The Federalist
 
 
Let’s Rethink The Reaction To Ted Cruz’s Persecuted  Christians Speech
 
Mollie Hemingway
September 16, 2014
 
 
 
By now you’ve seen or read about Sen. Ted Cruz’s speech at the _In Defense 
of Christians summit_ (http://www.idcsummit.org/)  in  Washington, D.C. His 
focus on Israel to a room full of persecuted Christians  with divergent 
views on the Jewish state received wildly mixed responses both  among attendees 
and the general population.
 
You probably have your opinion. I have mine. I wrote “_Ted  Cruz Is No Hero 
For Insulting A Room Of Persecuted Christians_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2014/09/11/ted-cruz-is-no-hero-for-insulting-a-room-of-persecuted-christians/)
 
.” My friend  and colleague David Harsanyi wrote “_Ted Cruz Was  Right 
(And The People Who Booed Him Were Wrong)._ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2014/09/11/ted-cruz-was-right/) ”

 
 
I could list many more articles explaining _one  side_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/opinion/sunday/ross-douthat-the-middle-easts-friendless-christ
ians.html?_r=1)  or _the  other_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/387822/jews-christians-and-ted-cruz-ramesh-ponnuru)
 . But what I’m worried about 
now is that we’re all so entrenched in our  views that we’re burrowing in 
and starting to malign the motivations of those  with whom we disagree. My 
email and social media were full of so much unhinged  reaction that it was 
hard to be open-minded about the good critiques. I also saw  some frightening 
or over-the-top pro-Cruz takes from people I generally like and  respect. 
And then on the other side of the ledger, I saw some people on my side  of 
things get very emotional and be jerks. And I saw extreme commentary from the  
hoi polloi on Cruz-defenders and, in some cases, Israel itself.
 
What if we just tried to see the best parts of other people’s arguments —  
just to understand each other a bit better?
 
Luther’s Small Catechism teaches about the commandment against bearing 
false  witness: “We should fear and love God that we may not deceitfully belie, 
betray,  slander, or defame our neighbor, but defend him, [think and] speak 
well of him,  and _put the best  construction on everything_ 
(http://bookofconcord.org/smallcatechism.php) .” I have it memorized because I 
need to be  
constantly reminded of it.
 
The best construction I have right now is that we’re all laser-focused on  
different things. It’s not necessarily that we all disagree with each other 
so  much as that we’re focused on different areas of concern. And each of 
these  areas of concern at the very least has legitimate angles. Let’s take a 
trip  through those different things.
 
1) These Are Bad Guys The Christians Keep Aligning With
Reports coming out of the _In  Defense of Christians Summit_ 
(http://www.indefenseofchristians.org/)  through its first couple of days were 
quite  
positive. The media coverage wasn’t much but the group had gotten a wide 
variety 
 of Christians to participate, both globally and in the United States. The 
first  sign of trouble came on Wednesday, when the Washington Free Beacon 
ran a story  headlined _Cruz  Headlines Conference Featuring Hezbollah 
Supporters_ 
(http://freebeacon.com/national-security/cruz-headlines-conference-featuring-hezbollah-supporters/)
 .
 
Many people have criticized that story but let’s remember we’re trying to  
just look at the best parts of everyone’s arguments. And the best version 
of  this argument is simply that it’s absolutely true that all sorts of 
Christians  in the Middle East have aligned with all sorts of bad guys. It’s 
something  everyone does, sure, (we went with Stalin in World War II, for 
example) but  that’s not a blanket excuse for same.
 
Syrian Bashar al-Assad is a horrible tyrant. He may be keeping the 
Christians  alive right now, but he’s still a bad guy. Assad has killed who 
knows 
how many  of his people in recent years, even using chemical weapons and 
bombs. His forces  rape and pillage. Even if he’s protecting Christians 
currently, he’s also known  for killing them. Lee Smith, a prominent voice 
whose 
focus is on the bad guys,  _notes_ 
(http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/184481/ted-cruz-exposes-christian-bigotry-against-jews-in-the-middle-east)
 :
 
I lived in Beirut during one of Bashar al-Assad’s anti-Christian campaigns, 
 when his spies and allies assassinated Christian politicians and 
journalists  and bombed Christian-majority regions of Lebanon.

