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The Tip of the
Iceberg of Christian Persecution
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friends to like this.
Two Christians living in the Islamic world under arrest and awaiting
execution—the one charged with apostasy, the other with blasphemy—were just
released.
According to a September 8 report on CNN,
"A Christian pastor sentenced to death in Iran for apostasy was reunited
with his family Saturday after a trial court acquitted him... Pastor Youcef
Nadarkhani, born to Muslim parents and a convert to Christianity by age
19, was released after being held in prison for almost three years under a
death sentence.... Setting aside the death sentence, a trial court convicted
Nadarkhani of a lesser charge—evangelizing Muslims—and declared that his
prison sentence had already been served... His case drew international
attention after his October 2009 arrest, and the 34-year-old pastor refused
to recant his Christian beliefs."
In a separate story published the
same day, "Pakistani authorities on Saturday released a teenage
Christian girl detained over accusations of blasphemy," for allegedly
burning pages of a Koran. Up till then, local Muslims were calling for the
death of the 14-year-old Christian girl, Rimsha Masih, warning that, if
released, they would "take
the law into their own hands."
Why were these two Christians released—when both apostasy and blasphemy
are great crimes in Islam, punishable by death? Is this a sign that Iran and
Pakistan are reforming, becoming more "moderate"? One U.S. paper,
for example, optimistically offers the following title, "Rescue
of Christian Girl may be Turning Point in Abuse of Blasphemy Law."
Nadarkhani and Masih were certainly not released because their governments
are acting according to universal standards of justice or reason. If so, they
would not have been arrested in the first place. Nor do these releases
suggest that Iran or Pakistan are rethinking their Islamic apostasy and
blasphemy laws.
The fact is, there are many more Christians imprisoned in both countries
for apostasy and blasphemy. Unlike Nadarkhani and Masih, however, the Western
mainstream has never heard of these unfortunate Christians.
And that's the whole difference.
In Iran, where at least as early as 1990 a convert to Christianity, Pastor
Hossein Soodmand, was executed by the state, apostates from Islam are under
siege. A few examples from the last few months include:
- A six-year prison
sentence for Pastor Farshid
Fathi Malayeri—whose
crime was to convert to and preach Christianity[M1] —was upheld last July following an unsuccessful
appeal hearing.
- Another prominent
house church pastor, Benham Irani, remains behind bars even as his
family expresses concerns that he may die from continued
abuse and beatings, leading to internal bleeding and other ailments.
The verdict against him contains text that describes the pastor as an
apostate who "can be killed." According to one activist,
"His
'crimes' were being a pastor and possessing Christian
materials." He is being beat in jail and getting sick, to the point
that his hair has "turned fully gray."
- A woman, Leila
Mohammadi, who had earlier converted to Christianity was arrested when
security agents raided her house. Imprisoned for five months in Iran's
notorious Evin prison without any word on her fate, she was later sentenced to
two years in prison.
- A June
17 report [M2] indicated
that, five months after five Christian converts were arrested, their
condition and fate had remained unknown. They were accused of
"attending house church services, promoting Christianity,
propagating against the regime and disturbing national security."
Being imprisoned for 130 days without word "is an obvious example
of physical and mental abuse of the detainees…. one of the prison guards
openly told one of these Christian detainees that all these pressures
and uncertainties are intended to make them flee the country after they
are released."
- A young woman, who had
recently converted to Christianity and was an outspoken activist against
the Islamic regime, was found
dead, slumped over her car's steering wheel, with a single gunshot
wound to her head.
Then there are Iran's many other faces of Christian persecution, including
the shutting
down of churches, regular
crackdowns on house-church gatherings, detaining
and abusing Christians, banning
church services in Farsi, and confiscating
Bibles and other Christian literature.
As for Pakistan's blasphemy law—which calls for the death penalty—here are
a few stories from the last few months:
- A Muslim mob doused a
man with gasoline and literally burned him alive for
"blaspheming" the Koran (graphic
picture here).
- A 26-year-old
Christian woman was arrested after neighbors accused her of
"uttering remarks against Muhammad." A few days prior, some of
her relatives who converted to Islam had pressured her to do likewise:
"She refused, telling them that she was satisfied
with Christianity and did not want to convert." She was
arrested of blasphemy soon thereafter.
- A female Christian
teacher was targeted by Muslims due to allegations
that she burned a Koran. A mob stormed her school in an attempt to
abduct her, but police took her into custody.
- A Christian man was
arrested and charged with "blasphemy" for rescuing his
8-year-old nephew from a beating at the hands of Muslim
boys who sought to force the boy to convert to Islam. Later, "a
Muslim mob of about 55 led by the village prayer leader besieged the
Christian's house," and insisted that "the blasphemer" be
turned over to them.
- A banned Islamic group
attempted to burn down a Christian village after accusing a 25-year-old mentally
retarded Christian man of "blasphemy."
- A 20-year-old Christian
man was arrested and charged with "blasphemy" after
Muslims accused him of burning a Koran soon after a billiard game. The
Muslims kept taunting and threatening him, to which the Christian
"dared them to do whatever they wanted and walked away." Days
later came the accusation and arrest, which caused Muslim riots,
creating "panic among Christians" who "left their houses
anticipating violence."
In the last two decades, over
50 people have been murdered in Pakistan for blasphemy. Even the recent assassination
of the nation's only cabinet-level Christian, Shahbaz Bhatti, was in
retaliation for his being an outspoken critic of Pakistan's
"blasphemy" laws.
In light of all the above, why were Pastor Nadarkhani and Masih, the
Christian girl—whose fates were sealed—released? Because unlike the many
nameless and faceless Christians persecuted for blasphemy and apostasy in
Pakistan and Iran, not to mention the rest of the Islamic world, the
mainstream media actually reported the stories of these two in the West,
prompting much public outrage, international condemnations, and the threat of
diplomatic actions and/or sanctions.
For example, Canada just cut relations with Iran, citing, among other
reasons the fact that Iran is "one of the world's worst violators of
human rights." It was the very next day that Pastor Nadarkhani was
"coincidentally" released, even as the Iranian regime, playing the
victim, accused Canada of being "racist."
These two particular Christians were simply too much of a liability to
punish as Sharia law demands—the same Sharia, incidentally, that teaches
Muslims to be lax and tolerant when in their interest.
While it is good that Western outrage and condemnation was fundamentally
responsible for the release of Nadarkhani and Masih, the West must learn that
these two Christians merely represent the tip of the iceberg of Christian
persecution in Muslim countries.
Raymond
Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center
and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Related
Topics: Anti-Christianism
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