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Persecution Watch: Praying for Ukraine and Russia

(Voice of the Persecuted) You are invited to join us on Tuesday, October 25, 2022 in a prayer conference call for the persecuted church hosted by Persecution Watch. 

Ukraine

  • Population 41 Million
  • Christianity 82%, Judaism 0.2%
  • Christians: 73% Orthodox, 2.3% Protestants
  • In Soviet times, Ukraine was the Bible Belt of the Soviet Union.
  • Ukraine is the poorest country in Europe, and has high levels of corruption
  • In March – war forced 10 million civilians to flee from their homes, including 3.5 million who left for other countries.  About half has returned to Ukraine.

Psa 75:9-10

But I will declare forever,

I will sing praises to the God of Jacob.

“All the horns of the wicked I will also cut off,

But the horns of the righteous shall be exalted.”

In General:

The capital Kyiv is full of large Evangelical churches; most evangelical growth was in Western Ukraine.  Pray for evangelical outreach to the Russian-speaking east.

Ukrainian Orthodox and Russian Orthodox are arguing over control of church buildings and legitimate authority in the nation.  

  • Pray for peace and cooperation between all who profess the name of Christ.
  • Pray for a strong church in every town and village.
  •  Pray for more Ukrainian missionaries to the Slavic world and former S.U.
  • Pray against the moral vacuum left from Communism – sexual libertinism, spiritual emptiness, alcoholism, hedonism.
  • Pray for leadership training to flourish amidst all the challenges

The War:

Children at risk – children from group homes in conquered territories are sent to Russia, cutting off contact to any surviving parents. Iranian drones are bombing Ukrainian energy infrastructure.  

  • Pray for drones and bombings to stop.

Most windows in the East were destroyed by shock waves.

  • Pray Ukrainians find ways to survive the long winter.

Russian soldiers are moving to Belarus in the north

  • Pray the war would not expand to more nations.

Russia claims that Ukraine is committing “genocide” against ethnic Russians

  • Pray Putin would never do what he has threatened – using chemical or nuclear weapons!

Between 100 to 300 Ukrainian soldiers die every day. In the process they kill many Russian conscripts.  

  • Pray for moral and spiritual healing from the horrors of war.

American and European support for Ukraine is weakening, because of inflation and high energy costs.  

  • Pray for Ukraine to make wise decisions.

Millions of families are separated because they are refugees or fighting the war.

  • Pray that God would protect families and children despite all challenges.
  • Pray for Christian churches and ministries serving the hurting.

Russia:

Thousands of Russian men fled the draft -mostly to Central Asia.  These nations may get tired of many desperate men, or Russia may demand them returned, or close the exits.  

  • Pray for the Russians who do not want to fight.

Russian police are violent to even mild war protests, plus give long prison terms.  

  • Pray for the safety of Russians who speak out against the war.

Putin is pressuring Jewish organizations to openly support the war.  

  • Pray for freedom of faith.

Gen. Alexander Dvornikov is Russia’s new war commander.  He is called the Butcher of Syria.

  • Pray Russia would choose peace!

Russian hawks push Putin to become more violent.  

  • Pray for pragmatics or peace seekers to gain influence.

After the breakup of the Soviet Union, many Ukrainians became missionaries to Russia.  Within 10 years, most were deported.

  • Pray missionaries would again go throughout Mother Russia.

We are continuing to lift up these persecuted witnesses to the Lord:

Leah Sharibu prisoner of Boko Haram since 2018. Pray for her release.

Alice Loksha Ngaddah was kidnapped in February 2019. She is a mother of two, working as a nurse for UNICEF. Pray for her release.

Pastor Wang Yi to be released from Chinese prison.

Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani from Iran for his release and his family as their persecution continues. Pastor Nadarkhani is serving the second year of his six-year sentence.

