Boko Haram sedang ngebantai orang2 Kristen di Nigeria demi auloh.
 
Apakah Boko Haram ini sedang memburuk2kan nama islam, menghujat Islam spt yg 
dilakukan Salman Rushdie (atau gua) misalnya? Kalo orang Islam ditanya spt itu, 
hehehe.... si Salman Rushdie (atau gua) pasti dibilang sbg yg menghujat Islam, 
sedangkan Boko Haram, hehehe... ga akan disebut sedang menghujat Islam.
 
Emang ga salah tuh, Boko Haram adalah orang2 Islam yg soleh dan bertaqwa, 
mereka sedang berjihad di jalan auloh ngebantai kafir sesuai dgn perintah auloh 
dan sunnah nabi.
 
http://www.catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=45121
 
Lands Drenched in Innocent Blood: Boko Haram Declares War Against Christians
        * By Deacon Keith Fournier
        * 3/12/2012
        * Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)
 
Boko Haram announced they are planning  a "war on Christians" in the "next few 
weeks". The spokesman said the group "will launch a number of attacks, 
coordinated and part of the plan to eradicate Christians from certain parts of 
the country. We will create so much effort to end the Christian presence in our 
push to have a proper Islamic state that the Christians won't be able to stay." 
 
ABUA,Nigeria (Catholic Online) - On Wednesday, March 7, 2012, six armed men 
killed a customs official, a five year old boy and at least two others. They 
did so intentionally and in cold blood. They did so in the name of Allah. 
 
They set fire to a police station, a government building and two churches, one 
Catholic and one belonging to the Christian Brethren. They blew up vehicles, 
motorcycles and terrorized a town for three hours - all, once again, in the 
name of Allah.
 
This Islamist group has been terrorizing northern Nigeria for two years. They 
claimed responsibility for their evil and horrific behavior without any remorse 
or regret. On Thursday, March 8, 2012, they also killed a British and an 
Italian hostage. None of the reports indicated how the murders occurred but, 
the track record of similar Jihadis points to beheadings. We have only to 
remember Danny Pearl. In fact, we MUST remember Danny Pearl!
 
The President of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan, properly condemned the murders. 
The two victims were innocent engineers who had been taken by these evil 
Islamists in May of 2011. Efforts to negotiate for their release were 
unsuccessful. So too were efforts to rescue them. Their families are in 
mourning and we should pray for them. 
 
We reported on the horrible bombing outside of St Theresa's Catholic Church on 
Christmas Day. That evil act, perpetrated by these Islamic terrorists who 
proudly refer to themselves as the "Nigerian Taliban," was followed by an 
ultimatum issued to Christians in Northern Nigeria to leave in three days or 
face further violence.
 
A spokesman for "Boko Haram" told reporters "our Muslim brothers are advised to 
return to the north, because we have evidence that they will be attacked. We 
also issue a three-day ultimatum to the southerners living in the north of 
Nigeria, to leave. We have serious indications to suggest that the soldiers 
only kill the innocent Muslims in areas where government has declared a state 
of emergency. We will face them decisively to protect our brothers."
 
That was nonsense. There have been no attacks on Muslims in Nigeria. In fact, 
some Muslims who properly reject the violence of this evil group have been 
victim of their terror. The phrase "Boko Haram" means "Western education is 
forbidden" in the Hausa language. These Islamist terrorists hate all things 
"western" and Christian. They are Jihadiss who have expressed their intention 
to forcibly establish an Islamic Caliphate and impose Shariah Law on everyone.  
 
They are also called  al-Sunnah wal Jamma - or "Followers of the Prophet's 
Teachings". They refer to themselves officially as Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna 
Lidda'awati wal-Jihad, which means "people committed to the propagation of the 
prophet's teachings and Jihad". They are murderers and terrorists who use an 
appeal to religion to attempt to justify evil. 
 
After the Christmas bombings, a spokesman claimed responsibility in an 
interview with a local newspaper called The Daily Trust saying "There will 
never be peace, until our demands are met. We want all our brothers who have 
been incarcerated to be released; we want full implementation of the Sharia 
system and we want democracy and the constitution to be suspended."
 
The terrorist group issued a three-day ultimatum for Christians to leave the 
North of Nigeria and has called for all Muslims living in the South to move 
North. They have signaled their intention to fight government troops and to 
expand their violent attacks against Christians and others who resist their 
Jihad. 
 
