Atlas Shrugs
 
 
Thursday, July 25, 2013

 
Saudi Grand Mufti announces that it is “necessary to  destroy all the 
churches of the region"

 
Where is the reciprocity? The infamous "interfaith dialogue" that Islamic  
supremacists club us with. There is none. Muslims in non-Muslim countries 
are  "building bridges" one way and one way only -- to Islam. Muslim outreach 
is a  giant hoax. 
Where is President Barack Hussein? Where is the leader of the free world  
speaking out forcefully for freedom for all peoples? Where is Obama providing 
 sanctuary for non-Muslims suffering unspeakable horrors, persecution, 
oppression  and slaughter at the hands of Muslim supremacists under the sharia? 
How does President Barack Hussein address the ethnic cleansing and brutal  
treatment of non-Muslims under Muslim rule? He sanctions it with silence.  
President Obama has gone so far as to_ remove the sections _ 
(http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/06/obama-removes-religious-freedom-sect
ion-from-its-human-rights-reports.html) covering religious freedom and 
religious  persecution from the Country Reports on Human Rights that the State 
Department  releases.  
It's not just Christians, of course, but Hindus, Zoroastrians, Baha'is, 
Jews,  Zoroastrians, et al.
 
Christian Tragedy in the Muslim World by _Bruce  Thornton_ 
(http://www.hoover.org/fellows/9018)  _Defining Ideas,_ 
(http://www.hoover.org/publications/defining-ideas/article/152651)  July 25, 
2013
 
We are living through one of the largest persecutions of a  religious group 
in history.   
____________________________________
  
Few people realize that we are today living through the largest  
persecution of Christians in history, worse even than the famous attacks under  
ancient Roman emperors like Diocletian and Nero. Estimates of the numbers of  
Christians under assault range from 100-200 million.  According to one 
estimate, 
a Christian is martyred every five  minutes. And most of this persecution 
is taking place at the hands of Muslims.  Of the top fifty countries 
persecuting Christians, forty-two have either a  Muslim majority or have 
sizeable 
Muslim populations.
    


The extent of this disaster, its origins, and the reasons why it has been  
met with a shrug by most of the Western media are the topics of Raymond  
Ibrahim’s Crucified Again. Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David  Horowitz 
Freedom Center and an associate fellow of the Middle East Forum.  Fluent in 
Arabic, he has been tracking what he calls “one of the most dramatic  stories
” of our time in the reports and witnesses that appear in Arabic  
newspapers, news shows, and websites, but that rarely get translated into  
English or 
picked up by the Western press. What he documents in this  meticulously 
researched and clearly argued book is a human rights disaster of  monumental 
proportions. 


 
In Crucified Again, Ibrahim performs two invaluable functions for  
educating people about the new “Great Persecution,” to use the label of the  
Roman 
war against Christians. First, he documents hundreds of specific examples  
from across the Muslim world. By doing so, he shows the extent of the  
persecution, and forestalls any claims that it is a marginal problem.  
Additionally, Ibrahim commemorates the forgotten victims, refusing to allow  
their 
suffering to be lost because of the indifference or inattention of the  media 
and government officials.
 
Second, he provides a cogent explanation for why these attacks are  
concentrated in Muslim nations. In doing so, he corrects the delusional wishful 
 
thinking and apologetic spin that mars much of the current discussion of  
Islamic-inspired violence.
 
Ibrahim’s copious reports of violence against Christians range across the  
whole Muslim world, including countries such as Indonesia, which is 
frequently  characterized as “moderate” and “tolerant.” Such attacks are so 
frequent because  they result not just from the jihadists that some Westerners 
dismiss as  “extremists,” but from mobs of ordinary people, and from 
government policy and  laws that discriminate against Christians. Rather than 
ad hoc 
reactions  to local grievances, then, these attacks reveal a consistent 
ideology of hatred  and contempt that transcends national, geographical, and 
ethnic  differences.
In Afghanistan, for example, where American blood and treasure liberated  
Afghans from murderous fanatics, a court order in March 2010 led to the  
destruction of the last Christian church in that country. In Iraq, also free  
because of America’s sacrifice, half of the Christians have fled; in 2010, Our 
 Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad was bombed during mass, with 
fifty-eight  killed and hundreds wounded.
 
