American Interest
 
Walter Russell Mead
 
October 12, 2011  
 
Arab Spring Leads to Second Exodus
 
As a horrified world watched coverage of Christian demonstrators dying at 
the  hands of Egyptian soldiers this week, it underlined the possibility that 
the  Arab Spring might permanently change Egypt after all. Coptic 
Christians, who  have lived in the Land of the Pharaohs since Biblical times, 
are 
making an  Exodus in all directions. The La Stampa affiliated  site Vatican 
Insider _reports_ 
(http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/homepage/news/detail/articolo/egitto-egypt-egipto-salafiti-salafi-salafisti-copti-copts-coptos-8657/
) : 
Since March, increased religious tension in Egypt has led to the  
emigration of about 100 thousand Christians. The Egyptian Union of human  
rights 
organisations has spoken out against this, saying that this mass exodus  could 
alter the Country’s demography as well as its economic stability… 
According to analysts, this high rate of emigration is mostly a consequence 
 of the Arab Spring revolts which began in December 2010 and are supposed 
to  have boosted the power held by the Islamic component within Egyptian  
society.
Egypt’s Copts welcomed Islamic forces as liberators in the 7th century  AD; 
the Orthodox Church considered the Copts to be a heretical sect and under  
the Byzantine emperors the Copts faced persecution.  Since then, relations  
with Muslims have had their ups and downs and in recent centuries Copts have 
 been outsiders in Egyptian society: prosperous enough to have influence, 
but not  populous enough to demand equal treatment as a matter of right.  
They  depend on the ruling establishment for protection but are also convenient 
 scapegoats for governments which rule by playing competing factions 
against one  another. 
Religious  tension has grown as the Egyptian ‘revolution’ stagnates.  
Rising economic problems stir up anger against a religious minority many  
Egyptians feel benefited from special treatment during the Mubarak years.  
Competition over land and water in the south often pits Muslim and  Christian 
villages and villagers against one another.  Some of the  Islamists reaching 
for 
political power in Egypt today are less sympathetic to  the concerns of the 
Copts than others are. 
Christian emigration from the Middle East is not new.  For the last 150  
years Christians have fled the region in droves.  Some have gone to seek  
better opportunities in richer countries; some have grown weary of the chronic  
poverty, tyranny and strife that has characterized so much of the region for 
so  long; others have fled waves of persecution, discrimination and murder 
that have  periodically erupted against the region’s Christian minorities 
since the 19th  century. 
Most recently, Christians have fled the chaos, violence and persecution 
they  have experienced in Iraq even as Palestinian Christians have been 
escaping the  confluence of Israeli occupation and rising Islamic militancy. 
The flight of the Copts (should the current flow of emigrants grow) would 
be  a bigger deal.  There are more than 8 million Copts and the outflow since 
 March has amounted to slightly more than one percent of the total.  Should 
 the numbers wishing to leave increase (not unlikely after the recent 
violence in  Cairo), it is not clear where many of them could go.  The pattern 
in 
the  Middle East in these circumstances has been that the wealthier and 
better  connected Christians get out, while poorer ones experience massacres 
and forced  conversions. 
But the Copts are more than a significant demographic presence in Egypt; 
they  are an important pillar of the country’s economy — and of its embattled 
liberal  tradition in politics. 
An Egypt without Copts, like so much of the Middle East that has steadily  
been losing the cultural and social diversity that once so enriched it, 
would be  a narrower, poorer, more radical and less hopeful place.  If the 
chief 
 legacy of the Egyptian revolution is the destruction of this historic 
minority,  future historians will likely judge it a step backward.  A picture 
of 
 former President Mubarak in a cage may make the front pages, but the 
destruction  of the Copts will do more to define Egypt’s  future.

-- 
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