 

Other participants in the conference have connections to Hezbollah, a Shia  
Islamist militant group based in Lebanon and funded by Iran. The argument 
of  groups such as the Free Beacon and Smith are that these guys are every 
bit as  bad as ISIS, so a conference organized around that threat shouldn’t 
have people  who are supportive of equivalent groups.
 
To be sure, the argument that Hezbollah is as bad as ISIS is debatable. One 
 can acknowledge that Hezbollah is hideous and evil, but one can’t quite 
imagine  ISIS _handing out press  passes to critics_ 
(http://www.city-journal.org/2009/eon0408jk.html)  to cover their rallies, much 
less aligning with 
Christian  groups.
 
And while it is also true that Assad has killed lots of Christians, so did  
the United States in World War II. So did Ulysses S. Grant during the Civil 
War.  But there is a difference between killing Christians who are your 
enemy in war  and killing Christians because they are Christians. Before we 
call these groups  equivalent as it relates to Christian persecution, we should 
point to Assad  saying something like, “Well, we’ve got to wipe out this 
specific group of  infidels on the grounds that they are infidels.” A lot of 
what we’re talking  about with regard to the persecution of Christians 
hinges on motivation and not  just being tyrants over everyone.
 
Having said all that, we should not lose sight of who bad guys are. A lot 
of  Arab Christians do exactly that, and move from making alliances with the 
Assad  regime because it’s protecting them right now to deciding that same 
regime is  good. That’s undoubtedly an important point to counter.
 
You may not like how these people made these arguments, or some of the  
dismissive ways that they treated the issue of Christian persecution, but  
hopefully you can see that these are, in fact, good points. It’s their  focus.
 
2) Israel Is A Good Ally To Christians in the Middle East
The video indicates that a subset of the “In Defense of Christians” crowd  
booed when Ted Cruz said that “Christians have no greater ally than Israel.”
  Some people got very upset at the crowd because, they argue, Israel is a  
wonderful ally to Christians in the Middle East.
 
My colleague David Harsanyi _made the case  well here_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2014/09/11/ted-cruz-was-right/) , in which he argues 
that Israel and 
Middle East Christians share  “the same enemies, the same broader 
geopolitical aims and the same moral  outlook.” He also notes that the 
Christian 
population in Israel is growing and  is the only stable Christian population in 
the region. He also writes that “The  Israeli government has actively 
attempted to better integrate Christian Arabs,  who are politically dissimilar 
from 
many Muslim Israeli Arabs.”
 
3) Christians Should Support Israel
Many American Christian supporters backed Ted Cruz for the simple reason 
that  Christians should love their neighbors and, they say, there should be 
special  affinity for Jews. A large part of that support is very likely 
dealing with  particular theological views held by millions of American 
evangelicals and  fundamentalists. The view, called dispensationalism, is based 
on the 
writings of  John Nelson Darby and spread via the popular _Scofield  
Reference Bible_ 
(http://issuesetc.org/2014/08/19/2-the-scofield-reference-bible-and-its-author-c-i-scofield-dr-kim-riddlebarger-81914/)
 . Dispensationalists 
believe that the nation of Israel is  distinct from the Christian Church, 
populated by God’s people, and that God has  not yet fulfilled his promises to 
Israel. These views are not popular at all in  older Christian churches.
 
But whether or not Americans hold to dispensationalism, there’s wide 
support  for Israel in general and very low support for criticism of same. It 
is 
obvious  to many that there is a very fine line between criticism of Israeli 
policy and  criticism of Jews in general. This makes it difficult to find 
safe spaces to  critique Israel but it’s also true that anti-Semitism is a 
huge global problem  and Christians are wise to be concerned about it.
 
Viewed in these ways, Ted Cruz was valiant for standing up to an ugly  
sentiment as well as valiant for standing up to people making stupid  alliances.
 
4) Christians Are Dying
For people focused on this issue, the over-arching concern is the plight of 
 Middle Eastern Christians, a shrinking and threatened minority throughout 
the  region. It’s as simple as that. These people are dying out and need 
help. All  people of goodwill should set aside political differences and 
secondary concerns  and focus on saving them, which was the stated goal of the 
conference.
 