After the Christmas bombing Vatican Radio reported that Archbishop Ignatius 
Kaigama of Jos, the Vice President of the Nigerian Bishop's Conference, urged 
Nigerians to not to allow their country to be overtaken by terror: "Churches 
have been destroyed and lives were lost and there is no sign that this might 
end, until the government intervenes decisively." 
 
"We continue to ask Christians to be vigilant and aware of the issue of safety 
when they go to church and even in their own homes. We have appealed that there 
be no retaliation and we continue to preach peace, hoping that all of us in 
Nigeria, Muslims and Christians, we will be able to work and live happily 
together. This is our position: no violence, no retaliation. We want to live in 
peace".

 
Sadly, these evil Jihadists have no such desire. 
 
Archbishop Kaigama added, "We continue to appeal to reason, for dialogue. It is 
possible for Muslims and Christians to reason together. We know that there are 
other forces behind the so-called Boko Haram. We do not even know who the Boko 
Haram really are, what they want, where they get their arms from. What is 
certain is that there are some forces behind them, either in Nigeria or abroad, 
who want to profit from instability in our country, but we will not give in to 
terrorism, we will not allow these fundamentalists to ruin our country". 
 
 
On the day after Christmas, the Feast of St Stephen the Deacon and Proto - 
Martyr, a visibly burdened Pope Benedict XVI spoke to the faithful gathered for 
the Angelus prayer. He spoke from his heart, urging prayers for those whose, 
"lands are drenched in innocent blood." 
 
The Pope reminded the faithful that St Stephen gave his life for his Christian 
faith. He spoke of his heroic witness, noting that even as he was being stoned 
to death he prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit" and begged forgiveness for 
his accusers. He extolled the witness of the early martyrs of the Church, a 
topic which he has frequently addressed in the last few years.
 
Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Holy See Press Office said in a 
statement, "Regretfully the attacks at the Church of Saint Theresa in Abuja, 
timed to coincide with Christmas Day celebrations, are once again the 
expression of the cruelty of blind and absurd hatred devoid of any respect for 
human life and represent an attempt to generate and fuel further hatred and 
confusion." 
 
"We express our closeness to the suffering of the Church and of all the 
Nigerian people who have been affected by violent terrorism even during these 
days that should be of joy and peace," he added. "While we pray for the 
victims, we also express the hope that this senseless violence will not weaken 
the will for peaceful cohabitation and dialogue in the nation." 
 
The word "Martyr" derives from a Greek word which means "witness." The Catholic 
faith proclaims that the shedding of one's blood in fidelity to Jesus Christ is 
the final witness to the Faith. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches us 
that:
 
"Martyrdom is the supreme witness given to the truth of the faith: it means 
bearing witness even unto death. The martyr bears witness to Christ who died 
and rose, to whom he is united by charity. He bears witness to the truth of the 
faith and of Christian doctrine. He endures death through an act of fortitude" 
(CCC #2471 - 2473)
 
What is happening to our brethren in Nigeria - Christian martyrdom at the hands 
of militant Jihadist Islamists - must not be overlooked. The threat of such 
violent, evil, Jihadism is not decreasing. If anything, it is increasing. For 
someone who remembers the cold war, even to the point of drills where we hid 
under our desks, it calls to mind the great need for a National resolve.  It 
makes the threat of militant Marxism look mild in comparison. 
 
The victims of this evil are often being killed precisely because they are 
Christians. The blood of the martyrs seems to be flowing more frequently these 
days as militant Islamic terrorism increases and establishes a new beachhead in 
Africa. For Catholics and other Christians, we cannot - we must not- fail to 
act. Africa is one of the great centers of the renewal of the Church in the 
Third Millennium. We are living in a new missionary age.  
 
The words attributed to Tertullian in the Second Century of the Church still 
hold out their promise: "The blood of the Martyrs is the seed of the Church."  
We are living in a new missionary age. Pray for our brethren in Africa. Also, 
understand the implications of the evil designs of these Jihadists. They hate 
us. If you want to read a source which "pulls no punches" in their reporting on 
this growing threat, read Jihad Watch.(http://www.jihadwatch.org/)

 
A spokesman for Boko Haram announced on Thursday they are planning  a "war on 
Christians". They told a local reporter  it would occur in the "next few 
weeks."  The spokesman said the group "will launch a number of attacks, 
coordinated and part of the plan to eradicate Christians from certain parts of 
the country. We will create so much effort to end the Christian presence in our 
push to have a proper Islamic state that the Christians won't be able to stay." 
 
© 2012, Catholic Online. Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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