Setelah beberapa kali rusuh dan coba memberontak, di China, Islam dibatasi sejak beberapa tahun ini. Apa reaksi Islam yang asli dalam aniaya?? kalian bisa tebak, dan itu dari teladan Muhammad yang terusir dari Mekkah, lalu apa yg ia lakukan?? membuat militia bersenjata dan gantian merampoki kafilah dan akhirnya menyerbu Mekkah. Kalian pikir itu bisa dilakukan kepada pemerintah komunis China???
CHINA CRACKDOWN: Islam Could Disappear in 10 Years Posted: December 16, 2008 | Author: barenakedislam | Filed under: EnemyWithin-foreign |32 Comments » And this is a BAD thing? One day soon, Islam will have to be restricted or banned outright in countries where Muslims have tried to impose their beliefs and systems on the native population. After the Beijing Olympics ended and the world's eyes were no longer upon China the government deployed soldiers throughout the province, Uighur rights groups say. Security forces made mass arrests of local Muslims and tightened surveillance of religious activities in Xinjiang's southern and central counties, the rights groups say. In some towns, prayer in public places outside the main mosque is forbidden and an imam's sermon is limited to no longer than a half-hour. Since the end of the Olympic Games in late August, the Chinese government's crackdown on Uighurs with alleged separatist ties in this oil-rich province has escalated. Even though no group has claimed responsibility for the violence, Chinese authorities say Islamic separatists are behind it. As children, Hussein and millions of other young Uighurs never attended the religious schools known as madrassas or prayed at mosques because of a government ban on Islamic education for those under 18. "Maybe in 10 years, there will be no more (Islamic) religion in Xinjiang" (province), said Hussein. A Uighur man passes an ad for the Beijing Olympics in Kas... (Ryan Anson / Special to The Chronicle) You don't get to set off deadly bomb attacks in China, as Muslims did during the Beijing Olympics, and expect not to get punished for it. CHINA RESTRICTS ISLAM www.islamonline.net Chinese authorities have enforced laws restricting Muslims in the northwestern region of Xinjiang from practicing their faith. (NY Times photo) With prayers banned in public areas, private hajj trips not allowed, teaching of the Noble Qur'an not allowed in private and students and government officials forced to eat during Ramadan, China is enforcing laws and regulations restricting the practice of Islam. In Khotan, signs posted in front of the grand mosque say the weekly Friday prayer sermon must not extend beyond than a half-hour. Prayers in public areas outside the mosque is forbidden and residents are banned from worshipping at mosques outside their town. Under the rules, imams are banned from teaching the Qur'an in private and only official versions of the Qur'an are allowed. Studying Arabic is only allowed at special government schools.Government workers are banned from showing the slightest sign of religious devotion. For example, a Muslim civil servant could be sacked for donning hijab. -- KRISTEN DI CHINA Kristen sedang meledak di China, sekarang diperkirakan sudah 130 juta, lewat 10% dari penduduk. Dalam satu dekade, pebisnis China menduga, akan berlipat dua atau tiga. Kristen China sudah dianiaya habis2an, aku pernah baca buku2 pendeta China yang kerjanya keluar masuk penjara demi alasan tidak jelas (beda dengan Islam yang pemukanya masuk penjara biasanya karena menghasut bom bunuh diri atau pemberontakan). Tetapi sejarah membuktikan, agama Kristen ini akan maju jika dianiaya. Suatu kali, seperti halnya Kekaisaran Roma, Korea Selatan, Taiwan dan Singapura, China akan diambil alih oleh Kristen. Mendengar fanatisme dan keseriusan orang2 kristen China yg kudengar sendiri dari kesaksian mereka, trend menunjukkan tidak lama lagi pusat Kristen dunia adalah ... China dan Korea Selatan!! Christianity in China By Lauren Green Fox Published January 20, 2011 While religion in China may not be a big topic for discussion during President Hu Jintao's meeting with President Obama this week, many experts say that an explosive growth in Christianity may be transforming the officially atheist regime. According to China Aid, a Texas-based human rights group, the number of Christians in China has increased 100-fold since 1949. Current estimates range from 80 million to 130 million active members. And one startling estimate from a Chinese Christian businessman has that number doubling or even tripling in the next generation. Christianity could become one of the macro forces shaping Chinese culture, say experts like Dr. David Aikman, author of "Jesus in Beijing."‬‪ "If the Chinese become Christianized ... which doesn't mean you have a majority of people who are Christians, but it means about 25 to 30 percent of people in positions of influence, in politics, in culture, in the media. If you have that component of a major power that accepts Christianity enthusiastically as a guide to life, that is going to change the world view of the leaders of China."‬‪ Others argue that even if the more generous estimate of 130 Christians is true, it's still a drop in the bucket in a population of more than a billion people. But Dr. Luis Palau, who has preached in China, says Christians are among the country's most cohesive groups. "They all preach the same gospel. There are no liberals or conservative branches ... they all believe the same." Supporters say even estimating 80 million Christians in China, a conservative figure, still has them outnumbering the membership of the Communist Party, which at last check, in June 2010, was 78 million, according to the ChinaDaily.com. What's the origin of this faith explosion? China Aid's Bob Fu says Christianity experienced a growth spurt after the Tiananmen Square conflict. Six of the 30 student leaders who were arrested converted to Christianity.‬‪ "Ironically," says Fu, "church history shows that the more the political persecution, the more believers there will be. This is the case in the Roman Empire, and also with China."‬‪ But Chan-Kei Thong, a businessman who lived and worked in China for 30 years, said Chairman Mao Zedong, Communist China's founder, may have unwittingly paved the way.‬ "What Chairman Mao did that the emperors did not do, he brought in a form of pseudo monotheism, a pseudo person to worship ... himself ... as a personal god.‬‪ "The Christian God fits into that."‬‪ The Chinese government is not exactly overjoyed at the prospect of Christianity's growth. Officially, the government says there are 28.6 million Christians. That's because it only counts churches that are registered with the government. Despite China's recent easing of hostilities toward Christians, Beijing has had a harsh and violent history with the growing religious community. Beijing's often brutal crackdown -- including roundups, blacklisting and jailing -- drove thousands of followers underground, spurring on the house church network. While some of those followers have since registered with the government, Beijing continues to crack down on unregistered house churches. ‬‪ But as many as 60 percent of Chinese Christians attend unregistered house churches, Palau says. Palau, who says he is on good terms with the government, added that some party members acknowledge in the neighborhood of 120 million active Christians. Others see a government fear of Christianity's traditionally anti-Communist power as a factor -- and along with it a growing concern over China's human rights record. What Fu sees in Hu's visit is a rare juncture in this changing philosophical climate, to press China harder on those issues.‬‪ "I think this is an historical opportunity for President Obama to really represent the free world's universal values. ... "It will be a huge mistake for Mr. Obama to put human rights at the bottom of the agenda."‬‪ Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/01/20/christianity-china/#ixzz1aM5aspny ------------------------------------ Post message: [email protected] Subscribe : [email protected] Unsubscribe : [email protected] List owner : [email protected] Homepage : http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/ <*> Your email settings: Individual Email | Traditional <*> To change settings online go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join (Yahoo! ID required) <*> To change settings via email: [email protected] [email protected] <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [email protected] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