Anita, a Christian convert, had faced a long prison term but was able to escape from Iran. She and her family have finally arrived in their permanent host country where they can express their faith openly. Pray for an easy transition into the new culture. Pray also for her family still waiting for asylum. May they be reunited soon.

The Harvest

“I am sending you, to open their eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who have been sanctified by faith in Me” (Acts 26:18)

Michael Laird, Persecution Watch Prayer Call Moderator

Prayer Conference Call Details

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Call in number: (667) 770-1476 

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If you are experiencing any difficulties joining the call, please let us know.

What is Persecution Watch?

Persecution Watch is a U.S. national prayer conference call ministry that prays specifically for the global Persecuted Church. For over a decade, Blaine Scogin led this national network of believers who faithfully pray for the persecuted and the global harvest for the Kingdom of God. The group meets via a free call-in service every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday night at 9pm Eastern time in the United States (please check your time zone). Blaine also served as Prayer Director for Voice of the Persecuted, and the missions became one. Brother Blaine passed into glory on December 26, 2019. It was truly a blessing for all of us to serve alongside this dear man of God and he will be greatly missed. The prayer mission of Persecution Watch remains an important part of our mission. Voice of the Persecuted is committed to continue the prayer conference call for the persecuted along with the dedicated Persecution Watch prayer warrior team.

Prior to the passing of Brother Blaine, he confirmed the passing of the torch as prayer conference call leader to Nadia Dybvik. Nadia has a burdened heart for the persecuted and is a prayer warrior standing in the gap for them. She joined the Persecution Watch prayer team in 2013 and has been part of the core ever since. Before becoming the prayer call leader, she served in the role of prayer moderator since 2015. Blaine chose Nadia for her faithfulness to pray for the persecuted and her strong commitment to the Persecution Watch mission. We are blessed not only with her gift of prayer, but her genuine love for every brother and sister in Christ that comes on the call to pray. May the Lord continue to bless Nadia and the prayer team in the mission and their personal lives.

“Pray for us” is the number one request that we hear from the persecuted. As the members of the first century Church were moved by the Holy Spirit to pray, we too must continue to serve those suffering persecution by lifting them up to the Lord through prayer.

On occasion, persecuted brothers and sisters have been invited on the conference call to share the trials they are facing. The team serves to encourage them by washing their feet in Spirit led prayer. Time is often reserved for those on the call to ask questions. We believe this helps to gain a better understanding of the situation that persecuted Christians endure in their specific nations. Q&A also helps us to focus our prayers based on their current needs.

Persecution Watch also hosts callers who want to pray united from other nations. If your heart is perplexed by the sufferings of our persecuted brothers and sisters, you no longer need to pray alone.

We welcome all who desire to pray for the persecuted church and consider it a joy to pray together with you. If you are new to the call and cannot find your voice, listen in and pray silently or on mute. We are grateful and thank the Lord for bringing us all together to pray in agreement for our persecuted family in Christ. We can all be prayer warriors on this call!

God bless and protect you in your faithfulness to serve.

Lois Kanalos, Founder, Voice of the Persecuted, Nadia Dybvik, Persecution Watch Prayer Call Leader and the Persecution Watch Prayer Team

NOTE: Please fill out the form in the sign-up link below to be included in our distribution list to receive urgent prayer requests, prayer points, notification of special prayer events and special guest speakers.

Note to Voice of the Persecuted (VOP) readers: The Persecution Watch prayer team is also the prayer team of Voice of the Persecuted. SIGN UP today.

Are Middle Eastern Christians Considered Collateral Damage?

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My Heart goes out to the people of Ukraine, but as I received a comment today from a Sister in Christ that got me thinking.  Since the world is focused on Ukraine, and Russia, and they are very fixated on this.  Media reports that lead to believe that all that remains is the first shot.  Some of the media reports indeed seem staged.  I watched one popular news channel, parade pictures all evening last night of ordinary citizens of Ukraine, posing with armed soldiers like it was a summer parade or picnic.  On the other hand, I saw pictures of  Russian troops with priests in the background carry a large cross standard.  But while we are all focused on Russia, as we should be concerned, but what is happening in Syria?

