Muslim persecution of Christians is at a high tide — and
there are grave fears of more sectarian bloodletting as millions of people in
Nigeria, which is half Muslim and half Christian, vote for their national
leaders next month.
These religious atrocities cry out for media attention and
political awareness, said Raymond Ibrahim, author of the monthly report “Muslim
Persecution of Christians,” which has chronicled attacks on Christians in
dozens of countries since July 2011.
Mainstream media rarely cover attacks on Christians, even
though they happen “all around the Islamic world,” Mr. Ibrahim said Tuesday.
Muslim-on-Muslim attacks can get broad attention — such as
the April kidnappings of some 230 Nigerian schoolgirls by the terrorist group
Boko Haram. The mass abductions so alarmed the world that first lady Michelle
Obama brought attention to the social media campaign #BringBackOurGirls.
But from August to October, Boko Haram and its radical
Islamist allies destroyed nearly 200 Christian churches as they rampaged
through towns and villages in northeastern Nigeria, said Mr. Ibrahim, a fellow
at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
His monthly report is published by Gatestone Institute, an
international think tank led by John R. Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations.
In just four years, he said, Boko Haram has destroyed around
1,000 churches.
The “sheer volume” of the attacks on Christians in Nigeria
“makes it one of the worst” places for them, Mr. Ibrahim said.
The peril in Nigeria was driven home Tuesday during a House
hearing.
Nigerians are scheduled to vote Feb. 14 from a slate of
several presidential candidates, including Christian incumbent Goodluck
Jonathan and Muslim challenger Mohammadu Buhari, to lead the nation’s 173
million people. An election for local leadership will be held Feb. 28.
In 2011, Mr. Jonathan’s victory over Mr. Buhari triggered
terrible sectarian violence in the Muslim north. More than 700 churches were
burned, hundreds of Christians were targeted and killed, and thousands of
Christian businesses and homes were torched.
That violence occurred at a time when Boko Haram was waging
its “campaign of terror,” human rights lawyer Emmanuel Ogebe said in his
testimony Tuesday to the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Africa, global
health, global human rights and international organizations.
“Boko Haram has never seen a live Christian male it liked,”
Mr. Ogebe said. Depending on the election outcome, Feb. 14 could turn into “a
Valentine’s Day massacre for the poor Christians in northern Nigeria.”
“The fear of political explosion is real,” lawyer Jadegoke
Badejo said at the hearing.
Just this year, as many as 2,000 people have been killed by
Boko Haram in its attack on the town of Baga and nearby villages, said Rep.
Christopher H. Smith, New Jersey Republican and subcommittee chairman.
“Clearly, Boko Haram violence is escalating drastically,” he said.
Secretary of State John F. Kerry traveled to Lagos last week
to meet with Mr. Jonathan and Mr. Buhari. Mr. Kerry later told reporters that
he was assured by both men that they would urge their followers to refrain from
postelection violence and to accept the results of the election.
Mr. Kerry also said the elections should take place on time
and that the United States would do more to support the fight against Boko
Haram if the elections are democratic and peaceful.
“A peaceful and smooth transition is equally essential, so
that whoever is elected can quickly turn his focus to confronting and defeating
Boko Haram,” Ambassador Robert P. Jackson, acting assistant secretary of state
for African affairs, told the House hearing.
“We are appalled by the accelerated pace and brutality of
Boko Haram’s attacks. This unchecked killing must stop,” Mr. Jackson said.
Attacks follow a pattern
In terms of persecution of Christians, Mr. Ibrahim is not
alone in sounding the alarm: The Center for the Study of Global Christianity,
which is part of the Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, has estimated that 1
million Christians were killed from 2000 to 2010 for their faith, an average of
100,000 martyrs a year.
This month, the Open Doors World Watch List, which surveys
religious liberty conditions for Christians, said persecution of Christians had
reached “historic levels.” North Korea was rated the most oppressive country
for Christians, but “Africa saw the most rapid growth of persecution,”
according to the group.
The American Civil Liberties Union and the Council on
American-Islamic Relations warn against “Islamophobia,” and Mr. Kerry has
cautioned against conflating ultraradical groups such as the Islamic State and
Boko Haram with all Muslims.
These militants are “a collection of monsters,” Mr. Kerry
told a Jan. 23 World Economic Forum, according to Reuters.
He urged the civilized world to “make clear” that it “will
not cower in the face of this violence,” but said “the biggest error that we
could make would be to blame Muslims collectively for crimes not committed by
Muslims alone.”
Mr. Ibrahim, who is the son of Coptic Christians, said his
research makes it clear that Muslim attacks on Christians are not isolated
incidents stemming from conflicts over geography or some local grievance, but
are “attacks on Christianity itself.” For instance, a primary target for Muslim
violence is a Christian church, which may be firebombed or destroyed while
people are congregating inside for worship services, Mr. Ibrahim said.
Christians also are punished or killed for perceived acts of
blasphemy, evangelizing and even converting from Islam, he said.
Another kind of Muslim persecution is to treat the
Christians in primarily Islamic lands as “third-class” citizens, denying them
permission to repair or build their churches or hold Bibles in public, and
requiring them to live under special rules such as paying a tribute to the
Muslim government.
The countries where these abuses happen are all different in
many ways, but the “common denominator” is that these are all countries with
large Muslim populations, said Mr. Ibrahim, who detailed these issues in his
2013 book, “Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New War on Christians.”
In an interview with The Washington Times on Tuesday, Mr.
Ibrahim said he once thought he wouldn’t be able to continue the “Muslim
Persecution of Christians” report because “surely, a month will come” when
there would be “only one or two stories” to write about.”
“But lo and behold, every month that’s gone by” has produced
even more atrocities, making the report much longer, he said.
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