If you want to talk about all the things these Christians shouldn’t be 
doing,  people who hold to this view say, that’s fine, but U.S. Senators should 
consider  the context of when to talk about it and how such conversations 
might disrupt  the already tenuous ecumenical gathering.
 
Nobody is going to have their mind changed by these simple summaries of  
arguments being made by others but if we do our best to view everyone as 
people  of good faith but people with different focus, we may be able to 
broaden 
our  perspectives. In fact, I bet that some of us could find agreement in 
each of  these categories. I have not changed my position on the propriety of 
Cruz’s  actions, but I acknowledge that there are important points made by 
those who  don’t share my views.
 
OK, Let’s Talk About Middle Eastern Christian Ideas On Israel
This is the elephant in the room, the fact that some Middle East Christians 
 don’t like Israel. Why, some people wanted to know, would Middle Eastern  
Christians do anything but support Israel? Well, who knows all the reasons.  
There are things Christians in the region have said that sound almost as 
bad as  Islamist calls for eradication of Israel and there are things 
Christians have  done there that are best described as terrorism. And then 
there are 
plenty of  legitimate reasons that Christians might not find Israel to have 
been the best  ally. For one thing, it’s not really the job of Israel to be 
an ally to  Christians in the region, except insofar as the alliance works 
for all parties.  That’s not the purpose of the nation of Israel, even if 
Christians fare better  in Israel than many other countries in the region.
 
In any case, Rep. Henry Hyde _wrote  a letter to President George W. Bush_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/05/henry_hydes_plea.html)  
in 2006, described here:
 
Rep. Henry Hyde… is pleading the case of endangered Palestinian Christians  
to President Bush. A faithful supporter of Israel over many years, Hyde 
said  in a letter sent Friday to the White House: “I cannot be blind when 
Israeli  actions seem to go beyond the realm of legitimate security concerns 
and 
have  negative consequences on communities and lands under their occupation.”
 He  urged the president to take up this issue with Israeli Prime Minister 
Ehud  Olmert on his Washington visit this week. Hyde, chairman of the House  
International Relations Committee, sent along with his letter a five-page,  
single-spaced report prepared by his staff based on visits to Israel and  
Palestine over the past two years. It contends “the Christian community is  
being crushed in the mill of the bitter Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” The  
Israeli security wall and expanding Jewish settlements in the West Bank, the  
report continues, “are irreversibly damaging the dwindling Christian  
community.”

 

And let’s look at some of the Christians who have taken up arms against  
Israel. Such as George Habash, who founded the Popular Front for the 
Liberation  of Palestine and was its secretary-general until 2000. This is a  
revolutionary-leftist group that makes Fatah seem moderate by comparison. In 
his  
obituary, _the  BBC_ (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7211505.stm)  
wrote:
 
Over the next decade the PFLP would carry out some of the defining attacks  
of the era. These catapulted the Palestinian cause onto the international 
news  agenda, but did not always generate sympathy for the Palestinians. Many 
people  in Israel and the West thought that George Habash was a terrorist. 
For many  Palestinians and Arabs he was a patriot.

 

And he’s not the only Arab Christian to have fought against Israel (or Arab 
 governments, for that matter).
 
In _an  interview with Kathryn Jean Lopez_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/387970/defense-christians-kathryn-jean-lopez)
 , executive director of 
In Defense of  Christians Andrew Doran said:
 
Over the last several years, I’ve had many conversations with Christians  
from the Middle East about Israel and their views land anywhere on a broad  
spectrum of opinion. Some are sympathetic but can’t say so because to do so  
would put their lives at risk; it should be sufficient to say that 
minorities  tend to be sympathetic to other minorities. Others remember being 
forced 
to  leave their villages in Palestine never to return. And still others are 
proud  citizens of Israel. So there must be more options for Middle Eastern  
Christians than outspoken support for Israel and anti-Semitism. The Middle  
East is complicated and nuanced, whether politicians want it that way or 
not.  That’s why serious statesmen are measured in their remarks: When they’
re not,  it puts lives at risk.