What is happening in Israel, and Iran, and Libya?  Libya is a hot bed again, killing Christians, threatening Christians either convert or die.  Parts of Syria have turned completely insane. There are reports coming out of Syria that ISIS, Iraq and the Levant have taken over large swaths of Christian communities and they are demanding that Christians either convert, or be killed or pay a tax of 500.00 per person.  I’ve heard it called dhimmitude, I’ve heard it called Jizya. (More)

This is ‘Sharia Law’ 101.  Most westerners know nothing of this practice.  It’s oppressive and the penalty for not paying this tax is death or worse.   Whatever it is, it’s hideous, appalling and unspeakable, that in the modern world that the west enjoys that one would think that this could actually happen.  Open doors is reporting that Syrian Christians are running out of options.  Mission Network News is also reporting:

Syria (MNN) — Ukraine has taken over the world’s spotlight, but developments in Syria are cause for concern: believers are running out of options. David Curry of Open Doors USA explains: “Over the past several months, Christians have increasingly been caught in the cross-fire of the battle between those that are loyal to the government and the Muslim extremists.“Some extremist groups have been quoted as saying, ‘We’ll either kill you or you’ll have to leave.’ There’s a concerted effort to put Christians in the middle of these battles because they want them to leave; they want to impose Sharia law.”

Iran continues to spew hatred about Israel and the US.  World leaders have seemed recently to actually be welcoming chaos and anarchy.  It’s as if they want this to re-shape the world.  I asked the question on a previous post, and that was ‘Do you suppose that Christians are just collateral damage?’

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Do you suppose that they know that the western world as a whole, is not informed about the plight of the Christians?  Do you suppose that in their zeal to re-shape the world into a ‘New World Order’  that Christians are just insignificant?

Well in Africa, evidently chaos and anarchy has blinders.  In the North Boko Haram are killing Christians and destroying villages and towns like a ravenous wolf.  In the CAR the UN is calling for more UN troops on the ground to quell the violence there.  They are protraying a war war between the Muslims and the Christians, with both attacking each other with what can only be described as heinous and demonic.  They are still removing dozens of bodies from streets today that have been hacked to pieces or burned.  (More)

Soon, the world will be enveloped in darkness and chaos.  It’s in the Bible.  Then you will be faced with this very choice.  What will you do?  What will you choose?  Man or God?

Right now, choose to be informed, choose to pray for peace in these regions.  Speak out to your Representatives, ask your Church leaders to speak out, and get behind those who dare to speak out, before this right is torn from us.  Pray for our Brother’s and Sisters as they face this evil.

Two murdered in Russian church shooting

The Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk

The Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk

The 25 year old was arrested and admitted his guilt. Witnesses: he was shouting against God and Christianity. Among the victims, a nun who tried to stop the killer. Local priest she is a “martyr of Christ”.

According to Archpriest Viktor Gorbach, the killer cursed God and Christianity, and for this reason – he added – the killed nun must be considered a “martyr of Christ”. According to his reconstruction, the nun tried to draw to the attention of the armed young man to allow those who were still in the church, women and children, to escape. READ FULL STORY

Putin calls to end Christian persecution, as Obama is ‘silent’

To borrow from the musical group The Kinks, you know “it’s a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world” when Russian president Vladimir Putin becomes the leading voice for stopping the violent persecutions against Christians while the president of the United States stands silent.

Speaking at a meeting with Orthodox Christian leaders in Moscow last week, according to Life Site News, Putin said he noted “with alarm” that “in many of the world’s regions… inter-confessional tensions are mounting, and the rights of religious minorities are infringed, including Christians and Orthodox Christians.”

