Patheos
 
Job One in 2011: Stand up for Embattled Religious Minorities

 
January 13, 2011
 
By Abraham Cooper
 
La Brea Boulevard is a major north-south street in Los Angeles that ends  
under the gaze of the iconic HOLLYWOOD sign. Folks driving past Trader Joe's 
on  Third Street this past Sunday caught sight of what appeared to be a 
Jewish  wedding procession, complete with Chuppah (canopy), a Klezmer band, 
plenty of  rabbis, and cute little kids decked out in their "Sabbath-best."  
Only the betrothed wasn't a young lady, and it wasn't exactly a wedding but 
 the renewal of vows between the Jewish people and its sacred Torah. The 
scroll  of the Five Books of Moses had just been completed with the final 
letters  of Deuteronomy inscribed on parchment by a sage scribe. The sponsors—
the  Teichman family—lost many members in the Nazi Holocaust, so the  
inter-generational celebration of age-old tradition was especially compelling  
and 
poignant. 
But we live in a time where we can no longer take such public displays by a 
 religious minority for granted. 
Last month, I met in Stockholm with Justice Minister Beatrice Ask and  
informed her that the Simon Wiesenthal Center was issuing a travel advisory  
urging extreme caution for Jews traveling to Malmö, Sweden's third largest  
city. That's because Jews in that city who wear Stars of David, a yarmulke, or  
who publicly manifest their Jewishness by attending the local synagogue are 
 often subject to harassment from bigots and the cold shoulder from the 
police,  politicians, and prosecutors. The mayor of Malmö, whose largest 
constituency is  Muslim, denigrated his Jewish constituents with this 
statement: 
"Malmö does  not accept anti-Semitism and does not accept Zionism." Small 
wonder that the  Chabad rabbi's scores of complaints over harassment went 
unanswered. 
And it's not just Malmö. The Chief Rabbi of France cautions Western 
Europe's  largest Jewish community not to wear their yarmulkes in public.  In 
Amsterdam, not so far from Anne Frank's house, police dressed as  Orthodox Jews 
are reportedly running stings to catch young anti-Semitic thugs  who 
internalize the hatred of Jews from satellite programming, extremist  clerics, 
and 
conspiratorial Islamist websites and social network  pages.  
The targeting of religious communities extends far beyond anti-Jewish 
bigotry  in Europe. 
This past Holy Season for Christians in the Middle East was an unmitigated  
disaster. First was the terrorist onslaught during Sunday Mass at Our Lady  
of Salvation Syriac Cathedral in Baghdad where fifty-eight people were  
killed after 100 parishioners had been taken hostage. In recent years, scores 
of  churches have been attacked and clergy targeted. In 2011, there remain  
only about 300,000 Christians in Iraq, down from 1.3 million during Saddam  
Hussein's regime.  
Then came the New Year's bombing at the Coptic Church in Alexandria, Egypt, 
 where twenty-one innocents were murdered. It unleashed a torrent of 
anguish and  anger from a religious minority that feels betrayed by its 
government 
which  refused to take action against the rising tide of anti-Coptic 
threats prior to  the bloody attack. Last week came the assassination of a 
leading 
 political figure in Pakistan. His crime? Having the audacity of opposing 
an  anti-blasphemy law that placed a Pakistani woman on death row for alleged 
 comments about Mohammad she denies ever uttering. The celebration of that  
murder by leading religious figures has the six million Pakistani 
Christians  reeling.  
All this takes place as mullahs rev up their campaign against Christians in 
 Iran. 
The warning signs are all there. Those of us who pray daily to G-d and are  
lucky enough to live in democracies must take the lead in this New Year and 
 speak out—not to protect religions from blasphemous attacks but to  shield 
members of religious minorities. It is they who are cast as  civilization's 
canaries in the coalmine. We either stand united to protect them  or we 
believers will inevitably join the endangered species list. 
Rabbi Abraham Cooper is the associate dean of the _Simon Wiesenthal  
Center_ (http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/pp.asp?c=lsKWLbPJLnF&b=6212365) , a 
leading Jewish human rights organization with over  400,000 family members

-- 
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