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Wabash
07-08-2007, 04:35 PM
July 05, 2007
Islam's Global War against Christianity
By Patrick Poole

From Nigeria to Indonesia, Christians are under siege in virtually every single country in the Muslim world, the victims of countless acts of discrimination, depredation, brutality, and murder that are so widespread and systematic that it can rightfully be called the new Holocaust. This time, however, the perpetrators of this Holocaust aren't wearing swastikas, but kufi skull caps and hijabs.


Some of the oldest Christian communities in the world are subject to relentless attack and teeter on the brink of extinction at the hands of the "Religion of Peace": Palestinian Christians in Gaza and the West Bank; Assyrian, Syriac and Chaldean Christians in Iraq; Coptic Christians in Egypt; Evangelical and Orthodox Christians in Eastern Ethiopia and Eritrea; Armenian Orthodox Christians in Turkey; and Maronite Christians in Lebanon.

Several of these communities date back to the beginning decades of Christianity and all have weathered wave after wave of Islamic persecution for centuries and more, but in the very near future some will simply cease to exist. In our lifetime, the only trace of their past existence will be in footnotes in history books (and probably only Western history books at that).


Meanwhile, we in the West hear much from radical Islam's apologists how the US is engaged in a war against Islam citing of our military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq. We are lectured on the inviolability of the Muslim ummah and justifications of defensive jihad.


But an extensive search this past weekend of the websites of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the Islamic Society of North America, the Islamic Circle of North America, the Muslim American Society, the Muslim Student Association, the Fiqh Council of North America, and the Muslim Public Affairs Committee - the most visible institutional representatives of Islam in America - found not a single mention or reference of the religious persecution of Christians by their Islamic co-religionists, thereby making them tacit co-conspirators in the Final Solution to the Christian problem in the Muslim world.


The global war on Christianity by Islam is so massive in size and scope that it is virtually impossible to describe without trivializing it. Inspired by Muslim Brotherhood ideology and fueled by billions of Wahhabi petrodollars, the religious cleansing of Christians from the Muslim world is continuing at a break-neck pace, as the following recent examples demonstrate.


Iraq: In the current issue of the American Spectator, Doug Bandow observes that centuries of dhimmitude have left Christians in the war-torn country without any means of self-defense. Washington policymakers have refused to lend assistance for fear of showing partiality, despite the murder of hundreds of Iraqi Christians, the kidnapping and torture of Christian clerics, the repeated bombings of Christian churches, the torching of Christian businesses, and the flight of close to half of the entire Iraqi Christian population since April 2003. Those who remain have been subject to the imposition of shari'a by the Shi'ite Mahdi Army and Sunni militias (al-Qaeda doesn't bother with such niceties, preferring to murder them immediately instead), including the recent published threat in Mosul of killing one member of every Christian family in that city for Christian women not wearing the hijab and continuing to attend school. (Be sure to remember that the next time an Islamist apologist claims that the hijab is a symbol of women's liberation.)


Egypt: Journalist Magdi Khalil chronicles in a new report ("Another Black Friday for the Coptic Christians of Egypt") the campaign of violence directed against Christian Copts almost weekly immediately following Friday afternoon Muslim prayers. Inspired by Islamist imams preaching religious hatred in mosques all over the country and protected by government officials willing to look the other way, rampaging mobs of Muslims set upon Christians churches, businesses and individuals, from Alexandria to cities all the way up the Nile. Coptic holy days are also favorite times for Muslim violence, which the Egyptian media likes to describe as "sectarian strife" - as if it were actually a two-sided affair.


Gaza: Ethel Fenig recently noted here at American Thinker ("More Gaza Multiculturalism") the systematic destruction of churches and desecration of Christian religious objects by Jihadia Salafiya following the HAMAS takeover of the Gaza Strip from their Fatah rivals and the imposition of Islamic rule. The head of Jihadia Salafiya told reporter Aaron Klein that any suspected Christian missionary activity in the area will be "dealt with harshly". (Ynet News)



Saudi Arabia: According to the Arab News, a Sri Lankan Christian man barely escaped with his life in late May when he was found working in the city of Mecca, Islam's holiest city, which is officially barred to non-Muslims. In December, an Indian man had been sentenced to death for accidentally entering the city, but was spared after the Indian embassy made an urgent appeal to the Saudi Supreme Court.