In emphasizing the Middle East and North Africa, Putin said:

Vladimir_Putin“This pressing problem should be a subject of close attention for the entire international community. It is especially important today to make efforts to prevent intercultural and interreligious conflicts, which are fraught with the most serious upheavals.”

Christians in Syria have suffered greatly amid a deadly civil war there, as have Coptic Christians in Egypt while under Muslim Brotherhood rule. There has also been a rapid decline of Iraq’s Christian population since 2003. All of which has largely been ignored by the Obama administration.

Nina Shea, Director of the Center for Religious Freedom and a Hudson Institute Fellow, said during an appearance at CPAC in March that “religious persecution is the gravest human rights crisis of our day,” as reported by Breitbart News.

Shea noted then that the Obama administration has been “silent” on the issue of global Christian persecution, and she had little hope of improvement.

”I have every expectation this problem will become worse between now and the end of the Obama administration,” she said.

Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., a co-chairman of the House of Representatives’ Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, has been critical of the U.S. government’s “anemic and at times outright baffling” response to the treatment of Christians in the Mideast, according to the National Catholic Register.

Rep Frank Wolf“America has always been a friend to the oppressed, the persecuted, the forgotten. But, sadly, today, that allegiance is in question, as religious freedom and human-rights abuses around the globe increasingly go unaddressed and unanswered,” Wolf said last month.

Yes, we may have passed through the looking glass if Christians must look to Russia for protection. A mixed up, muddled up, shook up world, indeed.

Source

Patriarch Kirill against gay marriage and the dictatorship of free will: “Signs of the Apocalypse”

signsapoc

All Russia, Kirill, has spoken out against countries that have approved same-sex marriage and warns about the risk of dictatorship of free will, which he has termed as

“dangerous signs of the Apocalypse”

On the occasion of the liturgy held on 21 July in Kazan Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow, the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church denounced the presence of colossal forces which aim to

“convince us all that the only real value is free will, and that no-one has the right to violate this value, even when a person chooses evil or a socially dangerous behavior”. “Everything goes as long as it does not violate the rules of the civil law,” he added, recognizing how these norms “easily fool.”

“In recent times, in a number of countries the choice of sin has been approved and justified by the law, and those who in good conscience, fight these laws imposed by a minority, are repressed”, denounced the Patriarch. This, he said, is “a dangerous sign of the apocalypse and we must do everything to ensure that in the area of ​​Holy Rus this sin is never justified by the law, because that would mean that the nation has embarked on the path of’ self-destruction”.

Kirill reaffirmed his approval of the law “against gay propaganda”, recently signed by President Vladimir Putin. The new law, criticized by human rights defenders, punishes any act of “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations in front of minors”, with fines and terms of imprisonment.
However, the Patriarch has admitted that laws alone are not enough.

“We know that any law, even the most perfect, can not eradicate crime, corruption, evil, lies. These can be eradicated only by the person who freely chooses good,” he concluded.

In Russia, homosexuality was considered a crime until 1993, and as a mental illness until 1999. Homophobia is widespread and recently there has been an increase in cases of murder and homophobic violence throughout the country. (AsiaNews)

Russian pastor chooses greater joy when faced with persecution

Joshua-1-9

by Berit Kjos  

Baptist leader Mikhail (Misha) Khorev was a lawbreaker. As a young Russian pastor in the Communist Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, he faced two options: spiritual compromise or persecution and prison. He chose the latter and continued his secret and illegal ministry to Christians eager to know God, even while incarcerated. Khorev followed Acts 5:29 well: “We ought to obey God rather than men.”

Khorev’s stay in Moscow’s Lefortovo Prison began May 20, 1966. For the crime of sharing God’s forbidden truths with Christian families, he faced a two-and-a-half-year sentence. God would use it for good.

His fellow prisoners had many questions for him. They wanted to know about God, His forgiveness and His saving love. Their dialogue exposed their hunger for hope in their hopeless world:

“What do you say, holy man?” one asked Khorev.

They all grew quiet, waiting for his answer.

