Realpolitiks stink, but I fear there are no good options for anyone these 
days...

Begin forwarded message:

From: Gregory Alan Bolcer <[email protected]>
Date: November 24, 2015 at 3:56:17 PM PST
To: Friends of Rohit Khare <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FoRK] Turkey->Russia

http://www.wnd.com/2015/07/obama-response-to-christian-killing-fields-horrifying/

Obama response to Christian killing fields 'horrifying'

President 'has head in the sand,' says author

Published: 07/08/2015 at 9:15 PM
Leo Hohmann About | Email | Archive
Leo Hohmann is a news editor for WND. He has been a reporter and editor at
several suburban newspapers in the Atlanta and Charlotte, North Carolina,
areas and also served as managing editor of Triangle Business Journal in
Raleigh, North Carolina.

Some Syrian Christians have formed militias to protect their homes.

Syrian Christian families are being forced out of their homes by rebel
factions operating with the support of the U.S. and its allies in Syria’s
civil war while President Obama continues his policy of ignoring a genocide
in the making.

A coalition of Sunni Islamist forces working to overthrow the Shiite
government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is attempting to seize the
key northern city of Aleppo with help from the U.S., Turkey and Saudi
Arabia.

Aleppo has been home to Syria’s largest Christian community, numbering in
the tens of thousands, but two-thirds of this community has been scattered
throughout the surrounding countryside into neighboring towns while others
have migrated across the border to Turkey or into Lebanon.

The rebel coalition, which is fighting ISIS as well as Assad, is no
different than ISIS in its utter contempt of Christians. And a July 3
report from National Public Radio confirms this, saying: “The alliance has
extremists in its own ranks who have mistreated Christians and forced them
out of their homes.”

NPR reporter Deborah Amos traveled to Antakya, Turkey, once known as the
ancient city of Antioch. This is the site of one of the first Christian
churches organized by the Apostles Peter and Paul. She met a priest there,
Father Ibrahim Farah, who was kidnapped last March by al-Nusra Front, an
affiliate of al-Qaida that fought alongside ISIS before later branching off
from the caliphate.

The al-Nusra terrorists held Father Ibrahim for 20 days. In Syria, his
church in the provincial capital of Idlib is now shuttered and he is living
with Christians across the border in southern Turkey.

At the turn of the century, Syria was home to about 1.5 million Christians,
who made up 10 percent of its population. Those numbers swelled to about
1.75 million by the time the civil war started in 2011, largely because the
U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 left Islamists in charge there, forcing many
Iraqi Christians to flee to Syria.

According to George Marlin’s new book, “Christian Persecutions in the
Middle East: A 21st Century Tragedy,” acts of violence by Islamic groups
forced about 150,000 Iraqi Christians to escape to Syria.

Now, the Christians are running out of places to hide in an increasingly
Islamic Middle East.

“Christians in Syria and Iraq are generally caught in the middle of these
conflicts and find they are targeted by all sides, because they support
democratic reform and are perceived to be sympathetic to the West,” said
Marlin, chairman of Aid to the Church in Need USA.

“Many elements on both sides would not be unhappy if Christians disappeared
from the face of the Middle East and they (the Islamists) would destroy all
the Christian historical sites, the relics and the documents dating back to
the founding of the Church, that are there,” he continued. “Peter centered
the church in Antioch before he moved it up to Rome. Syria is the cradle of
Christianity.”

He said Christians were generally left alone under Assad and lived
peacefully. “But Islamic Turks slaughtered 200,000 Christians in Syria
during the Ottoman Empire so it’s nothing new.”

As of December 2014, 600,000 Syrian Christians had fled their country or
have been internally displaced, Marlin reports. In Aleppo, more than 65
percent have been forced to leave.

He told WND most Syrian Christians will not go to the United Nations
refugee camps for two reasons. First, they are afraid they will be harmed
and, second, they do not want to leave their country.