Pakistan: In Islamabad, Younis Masih was sentenced last month to death under the country's frequently invoked blasphemy laws, which were also used against six Christian women suspended from a nursing school after they were accused of desecrating a Quran. And as protests against Salman Rushdie's knighthood raged, a Muslim mob armed with guns, axes and sticks attacked Christians worshipping in a Salvation Army church in Bismillahlpur Kanthan. (Associated Press; United Press International; Mission News Network)


Bangladesh: Almost a dozen Christian converts in the Nilphamari district were beaten last week by Muslim villagers wielding bricks and clubs, and threatened with death if they did not leave town immediately. Local hospitals subsequently refused them treatment. Christians in the area have also been prevented from using the only potable water well in the area after a pronouncement by religious authorities at the mosque in Durbachari. This came after 42 former Muslims were baptized as Christians in the local river on June 12. (Compass News Direct)


Malaysia: Government authorities demolished a church building on June 4th in Orang Asli settlement in Gua Musang in Ulu Kelantan, despite prior government approval of the project. The church was built on donated property after the entire village had converted to Christianity just a few months ago. Also in late May, the Malaysian high court ruled that Muslims who convert to Christianity must appeal to the religious shari'a courts to officially be deregistered as Muslims and reregistered as a Christians. (Journal Chretien; Associated Press)


Indonesia: Agence France Presse reported last month on an attack by the Islamic Anti-Apostate Movement, who stormed a church service in a Protestant church in the West Java town of Soreang. The AFP report notes that more than 30 churches have been forced to close in West Java and dozens more throughout the country in recent years due to Muslim violence, churches which were among the few spared during the outbreak of hostilities during 1997-1998, where hundreds of Christian churches were burned to the ground and never rebuilt.


Turkey: The Christian community is still reeling from the torture and ritual slaughter of three Protestants at a Christian publishing house in Malatya in April by an armed Islamist gang, which was preceded by the murder last year of Catholic priest Andrea Santoro in Trabzon and the assassination of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul in January. An additional six men allegedly associated with the same Muslim gang were arrested on May 30th for plotting an attack on a Christian pastor in Diyarbakir. (Lebanon Daily Star; ADKNI)


Cyprus: The Cyprus Mail reports that during a meeting last month in Rome the Archbishop of the Cypriot Greek Orthodox Church pleaded with the Vatican Secretary of State for the Pope's assistance to pressure Turkish authorities in restoring and repairing Christian sites and churches in areas occupied since the invasion of the island nation by Turkey in July 1974 and the ethnic cleansing of 160,000 Greek Christian Cypriots.


Lebanon: More than 60,000 Christians have left the country since last summer's war between Hezbollah and Israel, fearing the rise of both Sunni and Shi'ite extremism and terrorist activity. The Sunday Telegraph recently revealed the results of a poll finding that at least half of Lebanon's Maronite community were considering leaving the country. More than 100,000 have already submitted visa applications at foreign embassies.


Algeria: In what is considered one of the more "moderate" Muslim regimes, Al-Quds Al-Arabi announced that the Algerian government has just issued regulations requiring advance permission for non-Muslim public events, following a 2006 law aimed at limiting Christian evangelism in the Kabylia region and the Sahara. (MEMRI )


Morocco: In the country that The Economist magazine in 2005 anointed "the best Arab democracy", all Moroccans are considered Muslims at birth and face three years in prison if they attempt to convert. They are also prohibited from entering any of the few churches permitted to operate for the foreign inhabitants of the country. Moroccan Christians must operate covertly for fear of imprisonment by the government and attacks by Islamists. They cannot bury their dead in Christian cemeteries, and they must be married by Islamic authorities or face charges of adultery. Late last year, a 64 year-old German tourist, Sadek Noshi Yassa, was sentenced to six months in jail and fined for missionary activity. (Journal Chretien)


Nigeria: Police in Gombe arrested sixteen suspects after a Muslim mob stoned, stripped, beat, and finally stabbed to death a Christian teacher, Christiana Oluwatoyin Oluwasesin, after she caught a student cheating on an exam in March. Her body was then burned beyond recognition by the mob who falsely accused her of desecrating a Quran. The suspects were released last month without any charges being filed, prompting Christian leaders to accuse government authorities of a cover-up and raising concerns about additional attacks. (Christian Today)