“I think,” Khorev began, “the most important thing in life is to know God through Jesus Christ.”

“Why are you in here?”

Khorev explained that his arrest was probably because of his work preaching and teaching the gospel throughout Russia. They understood. When he mentioned that people in the “registered church” were responsible for his arrest, many nodded their heads. They were all too familiar with the government’s devious ways.

“Attention!” called the guard. “If I call your name, get ready for transport.”

Khorev rose to get his bag, prepared for the end of his sentence, when he heard his name.

“No,” the other prisoners protested. “Sit down. You have 15 more minutes. We need to talk some more.”

“I want you to pray for my wife, Natasha,” insisted one man.

A chorus of other requests rained on Khorev’s ears. As he knelt beside his chair, he tried to memorize all the prayer requests.

The time passed swiftly until the sound of the officer unlocking the door filled the room. Khorev shook hands with the men surrounding him.

One said, “I was sentenced to six months for my crime. Now I am glad that in these six months I have met you.”

Khorev never saw those men again, but he prayed that God would continue His work in their hearts.

Between lengthy prison terms, Khorev traveled through Russia to share the Gospel and bring encouragement to Christians who dared to attend the . The fact that Joseph Stalin’s Ministry of Religious Affairs had banned any biblical teaching in the presence of children didn’t stop families from bringing them. God’s comforting words meant more to them than the world’s transient safety.

The plight of the Russian people under Communist tyranny may seem totally contrary to our “land of the free,” yet we seem to be headed in a similar direction. Are we prepared to stand firm in our faith as our leaders purge Christian beliefs and values from schools, colleges, business and government?

“Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go” (Joshua 1:9).

Los Altos Hills resident Berit Kjos is a researcher and author in the study of education systems and global changes.

Muslim Persecution of Christians: January, 2013

persecuted

Gatestone  Institute reports

Egypt: A court sentenced an entire family – Nadia Mohamed Ali and her seven children – to fifteen years in prison for converting to Christianity.

The year 2013 began with reports indicating that wherever Christians live side by side with large numbers of Muslims, the Christians are under attack. As one report said, “Africa, where Christianity spread fastest during the past century, now is the region where oppression of Christians is spreading fastest.” Whether in Kenya, Nigeria, Mali, Somalia, Sudan, or Tanzania—attacks on Christians are as frequent as they are graphic.

As for the Middle East, the cradle of Christianity, a new study by the Pew Forum finds that “just 0.6 percent of the world’s 2.2 billion Christians now live in the Middle East and North Africa. Christians make up only 4% of the region’s inhabitants, drastically down from 20% a century ago, and marking the smallest regional Christian minority in the world. Fully 93% of the region is Muslim and 1.6% is Jewish.”

How Christianity has been all but eradicated from the region where it was born is made clear in yet another report on the Middle East’s largest Christian minority, Egypt’s Christian Copts. Due to a “climate of fear and uncertainty,” Christian families are leaving Egypt in large numbers. Along with regular church attacks, the situation has gotten to the point that, according to one Coptic priest, “Salafis meet Christian girls in the street and order them to cover their hair. Sometimes they hit them when they refuse.” Another congregation leader said “With the new [Sharia-heavy] constitution, the new laws that are expected, and the majority in parliament I don’t believe we can be treated on an equal basis.”

Elsewhere, Christians are not allowed to flee. In eastern Syria, for example, 25,000 Christians, including Syriac Orthodox, Syriac Catholics, Chaldeans and Armenians, were prevented from fleeing due to a number of roadblocks set up by armed Islamic militia groups, who deliberately target Christians for robbery and kidnapping-for-ransom—then often slaughtering their victims.

