Kansas City Star
 
 
Posted on Fri, Dec. 24, 2010 
A wave of Christianophobia is sweeping the world

By JOEL BRINKLEY
Tribune Media Services  
 
This Christmas season, Christians are under assault around the world. 
Certainly a focus of the problem is the Middle East, where Islamic 
extremists  consider anyone who holds another faith to be a heretic, often 
subject 
to  execution. But it’s surprising to learn that Christian groups report 
heinous  persecution on almost every continent. And for them, the nation 
considered the  worst place to live is North Korea. 
There, believers must worship in secret, and if caught they are imprisoned, 
 tortured and sometimes killed. 
North Korea may be the most brutal of the non-Muslim states, but it is far  
from alone at this. Bhutan forbids the building of churches. In Uzbekistan, 
 Christians are hated, and authorities cut off their water and electricity 
trying  to drive them away. In Azerbaijan, even after churches register with 
the  government, police shut some of them down. In Belarus, the government 
forces  churches to register, and that takes several years. In China, “
unregistered”  Christians are beaten and imprisoned. 
In a report to the European Parliament last month, the Pew Forum on 
Religion  and Public Life said that while Muslims and Jews face significant 
persecution,  “Christians faced some sort of harassment in two-thirds of all 
countries,” or  133 states. 
Why? The faith preaches tolerance and eschews violence, though of course 
not  every Christian lives up to its tenets. But Christianity is the world’s 
largest  religion. Almost one-third of the world’s people identify themselves 
as  Christian. Still, in many places the religion labors under the 
perception that  it is a vehicle of Western imperialism, and its adherents are 
the 
wealthy  oligarchy of Europe and the United States. It doesn’t help that 
Christians  aggressively proselytize. 
However, the truth is that almost 400 million Christians live in Africa, 
511  million in Latin America and about 200 million in Asia. Those people 
certainly  aren’t Western imperialists. That’s half the religion’s population, 
and among  them are the world’s poorest people. 
While persecution persists around the world, the most brutal examples come  
from the Islamic world, of course. Christianity was born in the Middle 
East, and  Christians have lived there since the first century — long before 
Islam was  born. But they earn no respect there now. The most visible example 
is Iraq,  where extremists detonated explosives in a church two months ago, 
killing more  than 70 people. Because of that and other attacks, Christians 
are fleeing, and  those who remain are asking for their own dedicated 
community in the north. 
Last month in Egypt, where 10 percent of the population is Christian, two  
people died and dozens were wounded in riots after police forbade a Coptic 
group  to build a church. South of Cairo, enraged Egyptians burned the homes 
of five  Christians over rumors that a Christian boy had been flirting with 
a Muslim  girl. An Egyptian news service quoted a local cleric saying, “we 
have reason to  believe that there is a plan to force Christians to convert” 
to Islam. 
Then, of course, you might expect the worst from Iran. There earlier this  
month, a court sentenced Youcef Nadarkhani, a 32-year-old Christian pastor, 
to  death on charges of apostasy. He is the minister for a 400-person Church 
of Iran  congregation. His crime: He admitted that when he was 19, he 
converted from  Islam to Christianity. A second priest is facing a similar 
charge, CNN  reported. 
I could go on ... and on and on. But both Christians and Muslims like to 
note  that Christian Arabs were important leaders of the Arab nationalist 
movement  that grew up after the war with Israel in 1948. They have been 
important parts  of the community for thousands of years. 
Yet horrors like this one occur all the time: In Pakistan, Asia Bibi, a  
mother of five, is sitting in jail awaiting execution simply because she is  
Christian. She’s accused of blasphemy because she tried to bring water to 
Muslim  neighbor women working in a field. They refused to take it — because 
she is  Christian. 
Pakistan’s president has suggested he might pardon her, but a Pakistani 
court  forbade him from doing it. Earlier this month, a hard-line cleric 
offered $6,000  to anyone who kills her if she is ever released from jail. 
As all of this continued, at the United Nations last week, the Islamic  
Conference of Muslim nations forced through a motion to hold a conference next  
year, known as Durban III, on racism and intolerance. Already at the top of 
 their agenda: ardent complaints about “Islamophobia.” 
© 2010 by Joel Brinkley 
Distributed by Tribune Media Services  Inc.

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