Nabi dkk itu doyan nyulik cewek, merkosa dan ngeperbudak si cewek dan
maksa si cewek masuk Islam. Dgn sendirinya sunnah nabi ini hrs
diamalkan oleh orang2 islam yg soleh dan bertaqwa, bukan?

Islam itu emang agama yg benar, hehehe... (Teddy dan arra_s pasti
mikir gua lg muji2 Islam).


http://frontpagemag.com/2013/frank-crimi/the-kidnapping-of-coptic-girls/


The Kidnapping of Coptic Girls
March 8, 2013 By Frank Crimi Comments (6)

When a rumor circulated last week that a Muslim woman in the southern
Egyptian city of Kom Ombo had been forcibly converted to Christianity,
a mob of Muslims felt compelled to riot, attacking and firebombing the
city’s local Coptic Christian church.

The rioting in Kom Ombo had begun when local Muslim residents believed
a missing 36-year-old Muslim woman had been forced to convert to
Christianity and was being held against her will in the Church of Mar
Girgis, Kom Ombo’s largest Coptic Church.

That transgression was apparently egregious enough to induce hundreds
of local Muslims to surround the church for three days hurling Molotov
Cocktails and rocks, a melee that caused injury to over two dozen
Christians and Egyptian police.

Of course, it should be noted that Copts, who make up 10 percent of
Egypt’s populace, are used to being on the receiving end of Muslim
ire, having seen over the past several years scores of their churches
routinely attacked and burned.

In fact, Muslim rage at Coptic churches and their parishioners extends
beyond Egyptian borders, fury evidenced by the recent attack by gunmen
of an Egyptian Coptic church in the Libyan city of Benghazi that
injured two priests.

That assault had been preceded by the arrest of nearly 50 Egyptian
Christians in Benghazi on suspicion of proselytizing, detention which
included the Christians reportedly being tortured by, among other
things, having their tattooed crosses burned off with acid.

Nevertheless, the mob fury in Kom Ombo began to dissipate somewhat
when the missing woman reappeared to her family, where according to an
Egyptian police official, it was found that she was not the victim of
a forced conversion but rather had disappeared for “family and social
reasons.”

Yet, while the rumor of the forced conversion was revealed to be a
fake, what is all too real is the ongoing and escalating abduction and
forced conversion to Islam of Coptic Christian women and girls by
Egyptian Muslims.

While this distressing practice has been plaguing Egypt’s Coptic
community for decades, the number of these abduction cases, perhaps
not surprisingly, has dramatically grown since the January 2011 ouster
of Egyptian President Hosnai Mubarak.

In a 2012 report commissioned by Christian Solidarity International
titled Tell My Mother I Miss Her and written by George Washington
University professor Michele Clark and Coptic human rights activist
Nadia Ghaly, 500 cases were reported of Coptic females having been
kidnapped and forcibly converted to Islam.

For those young women and girls fortunate enough to escape their
captors, their horrors were chillingly expressed by one of the authors
of the CSI report before a US congressional committee in July 2012:

    Many who return home indicate that they were raped and told they
could not go home because their families would never accept them back.
Many are beaten; others are forced into domestic servitude. They are
not allowed to leave where they are held without a member of their
captor’s family keeping watch. They eventually are brainwashed into
thinking the only way to be safe is to convert. Their families, who
have been searching frantically for their daughters, sisters and wives
— without any help from the police — often never discover their fate.

Equally disturbing is that while the number of abduction cases has
dramatically grown, the age of its victims has dramatically shrunk,
with the typical age of abductees, according to an official with a
Christian NGO, to now be 13-14 years of age.

One of those young girls is Sarah Ishaq Abdelmalek, a 14-year-old
Coptic girl who disappeared in September 2012 after stopping at a
bookstore on her way to school.

Sarah’s kidnapper was believed to be the 27-year-old Muslim bookstore
owner, Mahmoud Abu Zied Abdel Gawwad, a married man and father who
reportedly smuggled Sarah across the border into Libya. Despite an
Egyptian prosecutor ordering Gawwad’s arrest in October 2012, the
police have yet to arrest him.

Yet, that governmental inaction should come as little surprise to
those who believe Sarah and girls like her to be the victims of a
well-orchestrated plan to kidnap Coptic females, an operation run by
Egyptian Salafist groups, Muslim businessmen and Egypt’s governing
authorities.

Elements of that plan were detailed in a May 2008 report by the
Egyptian newspaper, Al Fagr, which told of Muslim businessmen funding
an operation “carried out with the collusion of State Security and
Mosque sheikhs” to buy Christian females for conversion to Islam,
prices which depended on the “girls’ ages, looks and social standing.”

Moreover, according to Ebram Louis of the Association of Victims of
Abduction and Enforced Disappearance, a Christian NGO, “In every
Egyptian province there is a Salafist association which handles the
kidnapping of Christian girls. They have homes everywhere where they
keep them.”

Still, even if a girl’s location is reported to Egyptian authorities,
Louis said those officials will simply “inform the Salafists, who then
move her away to another home and then we lose all trace of her.”

The sad reality, however, is that the abduction and forced conversion
of Christian women and girls has not only found fertile soil in Egypt
but in Muslim countries scattered throughout Africa, the Mideast and
Asia.

In Pakistan, for example, it is estimated that every year over 700
Christian girls are kidnapped, forced to marry their Muslim abductors
and convert to Islam.

In many instances, these forced marriages and conversions are carried
out by powerful and influential Muslim families who threaten and
severely beat the young girls into verifying their compliance if
questioned by local authorities.

However, as in Egypt, these abductors have little need to take the
added step of forcing compliance from their victims, given Pakistan’s
legal entities either have no moral qualms about the practice or are
themselves bribed to turn a blind eye to the situation.

In Egypt, one of those blind eyes belongs to Egyptian President
Mohamad Morsi who has publicly denied that the practice of forced
Islamization of Coptic women and girls even exists in his country.

While Morsi may be willfully ignorant, others see the situation all
too clearly, such as Coptic Orthodox Pope Tawadros II. He has called
the kidnapping and forced conversion of Christian girls a “disgrace
for the whole of Egypt,” while also asking, “Can any family accept the
kidnapping of their daughter and her forced conversion?”

Unfortunately, while many Christian families may not be accepting of
this horrendous practice, it may be safe to assume that the Obama
administration is, given its recent decision to send over $200 million
to Egypt in financial assistance.

That money, which is part of more than $1 billion in US financial aid
promised to Egypt by President Obama in 2012, was reportedly
contingent upon the Egyptian government’s promises of economic and
political reforms, a benchmark that the Obama administration
apparently believes has been met.

While many may disagree with that assessment, perhaps some of that
US-taxpayer funded money can be earmarked to help save the Coptic
women and girls of Egypt from their Muslim abductors.


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