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A Middle East Without Christians
FrontPage Magazine ^ | August 13, 2013 | Noah Beck

Posted on 08/13/2013 4:48:16 AM PDT by SJackson

Islamist terrorists have exploited the lawless Sinai to perpetrate vicious attacks on Egyptian Christians there, as reported earlier this week in the New York Times. Indeed, throughout Egypt, the Copts continue to be targeted and scapegoated for the ousting of the Muslim Brotherhood.

As defenseless and abandoned as Mideast Christians seem today, it is worth remembering their historical roots, and recognizing just how much the plight of Middle East Christians has deteriorated. Over 2,000 years ago, Christianity was born as a religion and spread from Jerusalem to other parts of the Levant, including territories in modern Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Jordan, and Egypt. The Christian faith flourished as one of the major religions in the Middle East until the Muslim conquests of the 7th century.

Despite Muslim domination of the region, Christians comprised an estimated 20% of the Middle East population until the early 20th century. Today, however, Christians make up a mere 2-5% of the Middle East and their numbers are fast dwindling. Writing in the Winter 2001 issue of Middle East Quarterly, scholar Daniel Pipes estimated that Middle East Christians would “likely drop to” half of their numbers “by the year 2020″ because of declining birth rates, and a pattern of “exclusion and persecution” leading to emigration.

The “Arab Spring” has only worsened conditions for the indigenous Christians of the Middle East. Like the Kurds, Middle East Christians are a stateless minority, struggling to survive in the world’s toughest neighborhood. But the Kurds at least have enjoyed partial autonomy in Iraqi Kurdistan since 1991 and most of them are Sunni Muslim, making it easier for them to survive in the Muslim-dominated Middle East. Christians, on the other hand, are a religious minority that controls no territory and is entirely subject to the whims of their hosts. These host countries – with the exception of Israel – offer a grim future to Middle East Christians. Home to one of the oldest Christian communities in the world, Egypt also has the largest Christian population in the Middle East, totaling 8-12 million people. But because Christian Copts make up only about 10-15% of Egypt’s estimated 80 million people, they have for decades lived in fear as second-class citizens, subjected to attacks on churches, villages, homes, and shops; mob killings; and the abduction and forced Islamic conversion of Christian women compelled to marry Muslim men. Such abuse took place under the staunchly secular regime of Hosni Mubarak, but grew much worse under the rule of Mohammed Morsi, the jailed Muslim Brotherhood activist who succeeded Mubarak, and they are now being blamed for Morsi’s ouster.

In Lebanon, Christians represent a bigger portion of the population, so their fate is for now less precarious than that of their Egyptian coreligionists, but their long-term prospects are worrisome. The Christian population is estimated to have dropped from over 50% (according to a 1932 census) to about 40%. Over the last few years, the de facto governing power in Lebanon has become Hezbollah, the radical and heavily-armed Shiite movement sponsored by Iran. With all of the spillover violence and instability produced by the Syrian civil war and Hezbollah’s open involvement in it, and/or the next war that Hezbollah decides to start with Israel, the emigration of Christians out of Lebanon will probably only increase in the coming years, leaving those who stay increasingly vulnerable.

In Syria, 2.5 million Christians comprised about 10% of the population and enjoyed some protection under the secular and often brutal regimes of the Assad dynasty. But as jihadi groups fighting Assad extend their territorial control, the past protection of Christians is often the cause of their current persecution by resentful Sunnis who revile the Assad regime and seek to impose Sharia law wherever they can. Christians have been regularly targeted and killed by rebels, and the sectarian chaos and violence that will likely prevail in Assad’s wake will only increase the number of Christians fleeing Syria.

In Iraq, the bloody aftermath of the 2003 invasion demonstrated how dangerous life can become for a Christian minority when a multicultural society in the Middle East explodes into sectarian violence. By 2008, half of the 800,000 Iraqi Christians were estimated to have left, rendering those remaining even more insecure. In 2010, Salafist extremists attacked a Baghdad church during Sunday Mass, killing or wounding nearly the whole congregation. Such incidents turn any communal gathering into a potential massacre, forcing Christians across the Middle East to ask the ultimate question of faith: “Am I prepared to die for Christian worship?”

