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Middle Eastern Church Leaders Highlight Christians' Plight

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  • Middle Eastern Church Leaders Highlight Christians' Plight

    MIDDLE EASTERN CHURCH LEADERS HIGHLIGHT CHRISTIANS' PLIGHT

    Voice of America
    Sept 11 2014

    Jerome Socolovsky

    September 11, 2014 7:39 PM

    WASHINGTON--

    Patriarchs of Eastern Rite churches met with President Barack Obama
    on Thursday at the close of a summit that drew attention to attacks
    against Christians in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East.

    For the first time, leaders of major Maronite, Coptic, Armenian
    and Melkite denominations came together in Washington for what was
    billed as the inaugural summit of In Defense of Christians, a Middle
    Eastern group.

    The leaders of churches, who have quarreled in the past over theology
    and religious practice, made a show of brotherhood to highlight the
    dire situation of their flocks. In recent months, Christians and other
    minorities have fled Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria after
    being told to convert or face death.

    Last year, scores of Coptic churches in Egypt were destroyed allegedly
    by Muslim brotherhood supporters.

    Maronite Patriarch Mar Bechara Boutros Raï said the violence against
    Christians is painful enough.

    "But, what makes [it] more painful still is the fact that such a
    human tragedy has been taking place under the very eyes of the world,
    which up to now has been simply watching those atrocities from the
    sideline," he told a packed auditorium at the Capitol.

    "What's happening in the Middle East is a concrete manifestation of
    evil," Armenian Orthodox patriarch Aram I said in an interview. "The
    violence, persecution, massacre - these are the different dimensions
    and manifestations of evil. Therefore this is not only a Christian
    problem. This is a human problem."

    The U.S. Congress is overwhelmingly Christian, and the lawmakers,
    who belong to Western churches - Catholic and Protestant, express
    increasing alarm about the violence against non-Muslim minorities in
    the Middle East.

    Congressional representatives lined up to meet the patriarchs and
    address the summit. But New Jersey Representative Chris Smith suggested
    they shouldn't get their hopes up.

    "I have chaired almost a hundred congressional hearings on religious
    freedom," said Smith, senior member of the House Committee on
    Foreign Affairs. "It is not from lack of knowledge. It is from lack
    of commitment, that Congress and the president have not stood up
    consistently, predictably, to speak out on behalf of the persecuted
    Christians in the Middle East."

    A gala dinner for In Defense of Christians Wednesday evening erupted
    in discord. Part of the audience booed Texas Senator Ted Cruz for
    suggesting that Middle Eastern Christians should see Israel as an ally,
    because "those who hate Jews hate Christians."

    But after listening to the speeches from other lawmakers, Syriac
    Catholic leader Youssef III Younan was optimistic.

    "They all are convinced that the United States has to defend the
    rights of those [who are] defenseless," he said.

    Thousands of Younan's followers have been forced from their homes
    in northern Iraq, and he hopes the U.S. will do more to help Kurdish
    and Iraqi forces make it safe for them to return.

    The patriarchs also led a rare ecumenical service, repeating liturgies
    and prayers in English, Aramaic, Coptic and Arabic, to conform to
    their differing rites. At the end they embraced and exchanged the
    ritual greeting: "Peace be with you."

    http://www.voanews.com/content/middle-eastern-church-leaders-highlight-christians-plight/2446865.html

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