Every day there are stories like this. No one story is all that  newsworthy,
but added up the narrative is overwhelming  --relentless persecution  of 
Christians.
Now and then I come across similar stories about individual Hindus or  
Buddhists
or small families. Granted, there also are occasional news items about bad  
conduct
by Hindus, even Christians or Buddhists once in a while,  but the  actions 
of Muslims
is predominant by any objective measure. This goes on in almost any Muslim  
country
you can name, but mostly, it seems, in Pakistan, Bangla Desh, Indonesia,  
Egypt,
Turkiye, Palestine / West Bank, Nigeria, Somalia, and Sudan.There  are also
misc incidents in Muslim enclaves in some cities in Europe.
 
Billy
 
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Muslims in Bangladesh Beat, Deprive Christians of Work
Tue, Nov. 02, 2010 Posted: 01:06 PM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
LOS ANGELES (Compass Direct News) – Muslim villagers last month beat a  
63-year-old Christian convert and his youngest son because they refused to  
return to Islam, the father told Compass. 
The next day, another Christian in a nearby village was beaten and robbed 
in  related violence in southwestern Bangladesh. 
Aynal Haque, 63, a volunteer for Christian organization Way of Life Trust,  
told Compass that his brothers and relatives along with Muslim villagers 
beat  him and his son, 22-year-old Lal Miah, on Oct. 9 when they refused to 
recant  Christianity. The family lives at Sadhu Hati Panta Para village in 
Jhenaidah  district, some 250 kilometers (155 miles) southwest of the capital 
city, Dhaka.  It is in the jurisdiction of Sadar police station. 
Haque’s relatives and villagers said that he had become Christian by eating 
 pork and by disrespecting the Quran, he said. 
“I embraced Christianity by my own will and understanding, but I have due  
respect for other religions,” Haque said. “How can I be a righteous man by  
disrespecting other religions? Whatever rumors the villagers are spreading 
are  false.” 
At a meeting to which Haque was summoned on Oct. 9, about 500 men and women 
 from several villages gathered, including local and Maoist party leaders. 
“They tried to force me and my son to admit that we had eaten pork and  
trampled on the Quran to become Christian,” Haque said. “They tried to force 
us  to be apologetic for our blunder of accepting Christianity and also tried 
to  compel us to go back to Islam. I told them, ‘While there is breath left 
in our  bodies, we will not reject Christianity.’ 
“When we denied their allegation and demand, they beat us severely. They  
ordered us not to mix with other Muslim villagers. They confined us in our 
house  for five days.” 
Haque has worked on his neighbors’ land for survival to supplement the 
meager  income he earns selling seeds in local markets, but the villagers have 
now  refused to give him work, he said. 
“Every day I earn around 50 taka to 100 taka [70 cents to US$1.40] from the 
 seed business,” he said. “Some days I cannot earn any money. So, I need 
to work  villagers’ land for extra money to maintain my family.” 
His youngest son also worked in neighbors’ fields as a day-laborer, besides 
 attending school. 
“We cannot live if we do not get farming work on other people’s land,” 
Haque  said. 
Haque, his wife and youngest son received Christ three years ago, and since 
 then they have faced harassment and threats from Muslim neighbors. His 
other  grown son and two daughters, as well as a son-in-law, also follow Christ 
but  have yet to be baptized. There are around 25 people in his village who 
came to  Christ under Haque’s influence; most of them remain low-profile to 
avoid  harassment from the villagers, he said. 
The weekly worship service in Haque’s shanty house has been hampered as 
some  have been too fearful to attend, and the 25 members of the church fear 
the  consequences of continuing to meet, Haque said. 
Officials of Way of Life Trust tried to visit the area to investigate the  
beating of Haque and his son but were unable due to security risks, said 
Jatish  Biswas, the organization’s executive director. They informed the 
district police  chief, who instantly sent forces to provide safety for the 
Christians, Biswas  said. 
Villagers thought that if they were able to get Haque to renounce  
Christianity, then the other Christians would quickly return to Islam, 
