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Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood supporters torch a Christian school, parade nuns
through streets as "prisoners of
war"<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/08/egypt-muslim-brotherhood-supporters-torch-a-christian-school-parade-nuns-through-streets-as-prisoner.html>

[image: 
churchdestroyed.jpg]<http://www.jihadwatch.org/images/churchdestroyed.jpg>


The persecution of Christians in Egypt continues, perpetrated by the same
group that the mainstream media in the West treats as victims. "Egypt:
Islamists hit Christian churches," by Hamza Hendawi for the Associated
Press<http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-islamists-hit-christian-churches-235144103.html>,
August 18:

CAIRO (AP) — After torching a Franciscan school, Islamists paraded three
nuns on the streets like "prisoners of war" before a Muslim woman offered
them refuge. Two other women working at the school were sexually harassed
and abused as they fought their way through a mob.

In the four days since security forces cleared two sit-in camps by
supporters of Egypt's ousted president, Islamists have attacked dozens of
Coptic churches along with homes and businesses owned by the Christian
minority. The *campaign of intimidation* appears to be a warning to
Christians outside Cairo to stand down from political activism....

*Nearly 40 churches have been looted and torched, while 23 others have been
attacked and heavily damaged* since Wednesday, when chaos erupted after
Egypt's military-backed interim administration moved in to clear two camps
packed with protesters calling for Morsi's reinstatement, killing scores of
protesters and sparking deadly clashes nationwide....

Many Morsi supporters say Christians played a disproportionately large role
in the days of mass rallies, with millions demanding that he step down
ahead of the coup....

While the Christians of Egypt have endured attacks by extremists, they have
drawn closer to moderate Muslims in some places, in a rare show of
solidarity.

Hundreds from both communities thronged two monasteries in the province of
Bani Suef south of Cairo to thwart what they had expected to be imminent
attacks on Saturday, local activist Girgis Waheeb said. Activists reported
similar examples elsewhere in regions south of Cairo, but not enough to
provide effective protection of churches and monasteries.

Waheeb, other activists and victims of the latest wave of attacks blame the
police as much as hard-line Islamists for what happened. The attacks, they
said, coincided with assaults on police stations in provinces like Bani
Suef and Minya, leaving most police pinned down to defend their stations or
reinforcing others rather than rushing to the rescue of Christians under
attack.

Another Christian activist, Ezzat Ibrahim of Minya, a province also south
of Cairo where Christians make up around 35 percent of the population, said
police have melted away from seven of the region's nine districts, leaving
the extremists to act with near impunity.

Two Christians have been killed since Wednesday, including a taxi driver
who strayed into a protest by Morsi supporters in Alexandria and another
man who was shot to death by Islamists in the southern province of Sohag,
according to security officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they weren't authorized to release the information.

The attacks served as a reminder that Islamists, while on the defensive in
Cairo, maintain influence and the ability to stage violence in provincial
strongholds with a large minority of Christians.

Gamaa Islamiya, the hard-line Islamist group that wields considerable
influence in provinces south of Cairo, denied any link to the attacks. The
Muslim Brotherhood, which has led the defiant protest against Morsi's
ouster, has condemned the attacks, spokesman Mourad Ali said.

Sister Manal is the principal of the Franciscan school in Bani Suef. She
was having breakfast with two visiting nuns when news broke of the
clearance of the two sit-in camps by police, killing hundreds. In an ordeal
that lasted about six hours, she, sisters Abeer and Demiana and a handful
of school employees saw a mob break into the school through the wall and
windows, loot its contents, knock off the cross on the street gate and
replace it with a black banner resembling the flag of al-Qaida.

By the time the Islamists ordered them out, fire was raging at every corner
of the 115-year-old main building and two recent additions. Money saved for
a new school was gone, said Manal, and every computer, projector, desk and
chair was hauled away. Frantic SOS calls to the police, including senior
officers with children at the school, produced promises of quick response
but no one came.

The Islamists gave her just enough time to grab some clothes.

In an hourlong telephone interview with The Associated Press, Manal, 47,
recounted her ordeal while trapped at the school with others as the fire
raged in the ground floor and a battle between police and Islamists went on
out on the street. At times she was overwhelmed by the toxic fumes from the
fire in the library or the whiffs of tears gas used by the police outside.

Sister Manal recalled being told a week earlier by the policeman father of
one pupil that her school was targeted by hard-line Islamists convinced
that it was giving an inappropriate education to Muslim children. She paid
no attention, comfortable in the belief that a school that had an equal
number of Muslim and Christian pupils could not be targeted by Muslim
extremists. She was wrong.

The school has a high-profile location. It is across the road from the main
railway station and adjacent to a busy bus terminal that in recent weeks
attracted a large number of Islamists headed to Cairo to join the larger of
two sit-in camps by Morsi's supporters. The area of the school is also in
one of Bani Suef's main bastions of Islamists from Morsi's Muslim
Brotherhood and ultraconservative Salafis.

"We are nuns. We rely on God and the angels to protect us," she said. *"At
the end, they paraded us like prisoners of war and hurled abuse at us as
they led us from one alley to another without telling us where they were
taking us*," she said. A Muslim woman who once taught at the school spotted
Manal and the two other nuns as they walked past her home, attracting a
crowd of curious onlookers.

"I remembered her, her name is Saadiyah. She offered to take us in and said
she can protect us since her son-in-law was a policeman. We accepted her
offer," she said. Two Christian women employed by the school, siblings
Wardah and Bedour, had to fight their way out of the mob, while groped, hit
and insulted by the extremists. "I looked at that and it was very nasty,"
said Manal.

The incident at the Franciscan school was repeated at Minya where a
Catholic school was razed to the ground by an arson attack and a Christian
orphanage was also torched.

"I am terrified and unable to focus," said Boulos Fahmy, the pastor of a
Catholic church a short distance away from Manal's school. "I am expecting
an attack on my church any time now," he said Saturday.

Bishoy Alfons Naguib, a 33-year-old businessman from Minya, has a similarly
harrowing story.

His home supplies store on a main commercial street in the provincial
capital, also called Minya, was torched this week and the flames consumed
everything inside.

"A neighbor called me and said the store was on fire. When I arrived, three
extremists with knifes approached me menacingly when they realized I was
the owner," recounted Naguib. His father and brother pleaded with the men
to spare him. Luckily, he said, someone shouted that a Christian boy was
filming the proceedings using his cell phone, so the crowd rushed toward
the boy shouting "Nusrani, Nusrani," the Quranic word for Christians which
has become a derogatory way of referring to them in today's Egypt.

Naguib ran up a nearby building where he has an apartment and locked
himself in. After waiting there for a while, he left the apartment, ran up
to the roof and jumped to the next door building, then exited at a safe
distance from the crowd.

"*On our Mustafa Fahmy street, the Islamists had earlier painted a red X on
Muslim stores and a black X on Christian stores*," he said. "You can be
sure that the ones with a red X are intact."

In Fayoum, an oasis province southwest of Cairo, Islamists looted and
torched five churches, according to Bishop Ibram, the local head of the
Coptic Orthodox church, by far the largest of Egypt's Christian
denominations. He said he had instructed Christians and clerics alike not
to try to resist the mobs of Islamists, fearing any loss of life.

"The looters were so diligent that they came back to one of the five
churches they had ransacked to see if they can get more," he told the AP.
"They were loading our chairs and benches on trucks and when they had no
space for more, they destroyed them."

  Posted by Robert <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> on August 18, 2013 7:35 AM


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



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