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Books and Culture
 
 
Mark Noll

Their Blood Cries Out
On violence  against Christians.  
 
 
Rupert Shortt and John Allen want readers to wake up. In books  chock full 
of details—names, dates, places, circumstances—they document violence  
against Christian believers that in various forms has been building steadily in 
 
many parts of the world. Shortt, religion editor of The  Times Literary 
Supplement, and Allen, senior correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, 
realize that they are  addressing issues of great moral complexity. Both 
know that "religious  persecution," "martyrdom," and related terms are hotly 
contested. Both are fully  alert to the myriad objections—historical, 
theological, political, diplomatic,  cultural, anthropological—that might 
respond 
to titles like "Christianophobia"  and "the global war on Christians." Yet 
Allen and Shortt also say, in effect:  "Yes, questions of definition, 
historical culpability, ethnic or religious  differentiation, moral 
responsibility, 
and more are fiendishly complex. But it  is not necessary to resolve all 
such issues before taking account of what is  actually occurring, recurring, 
and occurring again at many, many places around  the world." While neither 
author does in fact answer all of these questions,  both books should 
nonetheless be exceedingly helpful for raising the  consciousness of even the 
most 
casual readers. 
John Allen opens with a visit to the Me'eter military camp and  prison in a 
desert region of Eritrea near the African coast of the Red Sea. He  
describes the deplorable living conditions for the 2,000-3,000 people who are  
interned in this camp because they belong to branches of Christianity that  
Eritrea's single-party, hypernationalist rulers, the People's Front for  
Democracy and Justice, consider subversive. Their lot consists of desert heat,  
frigid nights, bodies crammed into unventilated 40' x 38' metal shipping  
containers, mindless tasks like counting grains of sand, death from heatstroke  
and dehydration, sexual abuse, and brutal beatings.[1] And Allen wants to 
know  "why the abuse at Me'eter doesn't arouse the same horror and intense 
public  fascination as the celebrated atrocities that unfolded at Abu Ghraib, 
for  instance, or at Guantanamo Bay. Why hasn't there been the same avalanche 
of  investigations, media exposés, protest marches, pop culture references, 
and the  other typical indices of scandal? Why isn't the world abuzz with 
outrage over  the grotesque violations of human rights at Me'eter?" 
Rupert Shortt begins the world tour making up his book with a stop  in 
Egypt and an interview with Dr. Ibrahim Habib, who now practices medicine in  
the British Midlands. Habib left Egypt after a gruesome incident in 1981 that  
took place in a Cairo suburb, al-Zawia al-Hamra. Local Muslims who wanted 
to  build a mosque on land owned by Coptic Christians attacked violently with 
 (according to Habib) "at least eighty people … killed in the violence, 
some  people … burnt alive in their homes, and the police just looked on." 
Shortt then  documents how the influence of Salafist Wahhabi Islam, which arose 
after the  formation in 1972 of Gama Islamiya, has become more intense over 
the years,  often with fatal results. 
• January 2010: nine worshippers murdered in Nag Hammadi as they  left 
services at St. George's Church. 
• December 2010: twenty-one killed and seventy wounded in an  attack on 
worshippers at Mass in the Two Saints' Church in Alexandria. 
• February 2011 (shortly before the resignation of President Hosni  Mubarak 
as the "Arab Spring" arrived in Egypt): more than twenty killed when a  car 
bomb exploded outside of St. Mark's Church in Alexandria. 
• March 2011: thirteen killed and more than one hundred wounded  when 
Copts, who had gathered to protest the burning of St. Min and St. George's  
Church in a village near Cairo, were set upon by a larger crowd of Muslims with 
 