“The Christians are afraid to go to those camps, because the camps are
basically populated by Muslims, and they’re afraid of retaliation and harm
in these camps,” Marlin said. “So what is happening with the Christian
refugees is the Christian community is basically taking care of these
people, they’re staying in the churches, they’re staying in Christian
homes, and we at Aid to the Church in Need are trying to get aid to the
churches that are housing them.”

He said many rural Syrians have been run off their farms and have fled to
the mountains between Syria and Lebanon, while others have gone into
Lebanon. Many would rather die than abandon their ancient homeland, but
there could come a day when they run out of places to flee.

“In Aleppo and elsewhere, Christians who are escaping, they are staying at
Christian homes, churches, places where there is solidarity so they are not
necessarily leaving the country or trying to get into refugee camps,” he
said.

This could explain why so few Syrian Christians are among the refugees
being sent to Western countries. In the U.S., for example, more than 90
percent of the Syrian refugees being sent to the U.S. from U.N. refugee
camps have been Muslim.

Marlin said the persecution of the Church in Syria has followed the same
pattern as every other country where Islamists have taken over.

“In the eight countries I cover in the book, the tactics are pretty much
the same, with the exception of Saudi Arabia which doesn’t have any
Christians and focuses on harassing Christians there as guest workers,” he
said. “In the other seven countries, the churches are being blown up on
high holy days; the pastors are being abducted and murdered. We’ve kept
these records so people can recognize the pattern.”

‘Horrified’ by Obama response to persecution

He said the response of the Obama administration to the war on Christianity
in the Middle East has been abysmal.

“My hope in writing this book was to remind the West that the unthinkable
is real and to jolt the conscience of the West, where too many people have
been putting their heads in the sand, including the White House,” Marlin
said. “I was horrified at their response of the White House when those
Coptic Christians were murdered on the beach in Libya, specifically because
they were Christians, and our president referred to them as ‘migrant
workers from Egypt.’

“Pope Francis said they were murdered solely because of their faith, and no
one has stepped up to the plate on this, no one in Europe, no one at the
White House, to condemn what is going on and try to effect change.”

Marlin believes part of the lack of response comes from the fact that
Europe, and increasingly America, has lost touch with its Christian roots
and thus feel no connection with the persecuted Christians of the Middle
East.

“Secretary of State John Kerry said we don’t recognize this, that ISIS acts
like they’re in the 18th century. This did not begin with ISIS; this is
what’s been going on for centuries, Mr. Kerry, so this again is just the
West putting its head in the sand.”

It has been said that “the last acceptable prejudice is against
Christianity,” Marlin said. “And when people like Mrs. Clinton said a few
weeks ago that we must change our religious views (on same-sex marriage),
that is where we’re heading. That’s what’s coming next, it’s no longer
freedom of religion but freedom from religion. You can practice your
religion in your home and within your church, but not in the public square.
So yes, language matters, culture matters, and we’re seeing a change in the
language to justify actively shutting up of Christians in the public
square.”

And without that voice, the suffering of Christians in the Middle East will
not be given a willing ear.

‘We’re here to get you’

In just one of many examples of the blood-lust of al-Nusra, Marlin
documented the attack in late 2013 on the Christian village of Maaloula.

“They destroyed the crosses on the monastery of St. Serge and threatened
the nuns at the convent of St. Thekla. They forced their way into Christian
homes screaming, ‘We’re here to get you, worshipers of the cross.’”

When the Islamic invaders demanded in one household that three Melkite
Christians convert to Islam, they proceeded to murder them, after one had
said, “I am a Christian and if you want to kill me because I am a
Christian, than do so.”

Al-Nusra Front then kidnapped 12 Orthodox Christian nuns from the convent
in December 2013 and held them for four months.

In October 2013, the al-Nusra Front captured the Christian town of Sadad,
about 200 miles north of Damascus, where 45 Christians were brutally
murdered, Marlin reported, and 2,500 families fled after their homes, shops
and churches were destroyed.

Marlin cited a report by Catholic World Report in October 2014 in which a
nun who had worked in Syria for years assessed the situation.