 

That’s undoubtedly true. I remember on my flight to Israel sitting next to 
an  Arab Christian who lived in Northern Israel who praised Israel. I spoke 
to some  others there who sounded like they were auditioning for an 
anti-Semitic title.  The spectrum of postures goes back decades. Remember that 
Cruz 
said:
 
Our purpose here tonight is to highlight a terrible injustice. A  
humanitarian crisis. Christians, are being systematically exterminated. In  
1948, 
Jews throughout the Middle East faced murder and extermination and fled  to the 
nation of Israel. And today, Christians have no greater ally than the  
Jewish state. Let me say this, those who hate Israel, hate America. And those  
who hate Jews, hate Christians.

 

Incidentally, that entire interview is worth reading and includes some  
perspectives and quotes from Middle East Christians that are worth  considering.
 
Anyway, it’s an important year not just because of how Jews were fighting 
for  their lives and property throughout the Middle East — just years after 
the end  of the Holocaust, mind you — but also because it was the year that 
Israel won  its war of independence. That was a war largely fought against 
Muslim Arabs but  against some Christian Arabs as well. And beyond that, many 
Christian Arabs were  caught in the crossfire between warring factions. It’s 
not exactly a fond  memory, whether the Christians were working with Jewish 
forces or against  them.
 
Professor Benny Morris’s book _1948_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/1948-History-First-Arab-Israeli-War/dp/0300151128/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1410765310&sr=8-2&k
eywords=1948)   does a decent job explaining what the war that year was 
like for all sides.  After one battle, he writes, “In Jerusalem, the Christians 
were eager to leave,  but the Muslims threatened to confiscate or destroy 
their property. Outside the  town, Muslim villagers overran the monasteries 
at Beit Jimal and Mar Saba, in  the former ‘robbing and burning property,’ 
in the latter ‘murdering [monks] and  robbing.’” Many Christians simply 
fled. Many others were forcibly expelled to  Lebanon or forced to move to other 
parts of the country. It might be worth  reading a bit on the _Palestinian  
Christians of Iqrit_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iqrit) . I don’t want to 
overstate the situation. Here’s another  good part of the book that explains 
what happened when majority-Christian  Nazareth fell to the Israeli Defense 
Forces:
 
But the following afternoon, [Moshe] Carmel and [Haim] Laskov ordered the  
town’s new military governor, Seventh Brigade OC Colonel Ben Dunkelman — a  
Canadian volunteer with armored experience from World War II — to expel the 
 inhabitants. Dunkelman refused. Laskov appealed to Ben-Gurion: “Tell me  
immediately, in an urgent manner, whether to expel [leharhik] the inhabitants 
 from the town of Nazareth. In my opinion, all should be removed, save for 
the  clerics.” Ben-Gurion backed Dunkelman. Perhaps he was moved by possible 
world  Christian reactions; perhaps he thought the idea objectionable as 
Nazareth’s  inhabitants had not resisted. Orderly administration was imposed 
under the new  governor, Major Elisha Sulz. IDF troops — except those serving 
in the military  government — were barred from the town, and normal life 
was rapidly restored.  Indeed, Nazareth soon filled with returning locals and 
refugees from  surrounding villages.

 

In this one brief passage we can see the best and the worst of Israeli 
action  in the War of Independence. Yes, some commanders were willing to expel 
Arab  communities from their homes — and in some cases, like Iqrit, that’s 
exactly  what happened. On the other hand, there was much humanity in how 
these forces  treated those they had beaten. Israelis have every right to point 
to this as  evidence that their record is generally better than their 
regional neighbors.  But in this story we can also understand why Arab 
Christians 
in Nazareth aren’t  entirely elated, particularly when their 
co-religionists nearby weren’t nearly  so fortunate.
 
It was an extremely tough war. Arab populations scattered or were 
scattered.  Many Israelis died and there were reports of massacres of 
Christians and  
Muslims. It may seem like ages ago, but for some Christians the cause of 
Arab  nationalism remains paramount, for some Christians Israel is their 
beloved  country and for some the feelings are simply more mixed.
 
South Lebanon Army
Or let’s look at another group that allied with Israel for a time, and how  
that ended up. The South Lebanon Army was allied with Israel from 1982–2000 
to  fight against the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and 
Hezbollah. Things  went pretty well at first but toward the end, things weren’t 
going 
so well and  Israeli casualties were mounting. Israelis were getting 
frustrated. Prime  Minister Ehud Barak ran on a platform of ending involvement 
with the SLA and  when he took over, he began pulling out without giving the 
SLA warning. The SLA  was completely over-run and it led to the arrest of many 
and a mass exodus of  Christians who feared they’d be tried as traitors.
 
