orthodox churches were closed in the 1970s, and the government
    has resisted attempts to reopen them. Foreign religious workers face
    harassment, and religious communities are under state surveillance.

    Muslims often say that such examples are selective, pointing to other
    Islamic nations with allegedly better track records such as Jordan,
    Indonesia or Malaysia.

    Even in traditionally tolerant Malaysia, however, trends are
    disturbing. Recently a woman named Lina Joy, who converted to
    Christianity from Islam in 1998, petitioned to officially change her
    religious status so that she could marry a Christian. She was refused
    by Malaysian courts on the grounds that "the plaintiff exists under
    the tenets of Islam until her death." Other Malay Muslims who have
    attempted to convert have been imprisoned and sent to "rehabilitation
    camps." Joy is currently awaiting a ruling from the country's Federal
    Court.

    Pluralism and Islam

    Facing this record, the towering question is whether there's something
    inherent within Islam at odds with religious liberty.

    Cardinal George Pell of Sydney, Australia, recently said that
    "considered on its own terms, Islam is not a tolerant religion,"
    though he clarified in a June interview with National Catholic
    Reporter that he meant to raise a question rather than propose a
    definitive conclusion.

    In response to claims that there are different strains in Islam just
    as in Christianity, Cardinal Pell issued this challenge: "Show me
    where they're tolerant."

    Muslims say that challenge can be met.

    Salam Al-Marayati, executive director of the Washington-based
    Muslim Public Affairs Council, said religious liberty "is an
    Islamic principle." Al-Marayati said that where imbalances exist,
    they are generally the result of dictatorial regimes or social and
    political rivalries that have little to do with Islamic theology. He
    dismissed claims that the concept of the dhimmi, meaning a non-Muslim
    under Islamic law, condemns non-Muslims to subjugation. In principle,
    al-Marayati said, dhimmi denotes respect (in Arabic, it means "honor"),
    and its requirements are open to interpretation.

    Reza Aslan, an Iranian-born journalist and scholar and author of No
    god but God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam, argues that
    religious freedom is part of Islam's genetic code.

    "There are few scriptures that can match the reverence with which the
    Quran speaks of other religious traditions," Aslan said, asserting
    that "democratic ideals such as ... pluralism and human rights are
    widely accepted throughout the Muslim world," though not the Western
    notion that church and state must be separate.

    Perhaps the most often-cited reference supporting an Islamic version of
    pluralism is sura 2, verse 256, of the Quran: "There is no compulsion
    in religion."

    In this regard, Aslan and other Muslim commentators contend that
    Benedict XVI made a critical error in his Sept. 12 address in
    Regensburg, Germany. The pope attributed this sura to the early
    Mecca period of Muhammad's life, when Islam was a tiny minority - the
    suggestion being that Muhammad abandoned tolerance once Islam attained
    political power. In fact, Aslan said, the sura comes from the later
    Medina period, when Islam was already a majority. That indicates, Aslan
    said, that religious pluralism is possible in majority Muslim states.

    Some Christian activists think so too.

    Nina Shea of the Center for Religious Freedom, the lobbyist widely
    credited with making anti-Christian persecution a "hot topic" on
    Capitol Hill, attributed the repressive climate within Islamic cultures
    largely to "social and political" factors, not the religion itself.

    "When I talk to Christians in these places, they usually say that
    they've lived in peace with Muslims for generations," she said.

    "Something has changed."

    That something, Shea argued, is the emergence of a global
    "politicization" of Islam, which seeks to expand the reach of Islamic
    law to the entire planet - an effort, she argued, that reached an
    apogee with reaction to Benedict's comments on Muhammad, with even
    the pope seemingly expected to obey Muslim laws on blasphemy.

    Yet because politics rather than doctrine seem to be driving this
    trend, Shea said, perhaps it can be reversed.

    Jesuit Father Tom Michel, who served as the Vatican's expert on Islam
    from 1981 to 1994, agreed that there are worrying developments in
    some countries, but said that most Muslims regard Shariah as a code
    for Muslims, not anyone else. Such a distinction, Father Michel said,
    "can create the basis for a pluralistic society."

    Six-point program

    How can Benedict make the case for reciprocity in a way that doesn't
    feed extremism? Muslim and Christian experts recommended a six-point
    program:

    ~U Humbly acknowledge that Christians have had, and in some places
    continue to have, their own struggles with religious freedom;

    ~U Don't make reciprocity seem like special pleading for Christians,
    but rather a principled stand in favor of freedom for all religions;

    ~U Make it clear that this is not a crusade against Islam;

    ~U Recall areas where Catholics and Muslims are natural allies,
    such as resistance to secularization;

    ~U Speak directly to Muslim governments that are responsible
    for repressive policies, not just to clerics and theologians in
    theological language;

    ~U Make religious freedom part of a broader message about civil and
    political liberties across the board.

    Bishop Wenski said it's important to cite cases where the church
    has stood up for other religions. Father Michel agreed, offering the
    example of former Cardinal Salvatore Pappalardo of Palermo, Italy.

    When Muslims in Palermo needed a place to worship, Father Michel said,
    Cardinal Papallardo gave them an unused church.

    "This is not a Muslim/Christian thing," Father Michel said. "The
    situation is just as bad, or worse, in places like India." He warned
    that an exclusive focus on Islam feeds suspicion that "reciprocity"
    is a smokescreen for Western interests.

    Shea said the pope should direct his appeals not just to religious
    leaders, but to governments.

    "What needs to be recognized in the West is that most of Islam is
    controlled by Muslim governments," she said. "The muftis [Muslim
    scholars who interpret the Shariah] are selected and paid for by the
    governments, the mosques are underwritten and registered, and the
    schools are controlled."

    Bishop Wenski said the church must remind Muslims of common interests,
    pointing to the U.N.-sponsored Cairo Conference on population in
    1994, when the Holy See and Muslim nations resisted liberal proposals
    on abortion.

    Fadel said that as Benedict presses the reciprocity issue, he should
    avoid awakening "old paradigms" in the Muslim world, one of which
    involves "outside powers using minority religious communities as a
    pretext for interfering in internal affairs," such as the British
    did with the Copts in Egypt.

    Instead, Fadel recommended that Benedict present a "universalist
    human rights agenda, stressing democratic and civil rights issues,
    such as free speech, freedom of the press, and voting rights."

    As a Muslim, Fadel said he would welcome such a contribution from
    the pope. "Anything that raises serious issues is always welcome, and
    the Catholic church still has a reservoir of goodwill," he said. But
    in reference to the recent controversy, Fadel added: "Last time he
    didn't do a very good job. The performance has got to get better."

    John L. Allen Jr. is National Catholic Reporter senior correspondent.
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