guns, clubs, and Molotov cocktails. 
Shortt concludes his survey of Egypt with the understated reminder  that 
Copts, whether in Egypt or abroad, "remain deeply concerned about the  future 
of their battered church." 
The propensity for some of us who read such accounts might be to  raise the 
interpretive "but." But don't such reports overlook the Christian  violence 
against non-Christians, not to speak of the Christian-on-Christian  
violence, that has so disfigured the history of Christianity? But is violence 
in  
places like Eritrea or Egypt really religious persecution or merely the last  
chapter in historical ethnic conflict? But aren't perpetrators of such 
violence  responding to Western blunders like the 2003 invasion of Iraq? But … 
But …  But…. 
Shortt and Allen know that such questions are germane, but they  are also 
impatient with how otherwise legitimate inquiries get in the way of  seeing 
multiplied instances of egregious human tragedy. Both authors, for  example, 
record the story of Aasiya Bibi (or Aaasi Noreen), a Pakistani Catholic  
imprisoned in 2009 for blasphemy, the next year sentenced to death and fined  
300,000 rupees (a staggering sum), and held since that time in solitary  
confinement pending appeals. The occasion for this prosecution could hardly 
seem 
 more trivial. This mother of five, from peasant stock in the Punjab, was  
harvesting berries under a blistering sun when she drank from a local well 
that  local Muslim women considered sacred to their religion. An exchange of 
words  followed during which Bibi was accused of slandering the Prophet.[2] 
The sequel gets worse. Salmaan Taseer, the governor of the Punjab  and a 
Muslim, protested Bibi's trial as a miscarriage of justice, but then he  was 
assassinated by one of his own bodyguards, Mumtaz Qadri, who objected to  
Taseer's complaints about the Pakistani law against blasphemy. At the trial of  
this killer, spectators showered the defendant with rose petals; the judge 
who  passed sentence on the accused fled the country out of fear for his 
life. 
Another official who protested against Bibi's treatment was  Shabbaz 
Bhatti, Pakistan's minister of minority affairs and as a Catholic the  only 
non-Muslim in the national cabinet. Like Salmann Taseer, Bhatti not only  began 
an 
official investigation but also visited Mrs. Bibi in prison. He was  shot 
and killed on March 2, 2011, by an assassin who remains at large. 
The most unusual aspect of this incident is the publicity it  received 
outside of Pakistan. That coverage responded to the self-sacrificing  efforts 
of 
Taseer and Bhatti, but also to a book written clandestinely by a  French 
journalist with Mrs. Bibi's cooperation.[3] Other incidents—though  involving 
much more violence, many more fatalities, but also much less  international 
publicity—have become routine in Pakistan and many other parts of  the 
world. 
The carefully documented case studies that fill these books are  important 
for many reasons. Most obvious is the breathtaking range of human  brutality 
they describe that has been—and is being—visited on many types of  
Christians. The violence also falls metaphorically on principles of religious  
freedom and simple humanity. It is not pleasant reading. Whether perpetrated by 
 
Islamists in much of the Arab world and quite a few places beyond; radical 
Hindu  nationalists in India; dictatorial regimes in Belarus, Cuba, China, 
Vietnam,  North Korea, Eritrea, and elsewhere; and not excluding violent 
attacks by  Christians on other Christians in Russia, Mexico, Colombia, and a 
few other  places—whether by torture, rape, solitary confinement, 
decapitation, fatal  beatings, gunshot, car bombs, and more—the blood of the 
victims, 
with the aid of  Shortt and Allen, cries out. 
A second, somewhat reassuring awareness prompted by the books,  however, is 
to realize that many others have been paying attention. A few  academics 
like Daniel Philpott, Timothy Samuel Shah, and Monica Duffy Toft are  
commended by both authors for their careful studies of religion, violence, and  
political systems.[4] But mostly that work is being carried out by  
self-sacrificing ad hoc agencies—including Aid to the Church in Need, Barnabas  
Aid, the 
Catholic Near East Welfare Association, the Centre for the Study of  World 
Christianity, Christian Freedom International, and Christian Solidarity  
Worldwide—which have been faithfully documenting such abuses (and also abuses  
against members of other religions) for a long time. 
Another salutary effect of these books is to compel humility.  Shortt and 
Allen do not shrink from showing that if Christians of various kinds  now 
suffer disproportionately from religiously inspired violence, that is no  cause 
for moral smugness. On this score, they could have quoted Montesquieu's  
Persian Letters: "I can assure you that no kingdom  has ever had as many civil 
wars as the kingdom of Christ." Or Albert Raboteau's  well-considered 
conclusion that "the suffering of African American slave  Christians" at the 
hands of other Christians is "the prime example of the  persecution of 
Christianity in [American] history."[5] A checkered history  should not 
paralyze a 
needy present, but neither should it be forgotten. 
The authors—Shortt somewhat fuller in documentation and geographic  
comprehension, Allen somewhat more direct in drawing conclusions for 
edification  
and action—explore many other compelling issues. They show, for example, that 
 "the Arab spring" has become a "Christian winter" throughout much of the 
Middle  East. Allen also explains convincingly why, when considering 
outcomes, there is  not a great deal of difference between believers killed 
because 
they are  Christians and believers killed because their Christian callings 
put them  directly in harm's way. 
Yet their most enduring message concerns the character of  Christian faith 
itself. In 2011 Shortt interviewed Afghans who after converting  to 
evangelical forms of Christianity had been forced to flee for refuge to  Europe 
or 
India. One of them, who had been taught to view all non-Muslims as  satanic, 
was eventually drawn to Christian faith. For him the attraction was  "God's 
self-offering in Christ, the characteristically Christian notion that  
victory can be won through apparent defeat, and that Christians have the status 
 
