Real Clear Politics   /   Real Clear Religion
 
April 11,  2011  
Death Warrant of Ancient  Christianity
By _Philip Jenkins_ (/authors/?author=Philip+Jenkins&id=17157) 

Ever since the wave of popular  movements started sweeping the Middle East, 
Western media have rarely found much  good to say about the authoritarian 
regimes under attack. Few observers deny  that the last generation or so of 
Arab rulers were indeed greedy despots, and it  seems desirable for Western 
powers to intervene as forcefully as they can on  behalf of what are commonly 
billed as pro-democracy movements. The arguments  against intervention are 
obvious enough, most obviously that it is much easier  to begin a military 
intervention than to end it, while we rarely have much idea  about the 
political character of the supposed democrats we are trying to aid.  But in one 
case above all, namely _Syria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/syria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 

, debates over intervention have missed one  overwhelming argument, which 
is the likely religious catastrophe that would  follow the overthrow of the 
admittedly dictatorial government. Any Western  intervention in Syria would 
likely supply the death warrant for the ancient  Christianity of the Middle 
East. For anyone concerned about Christians worldwide  -- even if you believe 
firmly in democracy and human rights -- it's hard to  avoid this prayer: 
Lord, bring democracy to Syria, but not in my  lifetime. 
Why is Syria so critical to the  religious geography of the region? From 
ancient times, the territory had a  complex mixture of religious traditions, 
and one that was far too complex to  reduce to a simple Christian-Muslim 
divide. Under the long centuries of Ottoman  power, Syria retained its sizable 
Christian minority, but other minority  populations also flourished, groups 
that originated within Islam, but which  orthodox believers condemned as 
heretics and apostates. Particularly important  were the Alawites, a group that 
certainly includes Christian and even Gnostic  strands in its esoteric world 
view. In fact, they were long known locally as  Nusayris, "Little 
Christians" The Druze are no less secretive in their  beliefs, and are equally 
loathed by strict Islamists. Although estimates are  shaky, a reasonable 
estimate 
is that Alawites make up around ten percent of  Syria's population of twenty 
million, with the Druze at another three  percent. 
Christian numbers are still harder to  determine. Over the past century 
century, Syria regularly served as the last  refuge for Christian communities 
who had been largely destroyed elsewhere in the  Middle East -- for 
Christians fleeing massacre in _Turkey_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/turkey/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  after 
1915, or in _Iraq_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/iraq/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  after 2003. A 
standard figure for the number of  Syrian Christians is ten percent, or around 
two million believers, but that  omits an uncertain number of thinly 
disguised crypto-believers, not to mention  the recent arrivals from the wreck 
of 
Saddam's Iraq. A fifteen percent Christian  minority is quite probable. 
It's one thing to catalogue the  religious oddities of a particular 
country, but we also have to know that that  diversity is the absolute 
foundation 
of Syrian politics. Basically, a large  majority of Syria -- officially, some 
74 percent -- is Sunni Muslim, and the  nation's politics for almost fifty 
years has been devoted to ensuring that this  majority does not gain power. 
Ever since 1963, Syria has been ruled by  variations of the Ba'ath Party, an 
Arab ultra-nationalist movement originally  co-founded by the Syrian 
Christian intellectual, Michel Aflaq. Because of its  devotion to absolute 
secularism, the Ba'ath cause appeals strongly to religious  minorities who fear 
the 
overwhelming demographic power of Sunni Islam.  Christians, Alawites and 
others all have a potent vested interest in drawing all  Arab peoples, 
regardless of faith, into a shared passion for secular modernity  and pan-Arab 
patriotism, in sharp contrast to Islamism. 
Since the 1960s, Ba'ath rule in Syria  has meant the dictatorship of a 
highly structured one-party system closely  allied to the armed forces and the 
intelligence apparatus. But it has also meant  the dominance of the nation's 
religious minorities, who are so over-represented  in the 
military-intelligence complex. This means above all the Alawites, in  alliance 
with Christian 
elites. Hafez al-Assad (President from 1971 through  2000) was of course an 
Alawite, and by the 1990s, five of his seven closest  advisers were 
Christian. The deadliest enemies of the al-Assad clan were the  Sunni 
Islamists, 
organized in groups affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood. But  any effective 
Sunni opposition ended violently in 1982, when government forces  suppressed a 
revolt in the city of Hama, killing possibly twenty-five  thousand. 
The evils of the Syrian regime are  obvious enough: this is a classic 
police state with a penchant for assassination  whenever it sees fit, and no 
compunction about supporting terrorist attacks at  home or abroad. But just 
imagine that the Ba'ath regime fell. Whatever happened  in the first few months 
of revolution, by far the most likely successor regime  in the long term 
would be Islamist, led by activists anxious to avenge Hama.  Alawites, Druze 
and Christians could all expect persecution at best, massacre at  worst, a 
fate that could potentially befall five million residents. And this  time, 
there would be no welcoming Middle Eastern refuge (_Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campai
gn=rcwautolink)  has millions of its own Coptic Christians, but  is not 
going to welcome a mass immigration of foreign Christian refugees). The  only 
solution for these Syrian minorities would be exile from the region -- to 
_France_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/france/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  or the US, _Australia_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/australia/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medi
um=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)  or Canada. 
The West might like to see the Ba'ath  regime crushed as thoroughly as its 
counterpart in Iraq, but as on that earlier  occasion, the religious 
consequences of intervention could be horrible. Before  planning to intervene 
in 
Syria, Western nations had better start printing  several million immigration 
visas to hand out to refugees seeking political  asylum, and demanding 
protection from religious persecution. 
 
Philip Jenkins teaches at Penn State  University.

-- 
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