Eritrea: Just a few weeks ago, the Islamic government installed a new Orthodox Patriarch after they removed the previous Patriarch and placed him under house arrest for no stated reason. Compass News Direct reported in February the death of Magos Solomon Semere, a Christian who had been imprisoned in a military jail for four and a half years for illegal Christian worship, the third Christian to die in government custody since October. Authorities have also cracked down on unapproved churches, jailing at least two thousand Protestants and members of the Medhane Alem Orthodox renewal movement since the beginning of the year and publicly burning confiscated Bibles. (Christian Post; Compass News Direct ; Journal Chretien)


It is not an exaggeration to say that I could extend this brief list ad infinitum with additional Islamic countries and news items from just the past few weeks' worth of incidents of violence, discrimination, intimidation and murder targeting Christians in the Muslim world. In many instances, the government and religious authorities in these Muslim countries work hand-in-hand in their campaign of religious persecution.


A scene in the Academy Award-winning movie Schindler's List gives us some insight into what is happening all across the Muslim world with respect to Christianity. As the SS Commandant Amon Göth and his Nazi Stormtroopers prepare to liquidate the Jewish ghetto in Krakow, Poland, Göth (played in the movie by Ralph Fiennes) gives his men a peptalk:


For six centuries there has been a Jewish Krakow. Think about that. By this evening, those six centuries are a rumor. They never happened. Today is history.
This scene is being repeated in the Friday sermons in mosques and on Islamic satellite TV all over the world, only this time it is the Christians in addition to the Jews who are targets. Great efforts are being made to make the two-thousand year history of Christianity in North Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia a blasphemous rumor. Soon students in Turkey will be taught that the Hagia Sophia, the greatest architectural structure in the Muslim world, wasn't built by the Christian Emperor Justinian in the Sixth Century, but by the Sultan Mehmed II a thousand years later after the Ottomans seized the Byzantine capital. That Christians lived at all in the Muslim world, let alone that much of the territory occupied by Muslims used to be Christian lands before the Islamic Wars of Conquest, will be nothing but a rumor by the end of this century punishable according to the precepts of shari'a.


President Bush announced last week that he will be sending a special envoy to the 57-member Organization of Islamic Countries. Hopefully, the systematic persecution of Christians and other religious minorities will be the first and primary item in the new envoy's portfolio, with the 2007 annual report of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom and the State Department's Annual Report on International Religious Freedom, which name virtually every single country in the OIC for its human rights abuses and religious cleansing, as evidence for our country's concern.


The fact remains that not a single Christian or Jew lives in peace in the Muslim world, and if it is truly our nation's foreign policy to spread democracy around the world, this issue is the perfect topic for us to press. Back at home, raising Islam's global war on Christianity should be the immediate response to the seemingly endless media grievance machine of radical Islam's Western apologists. Until they begin to address the new Holocaust perpetrated in the name of Islam, their complaints and denials are nothing but bald hypocrisy.


http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/...inst_chri.html

Semantics
07-08-2007, 05:39 PM
It's a shame that so much negativity comes from religion. :kickcan

kaaryn
07-08-2007, 06:43 PM
Yup.

Thanks for posting that, Wabash. It's good for us to remember that although we live in relative peace on this continent, the rest of the world is another story. We should never let ourselves become too comfortable where we are, because peace is a very fragile thing.

Wabash
07-08-2007, 09:43 PM
Yup.

Thanks for posting that, Wabash. It's good for us to remember that although we live in relative peace on this continent, the rest of the world is another story. We should never let ourselves become too comfortable where we are, because peace is a very fragile thing.

You are welcome. Yes...it is fragile, and so many here take it for granted.
When I teach my classes, I continually ask folks what preparations they have made for a catasphrophic event, either man made or from nature. The younger they are, the less prepared it seems.

The ideas and actions in the above article are not limited to the rest of the world...it can happen in these United States as well!
Two or more terrorist hits across this nation will throw the govt. in chaos and the local and Federal police will be unable to protect you...the larger the city, the worse it will be..