of adoptive children through the Spirit of Jesus." Shortt reports that 
despite  ostracism, mortal threat, and forced immigration, this Afghan believer 
did not  regret his conversion. Instead he affirmed that "the gospel had 
freed his  conscience and imagination … especially in its emphasis on the core 
principle  that forgiveness precedes repentance, not vice versa." 
Similarly moving were words that Shabbaz Bhatti recorded on video  only 
weeks before he was killed for trying to help Aasiya Bibi, and after he had  
received many threats against his life: "I am living for my community and for  
suffering people and I will die to defend their rights… . I want to share 
that I  believe in Jesus Christ, who has given his own life for us. I know … 
the meaning  of the Cross and I follow him on the Cross." 
Because of such testimonies, _Christianophobia_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Christianophobia-Faith-Attack-Rupert-Shortt/dp/0802869858/)
  and _The Global War 
on Christians_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Global-War-Christians-Anti-Christian/dp/0770437354)  
are almost as inspiring as  they are frightening. To 
read them is to weep. But it is also to grasp the  wisdom of a slogan 
popularized by Catholic Action in the middle of the last  century: 
Observe—Judge—
Act. 
Mark Noll is Francis A. McAnaney Professor of history at the  University of 
Notre Dame. He is the author most recently of From Every Tribe and Nation: 
A Historian's Discovery of the  Global Christian Story, coming in October 
from Baker Academic. 
1. See the Amnesty International 2013 report on Eritrea,  including 
information about the death of a Jehovah's Witness at Me'eter, 
_www.amnestyusa.org/research/reports/annual-report-eritrea-2013?page=2_ 
(http://www.amnestyusa.org/research/reports/annual-report-eritrea-2013?page=2)  
 (4-24-13). 
2. For an update, 
_tribune.com.pk/story/569761/blasphemy-convict-aasia-bibis-appeal-at-least-two-years-away/_
 
(http://www.tribune.com.pk/story/569761/blasphemy-convict-aasia-bibis-appeal-at-least-two-years-away/)
   (4-24-13). 
3. Available on a Kindle edition in English as _Blasphemy: The True, 
Heart-Breaking Story of the Woman Sentenced  to Death over a Cup of Water_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Blasphemy-heartbreaking-story-woman-sentenced-ebook/dp/B008KS
5YQO/)  (Virago, 2011). 
4. Philpott, Toft, and Shah, _God's Country: Resurgent Religion and Global 
Politics_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Gods-Century-Resurgent-Religion-Politics/dp/B008KUWRDU/) 
  (Norton, 2011). 
5. Albert Raboteau, _Slave Religion: The "Invisible Institution" in the 
Antebellum  South_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Slave-Religion-Invisible-Institution-Antebellum/dp/0195174127/)
 , 2nd ed. (Oxford Univ. Press, 2004), p.  333.

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