Christian Post
 
Over 50,000 Books Burned in Christian Library in Lebanon Over  Blasphemy 
Claim; US Leader Says 'Violent Hysteria' Spreading in Muslim  World

 
 
 
By _Tyler O'Neil_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/tyler-oneil/) 
January 7, 2014|8:50 am
American leaders denounced the burning of a Christian leader's library in  
Tripoli, Lebanon, last Friday night as based on false pretenses and said 
it's a  threat to religious liberty. 
"The really bad news is that this is not out of the ordinary," Robert P.  
George, _chair  of the United States Commission on International Religious 
Freedom (USCIRF)_ 
(http://www.uscirf.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3714:dr-robert-p-george-commissioner&catid=33)
 ,  told The Christian 
Post in an interview on Monday. George emphasized the need to  advocate for 
religious freedom across the world to prevent attacks like this  one. 
The Friday night fire burned two-thirds of some 80,000 books and 
manuscripts  in the Al-Saeh library owned by Greek Orthodox priest Ibrahim 
Surouj, _RT 
reported_ (http://rt.com/news/library-fire-lebanon-violence-176/) .  The 
arsonists targeted Surouj due to an alleged pamphlet insulting the Prophet  
Mohammed was found in one of the library books. When Surouj met with Islamic  
leaders in the city, he stated that he had nothing to do with the pamphlet. 
International Security Forces Brig. Imad Ayyoubi also denounced the  
connection. "Father Surouj has nothing to do with the article and the source of 
 
the website is from Denmark and was published on Jan. 7, 2010," Ayyoubi said, 
_The  Blaze reported_ 
(http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/01/05/lebanon-christian-library-with-80000-books-is-burned-down-after-owner-was-falsely-accu
sed-of-insulting-islam-mohammed/) . Hundreds of Lebanese citizens 
demonstrated Saturday in  support of the priest. 
"Flames of a violent hysteria against all perceived threats to Islam are  
spreading rapidly through the Muslim world today," Nina Shea, _director of 
the Hudson Institute's Center for  Religious Freedom_ 
(http://www.hudson.org/shea) , told CP on Monday. 
The co-author of _Silenced:  How Apostasy and Blasphemy Codes are Choking 
Freedom  Worldwide_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Silenced-Apostasy-Blasphemy-Choking-Worldwide/dp/0199812284)
 , Shea traced the backlash to any perceived 
insult to  Islam back to its sources. She denounced the governments of Saudi 
Arabia and  Iran, and called on the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) 
to 
"end its  own worldwide campaign of stirring passions against religious 
insult." 
Shea called on the OIC to change course entirely, urging the organization 
to  "condemn the violence that is now waged against the Lebanon Christian 
library,  and, even more critically, against the Christian minorities in all 
parts of the  Arab world." 
USCIRF's George touched on Lebanon's history of sectarian violence. "This  
goes all the way back to the Lebanese Civil War," from 1975 to 1990, the 
USCIRF  chair explained. "If you travel in Lebanon, as I have, you will start 
noticing  security checkpoints. The country is suffering acts of violence, 
and often  religiously based acts of violence." 
"Beirut itself was known as the Paris of the Middle East," George 
explained,  hearkening back to a more peaceful era. "It was held up as a city 
where 
people  of various faiths could live together in peace," the USCIRF chair 
recalled,  listing the different faith traditions in Lebanon: Maronite 
Catholics, Roman  Catholics, Sunni and Shia Muslim, Eastern Orthodox, and 
Antiochian 
 Christians. 
Despite this violence, George praised the country of Lebanon for rebuilding 
 an ancient Jewish Synagogue. Nevertheless, he lamented the loss of the 
Jewish  population, which is now "vanishingly small." 
"We see the Middle East emptying of its historic Christian populations," 
the  USCIRF chair explained. George even referred to his own relatives who 
fled from  Syria. "My father's family is Syrian, from the ancient Antiochian 
Orthodox  community," he explained. "They lived peacefully with their Muslim 
neighbors,  they were able to make a life for themselves, and now they have 
fled." 
"It's impossible for them to live in their country – they would be in  
complete fear," George said. He explained that the mission of USCIRF is to 
_urge 
 President Obama and his administration to make religious freedom a 
priority in  foreign relations_ 
(http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/20131231_Attacks_on_religion__liberty.html)
 . 
George argued that the responsibility of any government is to allow for  
religious freedom and to prevent and punish attacks against it. The government 
 of Lebanon has a responsibility "to bring some amelioration to people who 
are  being abused like this priest was abused," and to punish the 
perpetrators, he  said. 
But governments should not do this just to be on good terms with the United 
 States. George argued that the economic and political success of a country 
 depends on how it respects religious freedom. "If you want your country to 
 flourish, you should establish religious freedom," he declared. "that's 
true for  Lebanon, that's true for Syria, that's true for everywhere."

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to