Raymond Ibrahim The Torch (Christians United for Israel, Winter 2014)
“To their loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting Him to public disgrace”—Hebrews 6:6
The
United Nations, Western governments, media, universities, and talking
heads everywhere insist that Palestinians are suffering tremendous
abuses from the state of Israel. Conversely,
the greatest human rights tragedy of our time—radical Muslim
persecution of Christians, including in Palestinian controlled areas—is
devotedly ignored.
The facts speak for
themselves. Reliable estimates indicate that anywhere from 100-200
million Christians are persecuted every year; one Christian is martyred
every five minutes. Approximately 85% of this persecution occurs in Muslim majority nations.
In 1900, 20% of the Middle East was Christian. Today, less than 2% is. {except in Israel. DAS}
In one week in Egypt alone, from which my Christian family emigrated, the Muslim Brotherhood launched a kristallnacht—attacking, destroying, and/or torching some 82 Christian churches (some of which were built in the 5th century, when Egypt was still a Christian-majority nation before the Islamic conquests). Al-Qaeda’s black flag has been raised atop churches. Christians—including priests, women and children—have been attacked, beheaded, and killed.
Nor
is such persecution of Christians limited to Egypt. From Morocco in
the west to Indonesia in the east and from Central Asia to the north to
sub-Saharan Africa to the south; across thousands of miles of lands
inhabited by peoples who do not share the same races, languages,
cultures, and/or socio-economic conditions, millions of Christians are
being persecuted and in the same exact patterns.
Muslim
converts to Christianity and Christian evangelists are attacked,
imprisoned, and sometimes beheaded; countless churches across the
Islamic world are being banned or bombed; Christian women and children
are being abducted, enslaved, raped, and/or forced to renounce their
faith.
Far from helping these Christian victims, U.S. policies are actually exacerbating their sufferings.
Whether
in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, or Syria, and under the guise of the
U.S.-supported “Arab Spring,” things have gotten dramatically worse for
Christians. Indeed, during a recent U.S. congressional hearing, it was
revealed that thousands of traumatized Syrian Christians—who, like Iraqi
Christians before them are undergoing a mass exodus from their homeland—were asking “Why is America at war with us?”
The
answer is that very few Americans have any clue concerning what is
happening to their coreligionists. Few mainstream media speak about the
horrific persecution millions of people are experiencing simply because
they wish to worship Christ in peace.
There,
is of course, a very important reason why the mainstream media ignores
radical Muslim persecution of Christians: if the full magnitude of this
phenomenon was ever know, many cornerstones of the mainstream media—most
prominent among them, that Israel is oppressive to Palestinians—would
immediately crumble.
Why?
Because radical Muslim persecution of Christians throws a wrench in the
media’s otherwise well-oiled narrative that
“radical-Muslim-violence-is-a-product-of-Muslim-grievance”—chief among
them Israel.
Consider
it this way: because the Jewish state is stronger than its Muslim
neighbors, the media can easily portray Islamic terrorists as frustrated
“underdogs” doing whatever they can to achieve “justice.” No matter
how many rockets are shot into Tel Aviv by Hamas and Hezbollah, and no
matter how anti-Israeli bloodlust is articulated in radical Islamic
terms, the media will present such hostility as ironclad proof that
Palestinians under Israel are so oppressed that they have "no choice"
but to resort to terrorism.
However,
if radical Islam gets a free pass when violence is directed against
those stronger than Muslims, how does one rationalize away their
violence when it is directed against those weaker than them—in this
case, millions of indigenous Christians?
The media simply cannot portray radical Muslim persecution of Christians—which in essence and form amount to unprovoked pogroms—as
a “land dispute” or a product of “grievance” (if anything, it is the
ostracized and persecuted Christian minorities who should have
grievances). And because the media cannot articulate radical Islamic
attacks on Christians through the “grievance” paradigm that works so
well in explaining the Arab-Israeli conflict, their main recourse is not
to report on them at all.
In short, Christian persecution is the clearest reflection of radical Islamic supremacism. Vastly outnumbered and politically marginalized Christians simply wish to worship in peace, and yet still are
they hounded and attacked, their churches burned and destroyed, their
women and children enslaved and raped. These Christians are often
identical to their Muslim co-citizens, in race, ethnicity, national
identity, culture, and language; there is no political dispute, no land
dispute.
The only problem is that they are Christian and so, Islamists believe according to their scriptural exegesis, which permeates the Qur'an, must be subjugated.
If
mainstream media were to report honestly on Christian persecution at
the hands of radical Islamists so many bedrocks of the leftist narrative
currently dominating political discourse would crumble, first and
foremost, the idea that radical Islamic intolerance is a product of “grievances,” and that Israel is responsible for all Jihadist terrorism against it.
Raymond Ibrahim is author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New War in Christians
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