Persecution of
Christians increasing,
but
most Americans are not aware
Christians continue to be martyred abroad, but few American believers are
aware of how pervasive religious persecution is around the world. ³Christians
in this nation donıt realize how fortunate they are to live in the U.S.,² said
Jim Jacobson, president of Christian Freedom International.
According to
a CFI news release, distributed by Christian Newswire, the Talibanıs kidnapping
of the South Korean aid workers in Afghanistan illustrates how that conflict is
essentially religious. Yet ³the U.S.-backed government is little friendlier to
Christians,² observed Jacobson. ³Last year Christian convert Abdul Rahman
barely evaded a death sentence, and only after Western nations placed
substantial pressure on Kabul.²
In Turkey,
attacks continue on Christians and churches. In an area along the Black Sea
coast where an Italian Catholic priest was previously murdered, a Protestant
church was vandalized and its pastor threatened. ³Earlier this year three
Christians were murdered in a particularly gruesome fashion by Muslim
extremists,² Jacobson pointed out.
Attacks on
Christians are up in India. In one city a Catholic convent school was attacked;
in another town Hindu fanatics murdered a Christian convert; elsewhere a
Protestant minister was arrested for allegedly offering money for a conversion,
after seeking to mediate a dispute within a Buddhist family; in another case
Christian missionaries were beaten. ³India might be a democracy,² noted
Jacobson, ³but it is far from free religiously.²
In
Kazakhstan, Christians were tossed out of their home because they held an
unauthorized prayer meeting. A Baptist minister was arrested in Azerbaijan
while conducting services.
Malaysiaıs
top court prevented a Muslim woman from legally converting to Christianity.
Egypt similarly discourages conversions away from Islam; while mobs recently
attacked Coptic Christians thought to be planning to build a church.
Pakistan is
preparing to execute a Christian falsely accused of blaspheming Islam and the
prophet Mohammed.
China
continues to close down Protestant home churches and promote the official
³patriotic² Catholic church over the underground, legitimate church.
Vietnam
recently arrested and tortured Montagnard Christians. In Indonesia scores of
Christians have been arrested for blasphemy; Muslim extremists forced the
Carmelite Prayer Centre in West Java to cancel a planned international
conference. Christians were killed and wounded in a bomb attack in Ethiopia.
Far worse
³is the plight of Christians in Iraq,² said Jacobson. Christians are routinely
murdered and kidnapped; Christian churches are regularly destroyed; hundreds of
thousands of Christians have fled Iraq.
American
Christians ³belong to an international fellowship of believers,² said Jacobson,
and ³have an obligation to care for their brethren around the world.² The U.S.
government could speak out more, he notes, but often refuses to do so because
of other political considerations.
³Which means
that it is up to Americans, all Americans who believe in freedom of conscience
and faith,² said Jacobson. ³It is ironic that in an age when many people once
thought religion was on the wane, persecution has become a bigger issue than
ever.²
But this
means that our role as Christians and as Americans is more important than ever.
As persecution rises abroad, ³we must make our voices in protest even more
loudly known,² he said..
For more
information about Christian persecution, visit www.christianfreedom.org.
Dan Wooding
is a British journalist now living in Southern California. He is the founder of
ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service.