Categorized by theme, January’s batch of Muslim persecution of Christians around the world includes (but is not limited to) the following accounts, listed by theme and in country alphabetical order, not necessarily according to severity:

churchattack

Church Attacks

Egypt: Reminiscent of the 2011 New Year’s Eve church bombing in Alexandria, which left over 23 Christians dead, a car packed with explosives was discovered by a Coptic church celebrating Christmas [which is in January] and was neutralized before it could detonate. As patrols seized the explosives-packed car, another car with masked men in it sped away. Separately, hundreds of Muslims chanting Islamic slogans in the village of Fanous destroyed a social services building belonging to a Coptic Church. Security forces arrived only after the building had been completely destroyed. According to the AINA report, the social services building “had all the necessary government permits; it had a reception hall on the first floor and a kindergarten on the second. But the Muslims insisted that it would become a church. Mosques in surrounding areas had earlier called on Muslims, through their megaphones, to go and help their Muslim brethren in Fanous, because Christians were “building a church.” Hundreds of other Muslim protesters rioted outside yet another church in Upper Egypt; on claims that a Christian man had sexually assaulted a 6-year-old girl, they threw stones at the building. Four stores owned by Copts were torched. Police are investigating the accusations against the merchant.

Nigeria: A total of 30 Christians were slaughtered in two separate attacks carried out by armed men ahead of the New Year, in the Muslim-majority north: on Sunday December 30, 15 people were killed when armed jihadis stormed a church and opened fire on worshippers. The night before, Muslim terrorists broke into targeted homes and slaughtered 15 other Christians in their sleep. “The victims were selected because they were all Christians, some of whom had moved into the neighbourhood from other parts of the city hit by Boko Haram attacks,” said a relief worker. Meanwhile, Nigerian president Jonathan revealed that Boko Haram has enablers even within his own government: “The saboteurs in government condoning terrorism by Boko Haram, you do not love this nation,” he said. “Those of you who leak secrets to Boko Haram do not love this nation.”

Pakistan: On Christmas day, “when Christian worshipers were coming out of different Churches after performing Christmas prayers, more than one hundred Muslim extremists equipped with automatic rifles, pistols and sticks attacked the Christian women, children and men,” according to a Pakistan Christian Post report. Several were shot or beaten relentlessly. Much of this appears to have been exacerbated by a fatwa, or an Islamic edict, that came out right before Christmas, saying that, “Christmas cannot be celebrated by Muslims because it is against the concept of monotheism in Islam.” Due to the subsequent chaos, Christians “were under siege from Christmas day and running out of food supplies and milk for children on fear of safety and security of life from further attacks of Muslim mob…. The news of this attack on Christians on Christmas Day was intentionally blocked by media and administration of capital city Islamabad.”

Russia: Security forces in a North Caucasus province on Sunday killed three Islamic militants suspected of planning attacks on church services during the Russian Orthodox Christmas holiday in January. Security forces tried to stop a van in a Muslim-majority province but its occupants opened fire and, in the ensuing battle, were killed. Guns and ammunition were subsequently discovered in the van, indicating that the men could have been planning attacks on churches during the services that marked the Russian Orthodox Christmas. “Deadly exchanges of gunfire between police and suspected militants at road checkpoints are common in Russia’s North Caucasus, a string of provinces hit by an Islamist insurgency rooted in two separatist wars in Chechnya,” the report added.

Murders and Plots of Murder

Algeria: According to a local man who escaped an Islamic raid in the Sahara, the Islamic gunmen, who seized hundreds of gas plant workers, told the staff they would not harm Muslims but would kill Western hostages to whom they referred as “Christians and infidels”: “The terrorists told us at the very start that they would not hurt Muslims but were only interested in the Christians and infidels. ‘We will kill them,’ they said.”

Egypt: Two bearded men, apparently Salafis —those Muslims who most try to pattern themselves after Islam’s prophet—in what appears to have been a random act of violence, stabbed a Christian woman in Alexandria. The two men were riding a motorcycle when they intercepted Mary and, as she was crossing the street, stabbed her in her abdomen, causing a serious wound in her peritoneal membrane. Mary, a Copt, was transported to the hospital, where she underwent surgery. Although her family filed a complaint with the police, the head detective, as usual, refused to go out and inspect the assault scene. An activist confirmed that this is not the first attack on Coptic women in Alexandria; there were several such cases reported in January, all with no response from authorities.