In Kuwait, likewise, the beneficiary of American power, the Kuwait City  
Municipal Council rejected a permit for building a Greek Catholic church. A 
few  years later, a member of parliament said he would submit a law to 
prohibit all  church construction. A delegation of Kuwaitis was then sent to 
Saudi  
Arabia––which legally prohibits any Christian worship–– to consult with 
the  Grand Mufti, the highest authority on Islamic law in the birthplace of 
Islam,  the Arabian Peninsula.
 
The Mufti announced that it is “necessary to destroy all the churches of  
the region,” a statement ignored in the West until Ibrahim reported it. 
Imagine  the media’s vehement outrage and condemnation if the Pope in Rome had 
called for  the destruction of all the mosques in Italy. The absence of any 
Western  condemnation or even reaction to the Mufti’s statement was stunning. 
Is there no  limit to our tolerance of Islam?
 
Moreover, it is in Egypt––yet another beneficiary of American money and  
support–– that the harassment and murder of Christians are particularly 
intense.  Partly this reflects the large number of Coptic Christians, the some 
sixteen  million descendants of the Egyptian Christians who were conquered by 
Arab armies  in 640 A.D. Since the fall of Mubarak, numerous Coptic 
churches have been  attacked by Muslim mobs. Most significant is the 
destruction of 
St. George’s  church in Edfu in September 2011. Illustrating the continuity 
of mob violence  with government policy, the chief of Edfu’s intelligence 
unit was observed  directing the mob that destroyed the church. The governor 
who originally  approved the permit to renovate the building went on 
television to announce that  the “Copts made a mistake” in seeking to repair 
the 
church, “and had to be  punished, and Muslims did nothing but set things 
right.”
 
The destruction of St. George’s precipitated a Christian protest against  
government-sanctioned violence against Christians and their churches in the  
Cairo suburb of Maspero in October 2011. As Muslim mobs attacked the  
demonstrators to shouts of “Allahu Akbar” and “kill the infidels,” the soldiers 
 
sent to keep order helped the attackers. Snipers fired on demonstrators, 
and  armored vehicles ran over several. Despite the gruesome photographs 
showing the  crushed heads of Copts, the Egyptian military denied the charges, 
but then  claimed that Copts had hijacked the vehicles and ran over their  
co-religionists.
 
False media reports of Copts murdering soldiers fed the violence.  
Twenty-eight Christians were killed and several hundred wounded. In the  
aftermath, 
thirty-four Copts were retained, including several who had not even  been at 
the demonstration. Later, two Coptic priests had to stand trial.  
Meanwhile, despite an abundance of video evidence, the Minister of Justice  
closed an 
investigation because of a “lack of identification of the  culprits.”
 
The scope of such persecution, the similarity of the attacks, and the  
attackers’ motives, despite national and ethnic differences, and the role of  
government officials in abetting them, all cry out for explanation. Ibrahim  
clearly lays out the historical and theological roots of Muslim intolerance 
in  the book’s most important chapter, “Lost History.” Contrary to the 
apologists  who attribute these attacks to poverty, political oppression, the 
legacy of  colonialism, or the unresolved Israeli-Arab conflict, Ibrahim shows 
that  intolerance of other religions and the use of violence against them 
reflects  traditional Islamic theology and jurisprudence.
 
First Ibrahim corrects a misconception of history that has abetted this  
misunderstanding. During the European colonial presence in the Middle East,  
oppression of Christians and other religious minorities was proscribed. This 
was  also the period in which many Muslims, recognizing how much more 
powerful the  Europeans were than they, began to emulate the political and 
social 
mores and  institutions of the colonial powers.
Thus they abolished the discriminatory sharia laws that set out how  “
dhimmis,” the Christians and Jews living under Muslim authority, were to be  
treated. In 1856, for example, the Ottomans under pressure from the European  
powers issued a decree that said non-Muslims should be treated equally and  
guaranteed freedom of worship. This roughly century-long period of relative  
tolerance Ibrahim calls the Christian “Golden Age” in the Middle East.
 