Hezbollah’s Christian in Beirut
Here’s a New York Times story from 1983 about _U.S.  Navy gunfire saving a 
Lebanese Army garrison_ 
(http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A05EFD91138F933A1575AC0A965948260)
  that was fending of Syrian and  militia 
attacks. The story doesn’t get into it but the Army was mostly Christian  and 
it was led there by a Maronite Christian named Michel Aoun.
 
If you heard his name recently it was because the Free Beacon named him in  
one of its stories as “Lebanese politician Michel Aoun, _Hezbollah’s  top 
Christian ally_ 
(http://freebeacon.com/national-security/cruz-headlines-conference-featuring-hezbollah-supporters/)
  in the country.” Someone backing 
the conference was in  trouble for being supportive of Aoun.
 
So how could Aoun go from working with Americans and Israelis to being a  
Hezbollah ally? Well, it’s worth looking at, particularly in the context of 
last  week’s contretemps. We know this guy spent much of the 1980s fighting 
for  Lebanese Christians, working with Israelis and Americans as it suited 
their  interests. But in both cases, those allies left. By 1989 he decides to 
try to  fight the Syrian occupation and liberate Lebanon. This wasn’t the 
wisest move as  not only were the Syrians much better armed, they also had the 
backing of none  other than the United States. They crush him. He goes into 
exile in France for  15 years, returning only after the Cedar Revolution 
and the departure of the  Syrians.
 
And now he’s allied with Hezbollah, and it would seem that allying with  
Israel or the U.S. here wouldn’t really be an option as it doesn’t match his  
interests or theirs. I’m in no way defending this guy who has been involved 
with  war and revolution for all of his adult life. He’s killed a lot of 
people. But  his story is at the very least illustrative of how complicated 
alliances are in  the region.
 
Folks interested in learning more about the actual views of _Arab  
nationalism_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2014/09/08/the-roots-of-arab-solidarity/)  or 
the _political  views of Arab Christians_ 
(http://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2014/08/02/Is-the-pluralistic-Levant-heading-into-dark
ness-.html)  have plenty of opportunity to read up on them —  even if they 
come down as condemnatory as before.
 
Masquerading as victims?
A final word regarding the allegation that Middle East Christians are a “
_hate  group masquerading as victims_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2014/09/11/jeers-for-cruz-and-the-reality-of-jew-hatred-christians-middle-east/)
 ”
 or that persecuted Christians showed their  “_ISIS  face_ 
(https://twitter.com/LeeSmithTWS/status/510416449496961025) .”
 
People’s emotions were running high and, as we discussed, everyone had a  
different focus about what the main problem of last week was. But let’s not  
forget what Middle Eastern Christians are facing. ISIS hit one town in 
Lebanon  with graffiti that read “_We  came to slaughter you, you worshipers of 
the cross_ 
(http://araborthodoxy.blogspot.com/2014/09/isis-threatens-orthdox-church-in.html)
 ” and “The Islamic State  is coming.” _Christians  in 
Mhardeh, Syria, are facing a dire situation_ 
(http://araborthodoxy.blogspot.com/2014/08/the-assault-on-mhardeh-intensifies.html)
  against al-Nusra. You can  
read here about the alliance of that city’s _17,000  Christians and Syrian 
forces_ 
(http://araborthodoxy.blogspot.com/2014/08/an-nahar-on-defense-of-mhardeh.html) 
 against the threat.
 
If Americans who wish to stop ISIS and al-Nusra from killing Christians 
have  ideas for what these Christians should do, now is the time to offer up 
those  ideas and get moving. Yes, there are alliances with al-Assad and 
Hezbollah. Yes,  these are very bad guys and groups. Do we have a better 
proposal 
for them as  they face this existential threat? Let’s offer it.
 
And while many of us engaged in some regrettable fights with friends and  
others in the last week, one hopes that we also learned from each other and 
that  we can work together to understand the plight of threatened Christians 
and other  minorities in the Middle East, the problem of entanglements with 
bad actors,  ways to support Israel’s existence, and the importance of 
working to correct the  imprudent decisions made by each and every one of  us

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