Copts whose church was one of dozens
destroyed by Muslim Brotherhood supporters have returned to the charred house
of worship, with their pastor vowing the violence suffered by his flock will
make them "better Christians."
"This will learn us to be better
Christians," said Pastor Sameh Ibrahim of a torched congregation in Minya,
the capital of Minya Governorate in Upper Egypt, where some 14 churches were
reportedly attacked in recent days.
Across Egypt, at least 60 churches have been targeted, along with Christian schools, homes,businesses and even an orphanage, according to conservative estimates. In the areas of Minya, Beni Suef, Fayoum and Assiut, Christian homes and businesses have received leaflets warning them to leave or face reprisals by Islamists, Christians said.
Christian homes and businesses in Minya have reportedly been marked with black X's to single them out for attack.
Across Egypt, at least 60 churches have been targeted, along with Christian schools, homes,businesses and even an orphanage, according to conservative estimates. In the areas of Minya, Beni Suef, Fayoum and Assiut, Christian homes and businesses have received leaflets warning them to leave or face reprisals by Islamists, Christians said.
Christian homes and businesses in Minya have reportedly been marked with black X's to single them out for attack.
Another pastor in the area shares his
concerns. "We live in our church, so when someone attacks out
congregation, it's as if our house is being attacked," said Pastor John
Amin of the Meni Mazar church in published remarks.
"Our children are afraid," he added.
"Our children are afraid," he added.
As violence envelops Egypt, Christians
are paying a heavy price with scores of their most sacred buildings and
monuments being systematically destroyed by members of the Muslim Brotherhood
in what one Coptic leader called an attempt at ethnic cleansing.
The group, which is clashing with the
military throughout the North African nation, has zeroed in on Christians since
the Muslim Brotherhood-backed administration of Mohamed Morsi was ousted on
July 3. The military removed him from power after he imposed several sweeping
constitutional changes that appeared to put the nation of 90 million on a path
toward Islamist rule.
“The Muslim Brotherhood continues its
attacks on churches to implement their scheme, which includes ethnic cleansing
and the forced displacement of Copts,” Abul Ezz el-Hariri, a Christian and
former presidential candidate from Alexandria, told MidEast Christian News.
“Egyptian churches are part of a blueprint by the MB to lure other Islamist
groups.”
“The Muslim
Brotherhood continues its attacks on churches to implement their scheme, which
includes ethnic cleansing and the forced displacement of Copts.”
- Abul Ezz el-Hariri, a Christian and
former presidential candidate
At least 50 Christian churches and
schools have been looted and set ablaze since fierce fighting broke out last
week. In one recent case, Islamists torched a Franciscan school and then
paraded three nuns on the street like "prisoners of war" before a
Muslim woman offered them refuge, according to Catholic World Report.
The campaign of intimidation also has
targeted the homes and businesses of Christians, who make up about 10 percent
of the nation's population. Egypt's Christian community is one of the world's
oldest, and generally kept a low-profile before becoming more active after the
ouster of President Hosni Mubarak and the rapidly spiraling Islamification that
followed under Morsi.
Under fire, Christians are solidly
backing the military's harsh crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood.
"The Coptic Orthodox Church of
Egypt...confirms its strong stance with the Egyptian law enforcement, the armed
forces, and all of the institutions of the Egyptian people in its confrontation
of the violent armed organizations," the nation's Christian leader, Pope
Tawadros II, said in a statement.
Monasteries, dioceses, churches,
schools and other property of Copts have been targeted since government
security forces broke up Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Raba al-Adaweya and
Nahda squares on Wednesday.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/08/19/muslim-brotherhood-wages-war-on-christians/#ixzz2cWgXYGKt
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