Christian Post
 
 
Are Christians an Endangered Species 
in Their Ancestral Land?




By _Noah  Beck_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/noah-beck/) , Op-Ed 
Contributor
December 12, 2012



As _Christmas_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/christmas/)  
approaches,  it is worth remembering the historical roots of Christians in the 
Middle 
East,  and recognizing just how much the plight of Middle East Christians 
has  deteriorated.


Over 2,000 years ago, Jesus was born in Bethlehem, inspiring a faith that  
would spread from Jerusalem to other parts of the Levant, including 
territories  in modern _Israel_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/israel/) , 
Lebanon, Syria,  _Iraq_ (http://www.christianpost.com/region/iraq/) ,  Jordan, 
and Egypt. Christianity flourished as one of the major religions in the  
Middle East until the Muslim conquests of the 7th century. 
Despite Muslim domination of the region, Christians comprised an estimated  
20% of the Middle East population until the early 20th century. Today, 
however,  Christians make up a mere 5% of the Middle East and their numbers are 
fast  dwindling. Writing in the Winter 2001 issue of Middle East Quarterly, 
scholar  Daniel Pipes estimated that Middle East Christians would "likely 
drop to" half  of their numbers "by the year 2020" because of declining birth 
rates, and a  pattern of "exclusion and _persecution_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/persecution/) " leading  to emigration. 
The "Arab Spring" has only worsened conditions for the indigenous 
Christians  of the Middle East. Like the Kurds, Middle East Christians are a 
stateless  minority, struggling to survive in the world's toughest 
neighborhood. But 
the  Kurds at least have enjoyed partial autonomy in Iraqi Kurdistan since 
1991 and  most of them are Sunni Muslim, making it easier for them to 
survive in the  Muslim-dominated Middle East. Christians, on the other hand, 
are a 
religious  minority that controls no territory and is entirely subject to 
the whims of  their hosts. These host countries – with the exception of 
Israel – each offer a  grim future to Middle East Christians. 
In Egypt, the fate of Christians lies with Mohammed Morsi, who used to be a 
 leading member of the Muslim Brotherhood, and who has lost no time in 
trying to  introduce Sharia law to Egypt. Home to one of the oldest Christian 
communities  in the world, Egypt also has the largest Christian population in 
the Middle  East, totaling 8-12 million people. But because Christian Copts 
make up only  about 10-15% of Egypt's estimated 80 million people, they have 
for decades lived  in fear as second-class citizens, subjected to attacks 
on churches, villages,  homes, and shops; mob killings; and the abduction and 
forced Islamic conversion  of Christian women compelled to marry Muslim 
men. If such abuse took place under  the staunchly secular regime of Hosni 
Mubarak (which had banned the Muslim  Brotherhood), what can the Christians 
expect under the rule of an Islamist like  Mohammed Morsi? 
In Lebanon, Christians represent a bigger portion of the population, so 
their  fate is for now less precarious than that of their Egyptian 
coreligionists, but  their long-term prospects are worrisome. The Christian 
population 
is estimated  to have dropped from over 50% (according to a 1932 census) to 
about 40%. Over  the last few years, the de facto governing power in Lebanon 
has become  Hezbollah, the radical and heavily-armed Shiite movement 
sponsored by Iran. With  all of the spillover violence and instability produced 
by 
the Syrian civil war  and/or the next war that Hezbollah decides to start 
with Israel, the emigration  of Christians out of Lebanon will probably only 
increase in the coming years,  leaving those who stay increasingly 
vulnerable.  
In Syria, 2.5 million Christians comprise about 10% of the population and  
enjoyed some protection under the secular and often brutal regimes of the 
Assad  dynasty. But when the Syrian civil war eventually brings down the Assad 
regime  and Alawite rule, the past protection of Christians may be the 
cause of their  future persecution by the next regime and/or by the Syrian 
Sunnis who suffered  under the Alawites. Christians have already been targeted 
and killed by rebels,  and the sectarian chaos and violence that will likely 
prevail in Assad's wake  will only increase the number of Christians fleeing 
Syria. 
In Iraq, the bloody aftermath of the 2003 invasion demonstrated how 
dangerous  life can become for a Christian minority when a multi-cultural 
society 
in the  Middle East explodes into sectarian violence. By 2008, half of the 
800,000 Iraqi  Christians were estimated to have left, rendering those 
remaining even more  insecure. In 2010, Salafist extremists attacked a Baghdad 
church during Sunday  Mass, killing or wounding nearly the whole congregation. 
Such incidents turn any  communal gathering into a potential massacre, 
forcing Christians across the  Middle East to ask the ultimate question of 
faith: 
"Am I prepared to die for  Christian worship?" 
The Arab Spring threatens to exacerbate matters in much of the Middle East 
as  Islamists now either control the government or influence it enough to 
persecute  Christians with impunity. As new Islamist regimes in the Middle 
East condone  religious intolerance and introduce Sharia and blasphemy laws, 
the long-term  trend for Christians in their ancestral lands will only grow 
bleaker. 
The one bright spot is the state of Israel – "the only place in the Middle  
East [where] Christians are really safe," according to the Vicar of St 
George's  Church in Baghdad, Canon Andrew White. Home to Christianity's holiest 
sites and  to a colorful array of Christian _denomination_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/denomination/) s,  Israel has the only 
growing Christian 
community in the Middle East. 
Because Israel is the only non-Muslim state in all of the Middle East and  
North Africa, it represents a small victory for religious minorities in the  
region, and serves as the last protector of freedom and security for Jews,  
Christians, Bahai, Druze, and others. Without Israel, how much more 
vulnerable  would Christians in the Middle East become?

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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