Iraq: The nation’s ever dwindling Christian minority continues to suffer atrocities. A Christian university medical student was killed by a car bomb a day after the body of a 54-year-old female Christian teacher was found with her throat cut. She had been discovered in the same area where attacks have been perpetrated in the past against members of the city’s Christian minority — some abducted then murdered.

Turkey: An assassination plot against a Protestant pastor was thwarted when police arrested 14 suspects, two of whom had been part of his congregation for more than a year, pretending to be interested in Christianity; one went so far as to be baptized. “These people had infiltrated our church and collected information about me, my family and the church and were preparing an attack against us,” said the pastor, a native Turk who had converted to Christianity. “Two of them attended our church for over a year and they were like family.”

Also, an 85-year-old Christian Armenian woman was stabbed to death in her apartment. A crucifix was carved onto her naked corpse. Another elderly Christian Armenian woman was punched in the head, and, after collapsing to the floor, was repeatedly kicked by a masked man. According to the report, “the attack marks the fifth in the past two months against elderly Armenian women, one of whom has has lost an eye…. Opinion remains divided as to whether these are organised hate crimes targeting non-Muslims or just random theft.” According to Turkey’s Human Rights Association, however, “The attacks were carried out with racist motives,” the victims intentionally targeted for being Christian Armenians.

blasphemy

Apostasy, Blasphemy, Proselytism

Egypt: A court sentenced an entire family—Nadia Mohamed Ali and her seven children—to fifteen years in prison for converting to Christianity. Seven other people were sentenced to five years in prison, mainly for facilitating the formal conversion of the family. Born a Christian, Nadia had converted to Islam to marry a Muslim man; when she attempted to convert back to Christianity after the death of her husband, and reflect this change formally on her and her children’s identity card, the request created suspicions among security personnel, who arrested the family. The fifteen year prison sentence followed.

Iran: Saeed Abedini, an American-Iranian Christian pastor was arrested and, in a sham trial, sentenced “to eight years in prison for threatening the national security of Iran through his leadership in Christian house churches. He will serve the time in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison, known as one of the most brutal.” “This is a real travesty—a mockery of justice,” said the American pastor’s attorney. “From the very beginning, Iranian authorities have lied about all aspects of this case, even releasing rumors of his expected release. Iran has not only abused its own laws, it has trampled on the fundamentals of human rights.” This is not be the first time Tehran has behaved in such a manner.

Malaysia: Threats to burn Bibles in the Malay language were just the latest assaults on Christianity in a Muslim nation regularly touted in the Western press as “moderate.” A note written in Malay saying a Bible-burning festival would soon take place was sent to a Christian priest; it ended with a warning in English: “Let’s teach ’em a lesson.” This latest threat “has had the desired effect of adding to the despair of Malaysian Christians. A fortnight ago the Sultan of the State of Selangor, defying the conventional practice and in the country, forbade Christians from using the word ‘Allah.’ The Arabic term for God, in usage in religious and cultural contexts before the dawn of Islam, has been used in Bibles in the Malay language and litany for more than 400 years.”

Dhimmitude

[General Abuse and Suppression of Non-Muslims as “Tolerated” Citizens]

Egypt: A Muslim preacher, Hisham al-Ashri, appeared on prime-time television saying that women not wearing the hijab [headscarf] in public, are asking to get raped. He framed his discussion around Christians, who in Egypt are most likely not to wear veils: “I was once asked: If I came to power, would I let Christian women remain unveiled? And I said: If they want to get raped on the streets, then they can.” He further said that, “In order for Egypt to become fully Islamic, alcohol must be banned and all women must be covered,” a remark that pointedly does not take Egypt’s large Christian minority—whose own religious beliefs do not mandate veils or ban alcohol—into consideration.