“There are slaughterhouses, many slaughterhouses, in Syria where Christians
are taken to be tortured and slaughtered. People who are not political, who
do not choose or take sides in the conflict, are taken from their families,
kidnapped, forced to deny their faith and then – whether they have or have
not – are killed, often by beheading. This is not about siding with the
government, not about siding with President Assad, but about sheer
persecution of a peaceful but vulnerable minority. Yet the world says so
little, and often nothing at all.”

Stoking the war against Assad

The U.S. government under President Obama, with the help of its ally
Turkey, has helped stoke the civil war against Assad’s regime, training
rebels, helping transfer arms and creating a refugee crisis of unimaginable
scale.

The U.S. has agreed to accept 2,000 Syrian refugees during the 2015 fiscal
year and many more in 2016 and beyond. But of the nearly 1,000 resettled in
the U.S. so far, 90 percent of them have been Muslim and only 4.5 percent
Christian.

Aleppo now stands poised as the next bloody front in the now five-year-old
civil war.

Christians there are preparing for mass exodus as the Middle East continues
to empty itself of followers of Jesus Christ. Ancient churches dating back
to the first century have been left in ruins.

Syrian Christians are being run out of their homes and businesses not only
by ISIS but by al-Nusra Front and other Sunni radical groups.

Father Ibrahim, who escaped the northern Syrian town Idlib last March and
is now living in Turkey, told NPR that Christians in Turkey are concerned
for their brothers and sisters just across the border to the south.

“Of course, they’re interested. And they ask because they know about the
situation in Syria, and we are all Christians in the Middle East,” he told
NPR. “They’re afraid. They’re very afraid.”

He stopped the interview when asked if these Christians are right to be
afraid of the advancing Sunni Muslim rebels.

He still hopes the Islamists can be convinced to allow civilians to run the
government, according to the NPR report. But those hopes are fading fast.

Are Kurds last best hope for protecting Christians?

Half of Aleppo is now held by the Islamist rebels. Many Christians in the
Turkish frontier towns just across the border are stepping up emergency
plans for when Aleppo falls. They expect a mass exodus of Christians.

Of all the groups in the Middle East that have had success fighting ISIS,
the Kurds are clearly the one group most worthy of American support, says
Joel Richardson, author of the best-seller “The Islamic Antichrist” and
“Mideast Beast.”

Richardson, earlier this year, visited Kurdish strongholds in northern
Iraq. The Kurds also control areas within Syria and the New York Times
recently reported that the Kurds have made advances against ISIS in
northern Syria, increasing their control of a strategic highway and cutting
off a main supply route from Turkey. Many Christian men have fought
alongside Kurdish militias.

“I can attest that not only do Christian churches exist there, but the
Christians are treated well. Americans of all parties must ask themselves
why the Obama administration has, up until this point, refused to
adequately get behind the Kurds,” Richardson told WND.

“The U.S. has openly supported the Syrian rebels, despite the fact that it
is well documented that many of these rebels have gone on to join al-Nusra
or ISIS,” he said. “It is also well documented that many of the Syrian
rebels have been brutal in their persecution of the Christians, and other
non-Sunni minorities throughout the region.”

What is Obama seeking to accomplish?

Richardson said he has been in regular contact with Syrian Christian
leaders, and they have repeatedly reminded Americans to look at the history
of the Assad regime.

“Under Assad, Christians in other minority groups have lived with a
relative freedom and security,” he said. “Why then has the Obama
administration chosen to cast (the Assad regime) aside as the greatest evil
in Syria above all others?”

No one is suggesting that Assad is an angel, Richardson said.

“But look at the nation of Libya, after Obama and Hillary Clinton decided
to remove Gadhafi. Of course, no one will say that Gadhafi was an angel,
but Libya under his control was 1,000 times more stable and secure than it
is today, after the Obama administration effectively handed that nation
over to Islamists. One would think that they would have learned their
lesson, and taken a different approach in Syria.”


--
[email protected], http://bolcer.org, c: +1.714.928.5476
_______________________________________________
FoRK mailing list
http://xent.com/mailman/listinfo/fork

-- 
-- 
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/d/optout.

Reply via email to