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Islam's Cruel Crusaders
by JONATHAN FOREMAN
The New York Post, October 31, 2001
Last weekend's appalling massacre
of Christians in Pakistan - and the fact that it is part of a pattern
of oppression there and in other Muslim countries that predates our campaign
in Afghanistan - should clarify the media's rather muddy picture of today's
Islamic world.
It's all very well to assure others and ourselves that we
are not engaged in a war against Islam, and that support for al Qaeda
is hardly universal among the world's diverse Muslim populations - but
it's also worth remembering that our treasured notions of religious equality
and freedom of belief don't command the same respect once you go far enough
east or south of Istanbul. And while there is intolerance in every society
(including ours), religious intolerance has support or at least the acquiesence
of the state in many Muslim societies.
Indeed, it is all too common for Christians (and Jews and
other religious minorities, such as the Bahai in Iran) to face intolerance
amounting to persecution. In Pakistan, this has included assaults, rapes
and the murder of Christians awaiting trial for "blasphemy"
(a crime for which the punishment is death). The generally impoverished
Christians' situation is particularly bad because most are converts from
Hinduism or the children of such converts, some of whom made the switch
during or after the bloody sectarian horrors of India's partition. Many
came from low-caste Hindu families, which increases the contempt in which
they are held.
Nor is Pakistan alone in Asia in terms of anti-Christian
intolerance: Indonesia has seen worse anti Christian violence. Indonesia's
Molucca islands have actually been the scene of forced conversions and
large-scale murder of Christians by Islamic fundamentalists of the Laskar
Jihad movement over the past three years. Some 5,000 have died and 500,000
more been displaced, with the armed forces turning a blind
eye or even taking part in the atrocities.
In the Middle East, there's the official intolerance of
Saudi Arabia, and other Gulf States like Qatar and United Arab Emirates.
Egypt features fundamentalist pogroms against Coptic Christians; Algeria,
the anti-Christian violence of the Islamic Salvation Front. Saudi Arabia
may be the worst offender when it comes to official intolerance: It bans
non-Muslims from two whole cities, Mecca and Medina.
Hundreds of Christians have been arrested for acts of private
worship and at least 13 - including an Indian, a Filipino and an Eritrean
- are presently imprisoned without charge for religious offenses. This
U.S. "ally" actually banned Christmas carols from Armed Forces
Radio during the Gulf War.
And as fundamentalist Islam grows in Egypt, Coptic Christians
who have lived there since the first century (and who make up at least
10 percent of the population) are undergoing increasingly vicious persecution.
A particularly nasty pogrom in the town of el- Kusheh in
January 2000 saw the massacre of 20 Copts. The law actually forbids the
building, repair or repainting of Churches without permission of the government.
Then there's the persecution of Christians in Muslim regions
of Northern Africa. The adoption of sharia (Muslim law) in much of the
north of Nigeria has been accompanied by vicious anti-Christian rioting.
In Sudan, the northern Muslims (mostly Arabs) wage war on Christian Africans
of the south, often enslaving captured Christian women and children.
Centuries ago, Islam was far more tolerant of other faiths
than Christianity (though never to the level of legal equality). No longer.
Our leaders have gone out of their way to show respect to the Muslim faith
in all its variants, and to reassure our Muslim citizens that they are
as accepted and treasured as any other Americans. It would be nice to
have some of this respect reciprocated, even among our allies.
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