Indonesia: After being threatened with closure, six Catholic schools in the nation that has the largest Muslim population in the world, finally agreed to hire Islamic teachers and offer Islamic lessons to Muslim students. Muslim public schools, however, habitually refuse to offer Christian lessons to Christian students, and teach Islam to all students. As one Indonesian commentator put it, “If the regulation is upheld, will Islamic schools, which are more exclusive than Catholic schools when it comes to accepting students of different faiths, also be required to provide Buddhist, Christian or Hindu lessons for their non-Muslim students?” Separately, the Indonesia Ulema Council’s East Java chapter urged other regions in the province to issue similar decrees so that all schools, whether state-run or managed by Christian foundations, provide Islamic lessons for their Muslim students.

Pakistan: A powerful government official’s Muslim aide, running a prostitution ring abducted a 15-year-old Christian girl from her home, then forced her to convert to Islam and marry him. As a tenant of the Christian family, the aide was evicted after police exposed his prostitution ring. After his departure, the girl disappeared. When, according to the mother, the aide called the girl’s family, “He also claimed that Asma had converted to Islam and asked us not to look for her, as she won’t be returning home. I could not believe my ears, because Asma is hardly 15 and Ghaji [the Muslim aide] is thrice her age,” she said. “I told him that I wanted to speak to Asma for the last time, so he handed over the phone to her. ‘What have you done my child, my child?’ I asked as Asma burst into tears. [Asma said:] ‘They are not going to let me return home, mother—do something.'” The police, as usual, refused to register a case, telling the devastated parents, “Do you know Ghaji works for Siraj Durrani [a governmental official]? I’d suggest that you forget your daughter and stop creating problems for your other children.”

Tanzania: During a Friday mosque sermon, a cleric called on Muslims “not to cooperate with Christians because they were infidels. He insisted that Muslims should not take part in Christian festivals like Christmas, Easter and other celebrations, including baptism and confirmation.” He also called on Muslims not to go to Christian funeral services, because infidel Christians are to be buried as dogs: “Let me tell you if you came from a Christian father or mother, but you got assimilated [converted to Islam], consider yourself you are lucky. But if one of your parents is deceased, you shouldn’t burry [sic] him or her, but just put him/her in the grave as if you [were] doing it to a dead dog.” The report further adds that, “Since the founding of the Saad bin Mwazi mosque in Makorora half a decade ago [where the above sermon took place], most residents of the area, including Christians and Muslims have been listening to hate sermons uttered in the mosque.”

Uzbekistan: Police detained 80 church leaders in a raid on a gathering to train people for the ministry. In the process, they insulted the Christians and confiscated their Bibles and Christian books, later destroyed by a court order. According to the report, “Four leaders were charged with offences under the country’s harsh laws regarding religious practice, including violating the procedure for holding religious meetings, carrying out unauthorised religious activity and teaching religious beliefs without permission. They were each fined more than a year’s salary in Uzbekistan and are appealing against the ruling. On 24 December, a court ordered that Bibles confiscated during the raid must be destroyed, despite the fact that the Committee on the Religious Affairs of Uzbekistan officially recognises the Bible as a legitimate text.”

About this Series

Because the persecution of Christians in the Islamic world is on its way to reaching pandemic proportions, “Muslim Persecution of Christians” was developed to collate some—by no means all—of the instances of persecution that surface each month. It serves two purposes:

1) To document that which the mainstream media does not: the habitual, if not chronic, Muslim persecution of Christians.

2) 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 that criminalize and punish with death those who “offend” Islam; theft and plunder in lieu of jizya (financial tribute expected from non-Muslims); overall expectations for Christians to behave like dhimmis, or second-class, “tolerated” citizens; and simple violence and murder. Sometimes it is a combination.

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.

Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

by Raymond Ibrahim

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