Posted on 04/01/2006 5:06:24 PM PST by Dark Skies
Abdul Rahman, the Afghani man who dominated headlines last week, has been safely spirited away to Italy. Rahman had been imprisoned and threatened with a death sentence for apostasy (i.e. converting from Islam to Christianity). His case created an international uproar, as the US, the United Nations and even Pope Benedict XVI put pressure on Afghanistan to release Rahman and drop the charges against him. The outcry against this religious persecution in Afghanistan was so deafening that the authorities ultimately relented and released Rahman, suggesting that he was mentally deficient and unable to stand trial. After his release, Rahman told Italian journalists that his exodus to Italy was necessary because, In Kabul they would have killed me, I'm sure of it.
The unity of the International community against this horrid case of religious persecution was impressive and played no small role in securing Rahmans release and saving his life. Unfortunately, the widespread persecution of Christians around the world continues unabated and receives almost no attention from the international media and community. For instance, over the last several months, nearly 2,000 Christians in one African nation have been rounded up, imprisoned and treated like criminals. Yet these victims of religious persecution have received nowhere near the attention Rahman received. But they deserve it.
At this very moment, the government of Eritrea, a small country on the northeastern coast of Africa, which is bordered by Ethiopia, the Sudan and the Red Sea, is perpetrating vicious human rights abuses against its Christian population. Although Eritreas draft constitution reportedly allows freedom of religion, the ruling party, ironically called the Peoples Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ), has severely restricted religious rights in the country. As the U.S. State Department reported March 9, 2006, only four religious groups, Orthodox Christians, Muslims, Catholics and members of the Evangelical Church of Eritrea, were approved by the PFDJ and allowed to meet legally. Members of the nonregistered churches continued to be arbitrarily arrested throughout the year (2005), the report said.
Religious persecution has steadily worsened in the country since May, 2002, when the PFDJ shut down all religious institutions except the four mentioned. A recent report from Human Rights Watch observed:
Members of Pentecostal Christian churches are arrested for possession of Bibles or for attending communal worship. In 2005, the government intensified its persecution of adherents of unregistered religions by raiding wedding parties at private homes. Some clergy of a modernizing wing of the Eritrean Orthodox church were also arrested in 2005. Many of those arrested are beaten or tortured during their arrest or while in captivity.
Jehovahs Witnesses have been especially mistreated. Some have been detained for a decade for refusing to participate in national military service even though the official penalty is incarceration for no more than three years. The Eritrean government defends its practices on the ground that the unrecognized churches have failed to register, but some religious groups applied for registration in 2002 and have not been registered. The government announced in April 2005 that it soon would register the Seventh Day Adventist denomination, but as of November 2005, it had not done so.
Indeed, just over the last year, hundreds of Christians have been imprisoned and forced to endure deplorable conditions, for the crime of being part of an unregistered religious organization. Compass Direct reported that at least 250 guests, including the bride and groom, were arrested at a wedding on May 28, 2005. While some of them were released the next day, 129 individuals remained imprisoned. Reports say their Bibles were confiscated and burned and they were subjected to insults, mockery and physical abuse.
On Oct. 30, 2005, the Christian Post reported that earlier that month, two hundred Christians were arrested and their churches and affiliate humanitarian aid programs were forced to shut down in the latest report of legal actions against Christians in a series of crackdowns on Christian weddings and church officials.
It isnt just members of the unregistered churches that are being persecuted. Compass Direct reported in August, 2005, that 78-year-old Abuna Antonios of the Eritrean Orthodox Church was stripped of his patriarchal authority by the government-controlled Holy Synod for, among other things, his high-level request that the government release some imprisoned Christian traitors from jail and his objection to government interference in the church. Though the Eritrean government initially denied having stripped Antonios of his responsibilities, a formal declaration of his dismissal was released in January, 2006.
In addition, the US State Department noted, There were some complaints that the government discriminated against the Muslim community and Catholics because the government offered tax relief to Orthodox churches but not to some mosques and Catholic churches.
On November, 2005, Compass reported that 1,778 Eritrean Christians were confirmed to be imprisoned for their religious beliefs, including at least 26 full-time Protestant pastors and Orthodox clergy.
That number has continued to increase in 2006. In January, at least 40 pastors, elders and laymen from five Protestant churches, including the Church of the Living God and the Full Gospel, Rema, Hallelujah and Philadelphia churches.
