Posted on 06/14/2002 5:21:33 PM PDT by JMJ333
Michael Horowitz, Senior Fellow with the Hudson Institute, was arrested Feb 2, 2000 in front of the State Department in Washington, DC. It was the first time Horowitz had ever been arrested, though it may not be the last. His civil disobedience came out of frustration, after all his writings and articulate pleadings in the cause of persecuted Christians and animists in South Sudan had come to naught.
The facts of the matter are not in dispute. The Sudanese regime, centered in the North, has over the past 17 years conducted a bloody and genocidal civil war in order to impose Islam on the largely Christian South. An estimated two million Christians and animists have been killed 90% of them civilian. Five million more have been driven from their homes, and thousands of children have been sold into slavery.
Horowitz reaction to all of this has been deeply personal. He writes, The mounting persecution of Christians eerily parallels the persecution of Jews, my people, during much of Europes history. The silence and indifference of Western elites to the beatings, looting, torture, jailing, enslavement, murder, and even crucifixion of increasingly vulnerable Christian communities engages my every bone and instinct as a Jew.
Horowitz, Elie Weisel, and 150 major religious and national leaders, joined with Congress in urging President Clinton to demonstrate leadership against what a House resolution explicitly described as the deliberate policies of genocide committed by the Khartoum regime against its Christian and animist populations. These requests were made all the more pressing by last weeks call by the president of Sudan, Omar Bashir, for an escalated jihad (holy war) against those very populations.
A few months prior to Bashirs statement, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright declared the human rights situation in Sudan to be not marketable to the American people. The U.S. has since lifted all restrictions on gum arabic imports from Sudan ($40 million a year) and is now considering whether to resume all trade and diplomatic relations.
Thats why Michael Horowitz went to jail.
Sudan is arguably the greatest humanitarian crisis of the last half-century. More people have been killed in Sudan than in Kosovo, Bosnia, Rwanda, Chechnya, and Somalia combined and yet, unbelievably, the situation in Sudan somehow hasnt qualified for strident moral outrage on the part of the U.S. Administration.
Horowitz has his theories.
Government and media elites twentieth-century products of an Age of Politics are conditioned to dismiss allegations of widespread anti-Christian persecution. To them, the notion of Christians as victims simply doesnt compute. Armed with knowledge of sins committed in the name of Christianity and horridly unaware of Christianitys affirmative role in Western history, modern-day elites are conditioned to think of Christian believers as the ones who do the persecuting, not its victims. An elite culture that speaks caringly about Buddhists in Tibet, Jews in the former Soviet Union, and Muslims in Bosnia finds it easy to dismiss the thought of Christians as equivalent victims.
But before we get overly smug about American hypocrisy in Sudan, Canadians better look to their own.
Talisman Energy, Inc. (Calgary), Canadas largest international oil and energy concern, has emerged as the most important corporate partner with the Sudanese government in the development of oil fields in South Sudan.
An article by Eric Reeves (Los Angeles Times, Aug. 30) describes the companys involvement. Talisman has, along with its investment partners, China and Malaysia, agreed to send [40%] of its revenues to Khartoum. This is extraordinarily significant income for the cash-strapped Khartoum regime, which spends about $1-million (US) per day on the war; much of this money has been borrowed against anticipated oil revenues.
Yesterday, the U.S. Treasury applied sanctions on Talismans consortium. Americans caught doing business with Talisman or other consortium members could be subject to hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines, as well as imprisonment for up to 10 years.
The Canadian government, on the other hand has so far refused to apply sanctions, despite a report, released Monday, finding that the evidence we have gathered, including the testimony of those directly involved, directs us to conclude that oil is exacerbating conflict in Sudan. This report, prepared by John Harker, recommended Talisman stay in Sudan and work for peace.
Translation: Canada has backed down on its threat to impose sanctions.
Meanwhile, as politicians in Ottawa leisurely discuss whether sanctions should have been applied to Talisman, the Sudan, or both the shrapnel and cluster bombing hasnt stopped for a minute.
Reuters News service reported February 11 that the Upper Kaouda Holy Cross School sustained an air attack killing 14 children in a hail of shrapnel Most of the victims were first grade students sitting through an English lesson under a tree. Sudanese government officials defended the bombing, saying the school was a legitimate target in the countrys long-running civil war.
The government of Sudan is determined to depopulate the Nuba mountain region an area the size of Scotland of the black Christian Nuba people, to make way for Muslim tribes. The governments hope is that terror bombing, which often targets hospitals and schools, will eventually force the Nubas off their land into so called peace camps.
If the bombing is successful, and the Christian Sudanese enter the camps, they know what to expect a choice: conversion to Islam in exchange for food or starvation and death.
The wonder, and perhaps the miracle of it all, is that Christians in the South are still flocking to church, and still flocking to have their children baptized into the faith of their fathers.
50 bucks a head, last i heard. This was even portrayed on Touched By an Angel on one episode a few years ago. Missionaries were buying slaves' freedom. Problem was, once the slavers found out they could get money, they went out and apprehended more slaves to sell back. Sick.
Al Sharpeton, Jesse Jackson and the entire NAACP are hypocritical slime for not bringing this to the world's attention.
A poster contended that victims of the Holocost don't want to be reminded about what occurred during WWII. The big difference is the essence of your article. Catholics are "currently" being persecuted and killed TODAY.
I commend your efforts to keep this fact alive.
God Bless,
EODGUY
Just be glad ya'll aren't in the delta...its like an over down here...
And where is the U.N.?
When did we decide to "go quietly into the night", and allow this body to become the weapon of choice for the world savages to wage war against us (civilization) by "other means"?
What will it take for us to stop funding or even acknowledging this evil anachronism?
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