http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/03/destroy-all-the-churches-saudi-arabias-poor-treatment-of-christians/254650/

'Destroy All the Churches': Saudi Arabia's Poor Treatment of Christians
Elliott Abrams Mar 18 2012, 8:01 AM ET 

Why don't more Americans talk about religious abuses in the ultra-conservative 
kingdom?
Saudi Gr

The Middle East Forum reports that

  According to several Arabic news sources, last Monday, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin 
Abdullah, the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, declared that it is "necessary to 
destroy all the churches of the region." The Grand Mufti made his assertion in 
response to a question posed by a delegation from Kuwait: a Kuwaiti parliament 
member recently called for the "removal" of churches (he later "clarified" by 
saying he merely meant that no churches should be built in Kuwait), and the 
delegation wanted to confirm Sharia's position on churches. Accordingly, the 
Grand Mufti "stressed that Kuwait was a part of the Arabian Peninsula, and 
therefore it is necessary to destroy all churches in it.

This report brought back memories of a trip to Saudi Arabia that I took in 
January 2001, before joining the Bush Administration. I travelled there as 
chairman of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, and the 
delegation (which included Cardinal McCarrick) met with government officials 
and religious authorities.  To several, we made the argument that as Saudis 
claim to value religious faith and practice so deeply, surely they could 
understand the terrible hardship they were creating for the many Christians who 
lived in the Kingdom by forbidding them to worship. They can worship at home, 
came the reply (somewhat disingenuously, for we knew that the religious police 
often broke up such private religious services). That isn't enough, we argued, 
especially for Roman Catholics whose religion includes the sacraments that only 
a priest can administer. And there are roughly a million and a half Catholics, 
mostly Filipinos, here in Saudi Arabia, we said. Too bad, came the reply; they 
knew our rules before they came, and the rule is no religion other than Islam 
in Arabia. No churches. Period.

Well, we noted, there are churches in every other country on the Arabian 
Peninsula: Kuwait, Oman, Yemen, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE. You are the only 
exception. Are you suggesting that all those churches should be closed? Yes, 
came the reply. Every one of them.

So the reported statement by the Grand Mufti came as no surprise to me. Nor is 
it a surprise, considering his interpretation of Islam, that the religious 
police make it so difficult for Christians even to worship privately, in their 
homes. In a better world, the UN Human Rights Council would be denouncing these 
violations of freedom of religion, as would the whole Organization of Islamic 
Cooperation--given that Saudi Arabia is the only one of its 57 member countries 
that absolutely bars churches. In the world in which we actually live, 
denunciations of the Saudis for this are almost non-existent.

To give credit where it is due, the U.S. Government, in the latest 
International Religious Freedom report issued by the State Department, honestly 
states that "Freedom of religion is neither recognized nor protected under the 
law and is severely restricted in practice....The government officially does 
not permit non-Muslim clergy to enter the country to conduct religious 
services, although some do so under other auspices and are able to hold 
services. These entry restrictions make it difficult for non-Muslims to 
maintain regular contact with clergy. This is particularly problematic for 
Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians, whose faiths require that they receive 
sacraments from a priest on a regular basis."

This is not as frank as some of the earlier Bush Administration human rights 
reports, which until 2005 stated flatly that "Freedom of religion did not 
exist" in Saudi Arabia. The Grand Mufti's statement ought to be widely 
denounced around the world, and won't be--a scandal and a shame.

This article originally appeared at CFR.org, an Atlantic partner site.


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