Iran’s clerics concerned by spread of Christianity among youth
"World Watch Monitor," August 22, 2017 
Christianity  is spreading fast among young people in some of Iran’s most 
religiously  conservative cities, causing concern among leading Islamic 
clerics, who blame  foreign influence, according to Mohabat News. 
One  high profile cleric, Ayatollah Alavi Boroujerdi, said recently that “
accurate  reports indicate that the youth are becoming Christians in Qom 
[home to one of  Iran’s most famous Islamic shrines] and attending house 
churches
”. His concern  is shared and, according to Mohabat, over the years 
repeatedly expressed by  another influential cleric, Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi. 
Last  year he “expressed his deepest concern over the popularity of 
Christianity in  the suburbs of Mashhad” – a place of pilgrimage for Shia 
Muslims –
 after which  “the city’s religious and political officials immediately 
sent a vast number of  Islamic teachers and preachers to Mashhad’s suburbs in 
order to turn the youth  away from Christianity”, reports Mohabat. 
Kiaa  Aalipour, from advocacy organisation Article 18, told World Watch 
Monitor last  week that the Iranian government “sees Christian converts as a 
constant threat  to the Islamic identity of the Islamic Republic of Iran”. 
“The  Iranian regime is very fearful of the growth of Christianity in Iran,”
 he said.  “If more and more Iranians convert to Christianity, the 
legitimacy of the  Iranian regime, which is based on an Islamic theocracy, will 
be 
totally  lost.” 
Despite  the efforts of Iran’s government to promote Islam among young 
people in cities  like Mashhad and Qom, and a crackdown on newly converted 
Christians – many of  whom have been harassed or arrested – many young Iranians 
continue to convert,  saying they are willing to face the consequences. 
Christians  are thought to make up only around 0.6 per cent (around 
500,000) of Iran’s  roughly 80 million people, although precise numbers are 
difficult to determine.  The country is eighth on the Open Doors 2017 World 
Watch 
List of the 50  countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian. At 
least 193 Christians  were arrested or imprisoned in Iran in 2016 – many of 
them converts from Islam.  In recent months, more than a dozen Christians have 
been sentenced to at least  ten years in prison for “acting against 
national  security”

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