NY Post
 
Burning churches
    *   By RICH LOWRY 
    *   Last Updated: 3:46 AM, August 20,  2013

 
For the first time in 1,600 years, they didn’t pray this past Sunday at the 
 Virgin Mary and Anba Abraam monastery in a village in Southern Egypt. 
 
Islamists firebombed and looted the monastery that dates back to the fifth  
century. For good measure, they destroyed a church inside. They then 
announced  that they would be converting the monastery into a mosque.  
Egypt is in the midst of an anti-Christian pogrom. Supporters of ousted  
Muslim Brotherhood President Mohammed Morsi are lashing out at the country’s  
Copts for the offense of being Christian in Egypt.  

The militants have the same nihilistic spirit as the Taliban destroyers of  
the ancient Buddha statues in Afghanistan in 2001, the same poisonous 
arguments  as anti-Semitic propagandists in every time and every place and the 
same  sectarian intent as Slobodan Milosevic on the cusp of his 
ethnic-cleansing  campaigns of the 1990s. 
If there were any doubt that the Muslim Brotherhood couldn’t be trusted 
with  power, the wanton hate of its rampaging backers in the wake of its ouster 
should  remove it. 
Coptic Christians supported the massive protests that prompted the military 
 to move against Morsi, and Coptic Pope Tawadros II was one of more than a 
dozen  national figures who appeared with Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi when he 
announced  Morsi’s removal. But the Christians were hardly the decisive 
force in the  anti-Morsi uprising that reached across the spectrum from 
youthful 
democrats to  communists to supporters of the old Hosni Mubarak regime.
 
 
Islamists have nonetheless portrayed Coptic Christians as the moving force  
behind events. When the military attacked Muslim Brotherhood encampments in 
 Cairo with deadly force Aug. 14, a local mosque in Al Nazla broadcast the 
news  that Christians were the ones killing the protesters, according to the 
Christian  Science Monitor.  
Shouting “Allahu akbar,” the villagers looted and burned a church that had 
 only just opened after being under construction for 13 years. 
The Islamists want to portray the Coptic Christians as an alien force, a  
fifth column working to subvert the country, when in fact the Christians were 
 there first by a matter of centuries. The Coptic church was founded in  
Alexandria around 50 A.D.  
The stagecraft of some of the anti-Christian attacks is eliminationist. 
After  a mob ransacked a Franciscan school in suburban Cairo, knocking the 
cross off  the gate and replacing it with a black banner, the nuns were paraded 
through the  streets like “prisoners of war,” in the words of one. 
Reports says more than 50 churches have been targeted and the attacks have  
continued since the initial onslaught Aug. 14. According to Sam Tadros of 
the  Hudson Institute, a Coptic Christian who is author of the new book “
Motherland  Lost,” there has been nothing like it since 1321, when a similar 
wave of church  burnings signaled a centuries-long period of intense 
persecution that saw the  Coptic Christian community decline from somewhat less 
than 
half of Egypt’s  population to its current 10 percent.
 
For the Islamists, the ongoing pogrom serves the immediate purpose of  
whipping up popular sentiment and the longer-term one of cleansing the country  
of Christians, who may ultimately face the fate of Egypt’s Jews. They went 
from  a population of 80,000 after World War II to literally a handful today. 
If  Muslim Brotherhood rule would have been particularly dire for Coptic 
Christians,  none of the recent regimes in Egypt — including the latest set of 
military  rulers — has shown any interest in protecting them. 
Our power to change that is limited. At the very least, we should take an  
active interest. In his remarks after the bloodshed began in Egypt, 
President  Obama relegated his concern over the anti-Christian attacks to a 
three-word  dependent clause at the end of one sentence. More substantively, we 
should be  pushing for the adoption of a non-Islamist constitution that 
protects 
religious  freedom.  
But the hour is late. Aug. 14, 2013, may be remembered as the day that  
Egypt’s churches and monasteries began to go  dark.

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