The Q
07-08-2007, 10:27 PM
If you take away Americans' telvisions and force them to live 15 people to a small house, with an income of less than a minimum wage worker, provide them NO health insurance, make food hard to come by, make it impossible to get a decent education, you will have just as much---if not more--home grown terrorism in this country.

You sit in your ivory tower and judge people who live in societies that were ravaged by colonialism and then left there to mop up after they were raped and pillaged. And you wonder why they aren't living in happyflowerkittyland.

ADQ

Deadshot
07-09-2007, 07:23 AM
First let me point to the link of the original post that sends you to the American Thinker website. It's a highly conservative blog that is consistently mentioned upon the Rush Limbaugh show. That should tell you something.

Second, do we really want to discuss religious persecution over the last 100 years? As a Holocaust scholar and a Christian I would be happy to explain to you how Jews were persucuted, and worse in the majority of European countries as well as having hundreds of Jews fleeing Nazi Germany turned away from the USA. Yet now, in 2007 and even earlier in the 1950's had cordial relations with countries that just a decade earlier had helped to deport them to Dachau. See the point? People change, which leads me to my last point...

What do you plan on doing about it? Do you really want a Crusade against Muslims?

Here's a map of the "Muslim World" where muslims make up the Majority of the population.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e4/Muslim_World.png/400px-Muslim_World.png

This is information about Muslims from the CIA Factbook "These nations total 11,883,889 square miles (20.6% of the world's land area), 1.8 billion people (29% of the world's population), and US$4.3 trillion of GDP on a purchasing power parity basis (8.7% of the world's GDP). Total world trade with these nations adds to over US$ 800 billion. Military spending totals over US$ 60 billion

Please take notice of a few figures above. First, 1.8 Billion people, think a Crusade will be easy? Second, 8.7% of the worlds GDP, 4.3 Trillion dollars is a lot of money to loose out of the global economy...looked at your 401k lately? Third, $800 Billion worth of world trade what happens if that goes away? Finally, 60 billion in military spending, think a Crusade will be easy...is Iraq and Afghanistan?

issac the dragon
07-09-2007, 01:10 PM
If you take away Americans' telvisions and force them to live 15 people to a small house, with an income of less than a minimum wage worker, provide them NO health insurance, make food hard to come by, make it impossible to get a decent education, you will have just as much---if not more--home grown terrorism in this country.

You sit in your ivory tower and judge people who live in societies that were ravaged by colonialism and then left there to mop up after they were raped and pillaged. And you wonder why they aren't living in happyflowerkittyland.

ADQ
And the Europeans and Americans have been at it for over 1500 years. Thank you! The crap we expect the Islamic people to put up with is unbelievable. And we are shocked that they aren't grateful. :paclap

Trueblue
07-09-2007, 01:23 PM
If you take away Americans' telvisions and force them to live 15 people to a small house, with an income of less than a minimum wage worker, provide them NO health insurance, make food hard to come by, make it impossible to get a decent education, you will have just as much---if not more--home grown terrorism in this country.

You sit in your ivory tower and judge people who live in societies that were ravaged by colonialism and then left there to mop up after they were raped and pillaged. And you wonder why they aren't living in happyflowerkittyland.

ADQ

You are correct, IMO, about the seeds. It's not in the religion, but in the politics.

Fifteen to a house, but mass media shows them pictures of something very different in other parts of the world.

A couple of years ago, in Indonesia, young Muslims stood guard at Christian churches on Christmas Eve so that Christians could go to services without some protection against terrorist acts. It give me hope. :heart

Partyless
07-09-2007, 01:34 PM
It's not just Christianity - and it's not just abroad. Has anyone seen this quote:


"Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant. The Koran, the Muslim book of scripture, should be the highest authority in America, and Islam the only accepted religion on Earth."
Omar Ahmad, Chairman Emeritus, Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

scary!!!

AnnEsthesia
07-09-2007, 01:41 PM
Well, I how about this statement:

On Islamic extremists: "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity."
-- Ann Coulter, National Review Online, September 2001

Is that any better?

Wah wah... some talking head said Islam should be the religion of the world... well shit, lookie... a talking head said christianity should be the religion of the world.