It should also be noted that these prisoners are kept in absolutely deplorable conditions. Human Rights Watch described the conditions this way:
Prisoners are often held in secret prisons, including underground cells. Because of the large number of arrests, less prominent prisoners are packed into cargo containers or in other overcrowded prisons. In addition to psychological abuse, solitary confinement and abysmal conditions, escapees report the use of physical torture. Prisoners are suspended from trees with their arms tied behind their backs, a technique known as almaz (diamond). Prisoners are also placed face down, hands tied to feet, a method of torture known as the helicopter.
There are dozens of other reports available on Eritreas religious persecution. Yet none of the stories regarding the arrests of dozens, even hundreds of Christians in Eritrea have merited an iota of the attention one sole Apostate in Afghanistan received. Still, Rahmans story has stirred up an unprecedented international outcry for religious freedom around the world. Now it is time to turn the spotlight on Eritrea, and make the PFDJ feel the pressure to set their religious prisoners free.
If our nation doesn't soon announce its recognition of this enemy...we must arise without its support.
IMHO
That I could be there, in Eriterea, to help & suffer wiht my Brothers & Sisters in Jesus...
Not once in the whole article did it mention who or what was resposible for the Christian persecution.
You guessed it, TROP, Muslims, ALWAYS!
I suspect we will be enlisted soon.
I didn't even notice its absence...what else is the respository of demonic anger if not islam?
Registered religions? Weird. I wonder if they have placed their people in high positions in these religions to make sure they don't make waves.
I feared for the life of this Christian brother upon his release. Continued fervent prayer for his safety is needed.
"Radical Hinduism: Persecution, and the War for Indias Soul" November 23, 2002Here is a news article online that should interest international students from India and their American friends.
"NEW DELHI, India Earlier this month, the Indian state of Tamil Nadu passed an ordinance banning religious conversions. Under the new law those converting people from one religion to another face a minimum of three years in prison.
"Critics say the law is part of an aggressive Hindu agenda to restrict the rights of Christians and other minority faiths. While America worries about radical Islam, India, the second most populated nation on earth, has another worry the rise of radical Hinduism. Now Hindu militancy is threatening the stability of the world's largest democracy.
For the full text of the article see: http://cbn.com/CBNNews/News/021021a.asp
But by far most stories are about Islam
Subscribe to the voice of the martyrs http://www.persecution.com/
President Bush is not a religious leader. If a religious leader wishes to enlist temporal powers to fight back against religious enemies, he may gain support from unlikely places.
El Cid cleared Spain from Muslim control in cooperation with some Muslim allies. The Serbs cleared Kosovo from Muslim control in cooperation with some Muslim allies. I do not know if such Muslim allies would be, or would not be necessary or possible in the future. Just in the middle ages Christians were able to develop Muslim allies who were more interested in their independence from the dominant Arab-Muslim power than in their position as a tool of that hierarchy.
That is the reason why I regret that Dubai ports deal didn't go through. I saw it as an opportunity to exploit faults in the Muslim world by supporting an ally.
From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Sat Apr 01 2006 - 12:31:13 EST
Excerpt (more at url)
Many in Somalia suspect the United States has backed the warlord coalition as part of Washington's war on terrorism.
The charge has offered Islamist groups, notably the Islamic courts that have brought order to some parts of Mogadishu by imposing sharia law, another rallying cry against warlords also vying for control of the seaside city.
***CROSS-POSTING OF THIS E-MAIL IS NOT ALLOWED***
Possibly. We were given another opportunity in Afghanistan and used it.
bump
Isn*t ISLAM, (the murderous cult) usually behind the persecution of Christians?
How about Communism? Secular humanism? How about every human heart not filled with grace?
> That I could be there, in Eriterea, to help & suffer wiht my Brothers & Sisters in Jesus...
All it takes is a plane ticket.
Good post. While Islam gets the most press today, Hinduism is ... less than tolerant, and then there is Communism - still very much alive in China.
It's nothing new. To be persecuted is the mainstream of real Christianity. Jesus led the way by incurring the murderous wrath of the religious establishment.
Every century since then, including this young century, has seen the wholesale slaughter of His followers, usually by religionists who think they are doing God a favor.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.