The so-called “Arab Spring” threatens to exacerbate matters in much of the Middle East, as Islamists now either control the government or influence it enough to persecute Christians with impunity. As new Islamist regimes in the Middle East condone religious intolerance and introduce Sharia and blasphemy laws, the long-term trend for Christians in their ancestral lands will only grow bleaker.

The one bright spot is the state of Israel – “the only place in the Middle East [where] Christians are really safe,” according to the Vicar of St. George’s Church in Baghdad, Canon Andrew White. Home to Christianity’s holiest sites and to a colorful array of Christian denominations, Israel has the only growing Christian community in the Middle East.

Because Israel is the only non-Muslim state in all of the Middle East and North Africa, it represents a small victory for religious minorities in the region, and serves as the last protector of freedom and security for Jews, Christians, Bahai, Druze, and others. Without Israel, how much more vulnerable would Christians in the Middle East become?


TOPICS: News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: christiangenocide; christianpersecution; religiouscleansing

1 posted on 08/13/2013 4:48:16 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
Middle East and terrorism, occasional political and Jewish issues Ping List. High Volume

If you’d like to be on or off, please FR mail me.

..................

2 posted on 08/13/2013 4:55:43 AM PDT by SJackson ( The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself. BF)
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To: SJackson

McCain is perfectly happy with supplying weapons to Al Qaeda in Syria so that they can defeat Assad and kill more Christians.

Obama is in favor of the killings of Christians. At least he has done nothing to stop it.


3 posted on 08/13/2013 4:56:33 AM PDT by Venturer ( cowardice posturing as tolerance =political correctness)
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To: SJackson

Without Israel,the Middle East would simply become a new Muslim caliphate.


4 posted on 08/13/2013 6:53:18 AM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: SJackson

Look for more Christians to come to America from the Middle East.


5 posted on 08/13/2013 6:54:54 AM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: Biggirl
Look for more Christians to come to America from the Middle East.

Per recent threads thousands of Syrians may be arriving. Bet they're not Syrian Christians, to whom I'd give priority. And Copts. Though I'd prefer we use our influence (former till at least 2016) to advocate their ability to worship as they please where they live. At least in places like Egypt, Lebanon and the West Bank where we should have financial leverage. But that's an old story. The writing on the wall should have been clear 6 decades ago when the Arab world expelled their Jews after a couple millennia. Only fools thought they'd stop there.

6 posted on 08/13/2013 4:31:55 PM PDT by SJackson ( The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself. BF)
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To: SJackson

Just a thought...but maybe all Christians need to get out of the ME.....this will push them out to safe havens...otherwise most would remain as their home or as missionaries. God has His timing and it doesn’t always agree with how we see the picture....I just think Christians need to get out because some serious stuff is coming down the pike...and we’ve just heard only a fraction.


7 posted on 08/13/2013 4:43:09 PM PDT by caww
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To: SJackson

Besides Israel, look for the Christians from that very troubled neighboorhood to land up in America, one way or another.


8 posted on 08/21/2013 3:11:28 PM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: caww

Second it. It is time. I have been saying for years now, as much as the ME Christians want to stay for the sake of being historic, it is now time to get the good news of the Gospel of Jesus out because like you, I am sensing trouble down the pike.


9 posted on 08/21/2013 3:13:27 PM PDT by Biggirl (“Go, do not be afraid, and serve”-Pope Francis)
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To: Biggirl
the Christians from that very troubled neighboorhood to land up in America, one way or another.

That's OK, but bringing in moslem dirtbags is not.

I'd also like to see the displaced Christians offered sanctuary in the liberated areas of the West Bank and Gaza Strip as well as Lebannon. Send the Hamas filth back to Jordan, Syria and Egypt.

That would make it much easier to light-off any belligerent MB countries in the area without fear of innocent collateral damage.

10 posted on 08/21/2013 3:19:01 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate "Republicans Freed the Slaves Month")
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