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The Christian tragedy in the Middle East did not begin with Isis

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  • The Christian tragedy in the Middle East did not begin with Isis

    The Christian tragedy in the Middle East did not begin with Isis

    ROBERT FISK
    Sunday 5 April 2015

    A hundred years on from the Armenian genocide, and a Christian
    minority is again suffering


    One summer's day in 1990, I walked into a beautiful Crusader chapel in
    Keserwan, a gentle mountainside north of Beirut, where an old Catholic
    Maronite priest pointed to a Byzantine mosaic of - I think - Saint
    John. What he wanted to show me was the holy man's eyes. They had been
    stabbed out of the mosaic by a sword or lance at some point in
    antiquity. 'The Muslims did this,' the priest said.

    His words had added clarity because at that time the Lebanese
    Christian army General Michel Aoun - who thought he was the president
    and still, today, dreams of this unlikely investiture - was fighting a
    hopeless war against Hafez Assad's Syrian army. Daily, I was visiting
    the homes of dead Christians, killed by Syrian shellfire. The Syrians,
    in the priest's narrative, were the same 'Muslims' who had stabbed out
    the eyes in the ancient picture.

    I remember at the time - and often since - I would say to myself that
    this was nonsense, that you cannot graft ancient history onto the
    present. (The Maronites, by the way, had supported the earlier
    Crusaders. The Orthodox of the time stood with the Muslims.)
    Christian-Muslim enmity on this scale was a tale to frighten
    schoolchildren.

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    And yet only last year, as shells burst above the Syrian town of
    Yabroud, I walked into the country's oldest church and found paintings
    of the saints. All had had their eyes gouged out and been torn into
    strips. I took one of those strips home to Beirut, the painted eyes of
    the saints staring at me even as I write this article. This was not
    the sacrilege of antiquity. It was done by ghoulish men, probably from
    Iraq, only months ago.

    Like 9/11 - long after Hollywood had regularly demonised Muslims as
    barbarian killers who wish to destroy America - it seems that our
    worst fears turn into reality. The priest in 1990 cannot have lived
    long enough to know how the new barbarians would strike at the saints
    in Yabroud.

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    Note how I have not mentioned the enslavement of Christian women in
    Iraq, the Islamic State's massacre of Christians and Yazidis, the
    burning of Mosul's ancient churches or the destruction of the great
    Armenian church of Deir el-Zour that commemorated the genocide of its
    people in 1915. Nor the kidnapping of Nigerian schoolgirls. Not even
    the very latest massacre in Kenya where the numbers of Christian dead
    and the cruelty of their sectarian killers is, indeed, of epic,
    Hollywood proportions. Nor have I mentioned the ferocious Sunni-Shia
    wars that now dwarf the tragedy of the Christians.

    Soldiers standing over skulls of victims from the Armenian village of
    Sheyxalan in 1915, believed to be victims of the Armenian HolocaustBut
    the Christian tragedy in the Middle East today needs to be re-thought
    - as it will be, of course, when Armenians around the world
    commemorate the 100th anniversary of the genocide of their people by
    Ottoman Turkey. Perhaps it is time that we acknowledge not only this
    act of genocide but come to regard it not as just the murder of a
    minority within the Ottoman Empire, but specifically a Christian
    minority, killed because they were Armenian but also because they were
    Christian (many of whom, unfortunately, rather liked the Orthodox,
    anti-Ottoman Tsar).

    And their fate bears some uncommon parallels with the Islamic State
    murderers of today. The Armenian men were massacred. The women were
    gang-raped or forced to convert or left to die of hunger. Babies were
    burned alive - after being stacked in piles. Islamic State cruelty is
    not new, even if the cult's technology defeats anything its opponents
    can achieve.

    In Kuwait last week, a good and thoughtful Muslim, an American
    university graduate - within the al-Sabah family and prominent in the
    government - shook his head with disbelief when he spoke of Islamic
    State. 'I watched the video of them burning the Jordanian pilot
    alive,' he told me. 'I watched it several times. I had to, because I
    had to understand their technology. Do you know they used seven camera
    angles to film this atrocity? We could not compete with this media
    technology. We have to learn.'

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    And this is true. The West - that amorphous, dangerous expression -
    has still not understood the use of this technology - especially the
    use which the cult makes of the internet - nor have the Muslim Arab
    imams who should be speaking about the fearful acts of Islamic State.

    But most are not, any more than they denounced the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq
    war, when around a million Muslims killed each other. Because they
    were on Saddam's side in that war. And because the Islamic State's
    ideology is too obviously of Wahabi inspiration, and thus too close to
    some of the Gulf Arab states.

    The crimes of Islamic State are as brutal as any committed by the
    German army in the Second World War, but Jews who converted were not
    spared Hitler's plan for their extermination. What the Islamic State
    and the 1915 Ottoman Turks have in common is a cruelty based on
    ideology - even theology - rather than race hatred, although that is
    not far away. After the burning of churches and of synagogues, the
    rubble looks much the same.

    The tragedy of the Arab world is now on such a literally Biblical
    scale that we are all demeaned by it. Yet I also think of Lebanon
    where the old priest showed me his mosaic with the missing eyes and
    where the Lebanese Christians and Muslims fought each other - with the
    help of many foreign nations, including Israel, Syria and America -
    and killed 150,000 of their own people.

    Yet today, Lebanese Muslims and Christians, though still politically
    deeply divided, are protecting each other amid the gale-force winds
    around them. Why? Because they are today a much more educated
    population. It's because they value education, reading and books and
    knowledge. And from education comes justice. Which is why, when
    compared to Lebanon, the Islamic State is a nation of lost souls.


    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/the-christian-tragedy-in-the-middle-east-did-not-begin-with-isis-10157239.html

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