When I read stories like this I become outraged, hence a few  choice 
editorial comments
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Egypt pope apologizes over bishop's Islam  remarks
By MAGGIE MICHAEL
The Associated Press  /  W  Post
Sunday, September 26, 2010; 4:09 PM 
CAIRO -- Egypt's Coptic Christian leader Pope Shenouda III apologized in a  
television interview Sunday to any Muslims who were offended after his top  
bishop reportedly disputed the authenticity of some verses of the Quran.  
The remarks come during a period of heightened tension in Egypt between the 
 majority Muslims and a Christian minority that feels discriminated 
against.  
Shenouda's apology comes a day after the premier institute of Islamic  
learning in the Sunni Muslim world, Al-Azhar, criticized Bishop Bishoy, the  
Coptic Church's No. 2, for provoking sectarian tension.  
Bishoy was quoted in the Egyptian media for wondering about the time frame  
for the revelation of the Quranic verses disputing the divine nature of 
Jesus  Christ. The bishop reportedly said these verses were inserted after the 
Prophet  Muhammad's death by one of his successors. [ many scholars take the 
view  that major parts of the Qur'an are later interpolations.] 
Muslims believe that the prophet received all verses through the Archangel  
Gabriel during his lifetime and they are the immutable word of God. [  
exactly why should Christians or anyone else be expected to respect this point  
of view when it is so obviously false ? ] 
Tensions between Muslims and Copts are on the rise over issues like the  
construction of new churches and bitter arguments over conversions. The two  
communities generally live in peace, though clashes and attacks have taken  
place.  
"Debating religious beliefs are a red line, [ nonsense, why should  they be 
if truth actually matters ? ] a deep red line," Shenouda said  in an 
interview aired on state-run TV. "Maybe they (Bishoy's address) thought  this 
is 
for priests only and the remarks were not for publication."  
"I am sorry if our Muslim brother's feelings were hurt," he added. [  
really ? what a wimp. If the feelings of Muslims are hurt maybe it is because  
they are narrow-minded bigots who need to have their feelings wounded because  
the premises on which they are based are wrong ] 
Bishoy also sparked outrage last week when he told Al-Masry Al-Youm 
newspaper  that "Muslims are only guests" in the country.  
For this incident, Shenouda blamed the press for possibly misquoting Bishoy 
 and said that "we are the ones who are guests since Muslims are the 
majority."  Coptic Christians make up around 6 to 10 percent of the country's 
80 
million  people. Prior to the 7th Century Arab invasion, Egypt was majority 
Christian.  
Thousands of Muslims demonstrated on Friday against Bishoy's remarks and  
Al-Azhar's Islamic Research Center held an emergency meeting to condemn the  
bishop's statements.  
"Such irresponsible statements threaten ... national unity at a time when 
it  is vital to maintain it," said the statement.  
The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood opposition group, Mohammed Badie, 
urged  Muslims to "respond to whomever slanders the book of God or the 
prophet." 
 
Shenouda appealed for calm.  
"You don't extinguish fire by adding more fire, you need water," he said.  
Seeking to cool the controversy, political parties and the journalists'  
association have urged their members to stay away from the debate.  
Muslims complain that the Coptic Church is above state law and enjoys  
protections and safeguards not extended to society at large. Christians 
complain 
 of systematic discrimination by the state.  
Tensions occasionally spills over into violence. In January, a gunman 
killed  six Copts and a Muslim guard in a drive-by shooting outside a church 
after a  Christmas service in the southern town of Nag Hamadi, sparking days of 
rioting.  
There are also repeated demonstrations over rumors that Copts have 
converted  to Islam or vice versa.  
In the most recent case, a priest's wife, Camellia Zakhir disappeared in 
July  and reportedly converted to divorce her husband - fueling protests from  
Christians claiming that Muslims kidnapped her and forced her conversion.  
After police found Zakhir and returned her home, weekly protests erupted in 
 August, this time by Muslims who claimed Christians were holding her 
against her  will and forced her to renounce Islam

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