The Q
07-09-2007, 01:59 PM
Yeah, man. What the hell is proselytizing and the mass conversions in Christianity all about?

I mean, look, we all know that most extremely religious people tend to be elitists and think that their religion is the only one that is right. So what?

Luckily, in all religions, the really fundamentalist people are a minority. Albeit, a loud, pain in the ass minority, but a minority all the same.

ADQ

AnnEsthesia
07-09-2007, 02:06 PM
Exactly, Q. I am sure there are just as many people in the US who feel that Christianity, the religion of love and all that, should be the one true religion for the world.

Don't give me the whole 'muslims are terrorists' bs, because if ALL muslims are terrorists because someone blows a bomb in god's name, then I guess all Christians are too...

Partyless
07-09-2007, 03:52 PM
Well, I how about this statement:

On Islamic extremists: "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity."
-- Ann Coulter, National Review Online, September 2001

Is that any better?

Wah wah... some talking head said Islam should be the religion of the world... well shit, lookie... a talking head said christianity should be the religion of the world.

I don't elevate Ann Coulter to the status of 'talking head' and the scary thing to me is this quote is attributed to the Chairman Emeritus, Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) - something developed specificially to IMPROVE relations between the religions not some extremist whack job from either side.

I'm not saying all Muslims are terrorists any more than I'd say all Fundy Christians are abortion bombing nutcases.

The Q
07-09-2007, 03:57 PM
Oh, please. Plenty of people think Ann Coulter is the wisest woman in the west. There is a reason that bitch sells so much of her shit.

My guess is, if you broke it down, the ratio of the number people who consider Ann Coulter an authority to the the number of people who consider some guy who used to be on the board of CAIR an authority?

100:1

ADQ

Partyless
07-09-2007, 07:10 PM
Oh, please. Plenty of people think Ann Coulter is the wisest woman in the west. There is a reason that bitch sells so much of her shit.

My guess is, if you broke it down, the ratio of the number people who consider Ann Coulter an authority to the the number of people who consider some guy who used to be on the board of CAIR an authority?

100:1

ADQ

I'm proud to say I don't know 100 people who consider Ann Coulter to be wise much less an authoritity on anything other than using her vile tounge to deliver shock jockette esque statements to garner her more attention and sell more of her books.

And personally I think the formation of CAIR was a knee jerk bullshit reaction because the more ignorant amongst American's can't disseminate between extremist Muslims and the religion in general. But it's totally irresponsible of the Chariman of that organization to make statements like that. Had any other 'leader' be they political or religious said it, those words would have been plastered all over every paper and news outlet and whomever uttered them skewered like a BBQ pig.

Religious freedom and separation of church and state mean a lot to me as a citizen of this country. To read words saying the Koran should be the highest authority here is scary. Just as scary as if some Fundy Baptist Pastor would have said the Bible should be the only authority in this country and everyone should convert to Baptism. And until the people in this country stop and realize that statements like what that Chariman made go completely against what this country is - we're spitting on the constitution just as much as Bush Co and his croonies are with some of the bullshit ideas they present.

The Q
07-09-2007, 07:28 PM
I'm proud to say I don't know 100 people who consider Ann Coulter to be wise much less an authoritity on anything other than using her vile tounge to deliver shock jockette esque statements to garner her more attention and sell more of her books.

And personally I think the formation of CAIR was a knee jerk bullshit reaction because the more ignorant amongst American's can't disseminate between extremist Muslims and the religion in general. But it's totally irresponsible of the Chariman of that organization to make statements like that. Had any other 'leader' be they political or religious said it, those words would have been plastered all over every paper and news outlet and whomever uttered them skewered like a BBQ pig.

Religious freedom and separation of church and state mean a lot to me as a citizen of this country. To read words saying the Koran should be the highest authority here is scary. Just as scary as if some Fundy Baptist Pastor would have said the Bible should be the only authority in this country and everyone should convert to Baptism. And until the people in this country stop and realize that statements like what that Chariman made go completely against what this country is - we're spitting on the constitution just as much as Bush Co and his croonies are with some of the bullshit ideas they present.

I completely agree.
But I don't think many people -- Muslim or not -- really think that that guy has any reason to believe that will ever happen.

ADQ