Saudis arrest 40 Christians for praying
April 25, 2005, 7:52 a.m.
Kingdom’s Religious Wrongs
The religious tyranny in Saudi Arabia is not just Saudis’ business

NRO
By Nina Shea

Before boarding his flight to Crawford to meet with President Bush Monday, 
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Abdullah presided over the arrest of 40 
Pakistani Christians on Friday. Their crime? The Pakistanis were caught 
praying in a private home in the capital Riyadh in violation of the state’s 
strictly enforced religious law that bans all non-Muslim worship.

As the State Department has determined, there is no religious freedom in 
Saudi Arabia and everyone there, Muslim or not, must obey the rules of the 
extreme sharia of the kingdom’s established religion, the Wahhabi 
interpretation of Islam. The Saudi state indoctrinates its nationals from an 
early age in the Wahhabi ideology of zero tolerance for the “other.” 
Government textbooks and publications teach that it is a religious 
obligation for Muslims to hate Christians and Jews and warn against 
imitating, befriending, or helping them in any way, or taking part in their 
festivities and celebrations. The state teaches a Nazi-like hatred for Jews, 
treats the forged Protocols of the Elders of Zion as historical fact, and 
avows that the Muslim’s duty is to eliminate the state of Israel.

Though the persecution of the Pakistani Christians is a dramatic example, 
they and the other non-Muslims among the quarter of the kingdom’s population 
who are foreign workers are not the only ones to suffer from the denial of 
religious freedom. Saudi Arabia’s nationals, by law Muslim, find that a 
broad range of their freedoms are limited because of the state’s monopoly on 
religious expression.
For example, Muslims who follow the Sufi and Shiite traditions are viewed as 
heretical dissidents and viciously condemned and discriminated against by 
the state. Regarding those who convert out of Islam, the Saudi ministry of 
Islamic affairs explicitly asserts in publications Freedom House has 
acquired, they “should be killed.” Muslims who object to even particular 
tenets of Wahhabism, such as advocates of greater religious tolerance, also 
are viewed as the “other” and condemned as “infidels.” Under Saudi law, such 
“blasphemers” and “apostates” from Islam can be sentenced to death.

Political reformers, too, are crushed on religious grounds. Three Saudi 
professors have now languished for over a year in prison after proposing 
that the country adopt a written constitution. Among other charges, their 
terminology was denounced as un-Islamic or “Western.” State publications 
condemn democracy itself as un-Islamic. They instill contempt for America 
because the United States is ruled by “infidel” legislated law, rather than 
Wahhabi-style Islamic law.

A direct consequence of there being no religious freedom is that every Saudi 
woman is forced by the state to conform to Wahhabi religious edicts 
restricting dress, transportation, movement, due-process rights, and the 
ability to participate in civic life.

The expansion of civil and political freedoms in the kingdom, therefore, 
hinges on religious freedom.

Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks — and the discovery that two thirds of the 
hijackers were Saudis — Saudi state ideology has become a matter of U.S. 
national security. As bad as it is that Wahhabism is Saudi Arabia’s state 
religion, even worse is that it is the Saudi government’s aim to propagate 
it and have it replace traditional and moderate interpretations of Islam 
worldwide, including within the United States. Earlier this year, Freedom 
House’s Center for Religious Freedom released a report based on a year-long 
study of the radically intolerant Wahhabi ideology contained in documents 
spread, published, or otherwise generated by the government of Saudi Arabia 
and found in the United States.

In one example, a publication for the “Immigrant Muslim” bearing the words 
“Greetings from the Cultural Department” of the embassy of Saudi Arabia in 
Washington, D.C., gave detailed instructions on how to “hate” the Christian 
and Jew: Never greet them first. Never congratulate the infidel on his 
holiday. Never imitate the infidel. Do not become a naturalized citizen of 
the United States. Do not wear a graduation gown because this imitates the 
infidel. The opening fatwa of another a book distributed by the embassy that 
was published by the Saudi air force responds to a question about a Muslim 
preacher in a European mosque who taught that it is not right to condemn 
Jews and Christians as infidels. The Saudi state cleric’s reply emphatically 
rebukes the Muslim cleric: “He who casts doubts about their infidelity 
leaves no doubt about his.”

Within worldwide Sunni Islam, followers of Saudi Arabia’s extremist Wahhabi 
ideology remain a distinct minority. This is evident from the millions of 
Muslims who have chosen to make America their home and are upstanding, 
law-abiding citizens and neighbors. It was just such concerned Muslims who 
first brought these publications to the attention of Freedom House. They did 
so in the hope of “freeing their communities from ideological 
 strangulation.”

The Saudi state’s propagation of Wahhabi extremism is more than hate speech; 
it is a totalitarian ideology of hatred that can incite to violence. The 
fact that this ideology is being mainstreamed within our borders through the 
efforts of a foreign government demands President Bush’s urgent attention in 
today’s conversations with Prince Abdullah. With his remarkable State of the 
Union address that challenged Saudi Arabia to democratize, the president 
turned a new page in U.S. policy. Some in American policy circles argue that 
religious freedom, however, is too sensitive to raise. It's too important 
not to; the first topic on the president’s agenda should be the expansion of 
religious freedom in the kingdom — for Muslims, as well as the captive 
Christians.

— Nina Shea is the director of Freedom House's Center for Religious Freedom.

____________________

http://indonews.free.fr










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