according  to 
Biswas. 
Reverberation
Hearing of the incident in Sadhu Hati Panta  Para the next day (Oct. 10), 
Muslims in Kola village about five kilometers  (nearly three miles) away beat 
a Christian friend of Haque’s and robbed his seed  shop. 
Tokkel Ali, 40, an evangelist in one of the house churches that Way of Life 
 Trust has established, told Compass that around 20 people arrived at his 
shop at  about 11 a.m. and told him to go with them to Haque’s house. 
“The presence of so many people, most of whom I did not know, and the way  
they were talking, seemed ominous to me, and I refused to go with them,” Ali 
 said. “I said, ‘If he wants me to go to his house, he could call me on my 
 mobile.’” 
One person in the crowd pointed toward Ali, saying that he was a Christian  
and had made otherwise innocent people Christians by them feeding pork and  
letting them disrespect the Quran, said Ali. Islam strictly prohibits 
eating  pork. 
“That rumor spread like wildfire among other Muslims,” Ali said. “All of a 
 sudden, a huge crowd overran me and started beating me, throwing my seeds 
here  and there.” 
Ali said he lost consciousness, and someone took him to a nearby 
three-storey  house. When he came to, he scrambled back to his shop to find his 
seeds  
scattered, and 24,580 taka (US$342) for buying seed had been stolen, along 
with  his bicycle. 
Accustomed to earning just enough each day to survive, Ali said it would be 
 impossible for him to recover and rebuild his business. He had received 
loans of  20,000 taka (US$278) from Grameen Bank (Nobel Peach Prize laureate 
Muhammad  Yunus’ micro-finance entity), 15,000 taka (US$209) from the 
Bangladesh Rural  Advancement Committee and 11,000 taka (US$153) from Way of 
Life 
Trust to  establish the business. Ali ran a similar seed business in 
Dakbangla market in  Kola village. 
“How can I pay back a weekly installment of 1,150 taka [US$160] to the  
micro-credit lending NGOs [Non-Governmental Organizations]?” he said. “I have  
already become delinquent in paying back some installments after the 
looting of  my money and shop. I’ve ended up in deep debt, which has become a 
noose around  my neck.” 
Ali said he has not dared filed any charges. 
“If I file any case or complain against them, they will kill me, as this 
area  is very dangerous because of the Maoists,” he said, referring to a 
banned group  of armed rebels with whom the villagers have links. “Even the 
local 
 administration and the law enforcement agencies are afraid of them.” 
Ali has planted 25 house churches under Way of Life Trust serving 144 
people  in weekly worship. Baptized in 2007, he has been following Christ for 
more than  10 years. 
“Whenever I go to bazaar, people fling insults at me about that beating,” 
he  said. “Everyone says that nothing would have happened if I had not 
accepted  Christianity, an abhorrent religion to them. People also say that I 
should hang  myself with a rope for renouncing Islam.” 
Since the beating, he has become an alien in his own village, he said. 
“Whatever insinuation and rumors they spout against me and other believers, 
 there is no language to squash it,” he said. “I have to remain 
tight-lipped,  otherwise they will kill me.” 
He can no longer cross the land of one of his neighbors in order to bathe 
in  a nearby river, he said. 
“After that incident, my neighbor warned me not to go through his land,” 
he  said. “Now I take a bath in my home from an old and dysfunctional 
tube-well. My  neighbors say, ‘Christians are the enemy of Muslims, so don’t go 
through my  land.’ It seems that I am nobody in this village.” 
Biswas of Way of Life Trust told Compass that Christians in remote villages 
 lack the freedoms guaranteed in the Bangladeshi constitution to practice 
their  faith without any interference. 
“Where is religious liberty for Haque and Ali?” Biswas said. “Like them, 
many  Christians in remote villages are in the throes of persecution, though 
our  constitution enshrined full liberty for religious minorities.” 
Way of Life Trust has aided in the establishment of some 500 house churches 
 in Bangladesh, which is nearly 90 percent Muslim. Hinduism is the second 
largest  religion at 9.2 percent of the 153.5 million people, and Buddhists 
and  Christians make up less than 1 percent of the population.
Compass Direct News
 
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