Unfortunately, as Ibrahim writes, the century-long flourishing of Middle  
Eastern Christians “has created chronological confusions and intellectual  
pitfalls for Westerners” who take the “hundred-year lull in persecution” as 
the  norm. In fact, that century was an anomaly, and after World War I, 
traditional  Islamic attitudes and doctrines began to reassert themselves, a 
movement that  accelerated in the 1970s. The result is the disappearance of 
Christianity in the  land of its birth. In 1900, twenty percent of the Middle 
East was Christian.  Today, less than two percent is.
 
Having corrected our distorted historical perspective, Ibrahim then lays  
out the justifying doctrines of Islam that have made such persecution 
possible  during the fourteen centuries of Muslim encounters with non-Muslims. 
The  
foundations can be found in the Koran, which Muslims take to be the words 
of  God. There “infidels” are defined as “they who say Allah is one of three”
 or  “Allah is the Christ, [Jesus] son of Mary”––that is, explicitly 
Christian. As  such, according to the Koran, they must be eliminated or 
subjugated. The most  significant verse that guides Muslim treatment of 
Christians 
and Jews commands  Muslims to wage war against infidels until they are 
conquered, pay tribute, and  acknowledge their humiliation and submission.
 
In the seventh century, the second Caliph, Omar bin al-Khattab, promulgated 
 the “Conditions of Omar” that specified in more detail how Christians 
should be  treated. These conditions proscribe building churches or repairing 
existing  ones, performing religious processions in public, exhibiting 
crosses, praying  near Muslims, proselytizing, and preventing conversion to 
Islam, 
in addition to  rules governing how Christians dress, comport themselves, 
and treat  Muslims.
 
“If they refuse this,” Omar said, “it is the sword without leniency.” 
These  rules have consistently determined treatment of Christians for fourteen  
centuries, and Muslims regularly cite violations of these rules as the  
justifying motives for their attacks. As a Saudi Sheikh said recently in a  
mosque sermon, “If they [Christians] violate these conditions, they have no  
protection.” From Morocco to Indonesia, Christians are attacked and murdered  
because they allegedly have tried to renovate a church, proselytized among  
Muslims, or blasphemed against Mohammed––all reasons consistent with 
Koranic  injunctions codified in laws and the curricula of school textbooks.
 
Both Islamic doctrine and history show the continuity of motive behind  
today’s persecution of Christians. As Ibrahim writes, “The same exact patterns 
 of persecution are evident from one end of the Islamic world to the other––
in  lands that do not share the same language, race, or culture––that 
share only  Islam.” But received wisdom in the West today denies this obvious 
truth.  The reasons for this attitude of denial would fill another book. As 
Ibrahim  points out, the corruption of history in the academy and in 
elementary school  textbooks have replaced historical truth with various 
melodramas 
in which  Western colonialists and imperialists have oppressed Muslims.
 
These and other prejudices have led American media outlets to ignore or  
distort Islamic-inspired violence, as can be seen in the coverage of the  
Nigerian jihadist movement Boko Haram. These jihadists have publicly announced  
their aim of cleansing Nigeria of Christians and establishing sharia law, 
yet  Western media coverage consistently ignores this aim and casts the 
conflict as a  “cycle of violence” in which both sides are equally guilty.
 
As Ibrahim concludes, even when Western media report on violence against  
Christians, “they employ an arsenal of semantic games, key phrases, 
convenient  omissions, and moral relativism” to promote the anti-Western 
narrative 
that  “Muslim violence and intolerance are products of anything and  everything
––poverty, political and historical grievances, or territorial  disputes––
except Islam.”
 
Within the global Muslim community, there is a civil war between those who  
want to adapt their faith to the modern world, and those who want to wage 
war in  order to recreate a lost past of Muslim dominance. We do the former 
no favor by  indulging Islam’s more unsavory aspects, since those aspects are 
exactly what  need to be changed if Muslims want to enjoy the freedom and 
prosperity that come  from political orders founded on human rights and 
inclusive tolerance. Raymond  Ibrahim’s Crucified Again is an invaluable 
resource 
for telling the  truth that could promote such change.

-- 
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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