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To: ET(end tyranny)
Did you know that in 2000 in Mexico Catholics were persecuting Protestants? Threatening them with machetes.

Yeah, and Protestants in Ireland jeer little Catholic schoolgirls. It's little to do with religion. What a hatemonger you are.

SD

1,646 posted on 04/01/2004 1:42:52 PM PST by SoothingDave
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To: SoothingDave
It's little to do with religion. What a hatemonger you are.

From Christianity Today

Healing the Violence
Presbyterians, Catholics try to reconcile as expulsions persist in Chiapas.

By Kenneth D. MacHarg, with reports from Compass Direct | posted 7/25/00

In March, about 70 Protestant families were expelled from the Mexican village of Plan de Ayala, in Chiapas state, by the town's Roman Catholic majority. "Fourteen homes were demolished by the mob as the Protestants fled to the hills for refuge," reports Seventh-day Adventist pastor Isaias Espinosa.

This is not unusual for Mexico's much-troubled southern region. Yet despite a climate of open hostility and violence, a handful of Roman Catholics and Presbyterian evangelicals are in pursuit of peace. "Political and religious leaders need to be looking for reconciliation," says Vern Sterk, a missionary of the Reformed Church in America. Both Catholic and Protestant participants are discussing how to return refugees to their homes, bring justice for innocent Christians, heal violence and division, and forgive one another.

Expulsions, Arrests
Paramilitary groups among indigenous Indians have waged guerrilla war since 1994 against Mexico's government, mostly in the Chiapas province.

The ethnic and political conflicts have fanned the flames of religious tensions between Roman Catholics (80 percent of the population) and the fast-growing Protestants, who have surged at three times the rate of population growth during the 1980s.

Recently, Plan de Ayala has been practically sealed off from outside contact since a quarter of the local police department fled along with 20 evangelical families in May. About 50 evangelical families who remain have been held as semi-hostages, according to Hortensio Vázquez, a Seventh-day Adventist attorney.

"The evangelicals are being harassed and threatened with expulsion again," he says. Evangelicals' children are not allowed to attend school and the adults cannot go to their jobs.

"It appears to be a last-ditch effort by traditionalists to try and control evangelicals to keep them out," says an evangelical observer in the area. "If they can't keep the evangelicals out now, they're fighting a losing battle," he says, adding that over half the region's villages now have evangelicals. "There is no way to stop the evangelical movement," he says.

In its annual review of religious freedom around the world for 1999, the U.S. State Department reports that in Chiapas religious diversity is viewed as a threat to the indigenous culture.

The report noted that municipal authorities in San Juan Chamula, Chiapas, have expelled 30,000 evangelicals in the last 30 years.

The pope has aggravated the situation by expressing alarm about the growth of Latin American evangelicalism. During his 1999 visit to Mexico, Pope John Paul II urged Catholics to vigorously defend their faith against Protestant sects that have made inroads in Latin America. On previous visits to the region, the pontiff said that evangelicals are spreading "like an oil stain" in the region and "threaten to pull down the structures of faith in numerous countries."

Dialogue continues, but with much uncertainty. "The danger in digging into these issues is that old wounds will be reopened; [they] must be treated with the love of Christ," Sterk says.

Members of the Zapatistas, a guerrilla group that started with an armed uprising in Chiapas in 1994, say they are not interested in reconciliation. So far they have not taken part in Sterk's meetings. "You can't force people to reconcile," Sterk says. "You can only invite them to join the process. So, we'll continue to invite them."

Looks like it is about religion to me. Do you need some CROW to go with your WHINE? Will you be drinking from the pope's cup or do you need your own?

1,657 posted on 04/01/2004 3:04:35 PM PST by ET(end tyranny) (Isaiah 47:4 - Our Redeemer, YHWH of hosts is His name, The Holy One of Israel.)
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To: SoothingDave
Yeah, and Protestants in Ireland jeer little Catholic schoolgirls. It's little to do with religion. What a hatemonger you are.

Speaking of hatemongers:

Religious Freedom In Mexico

1,658 posted on 04/01/2004 3:40:35 PM PST by OLD REGGIE ((I am a cult of one! UNITARJEWMIAN) Maybe a Biblical Unitarian?)
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