The war against Christians

Christians are often persecuted in Muslim nations. It hit a peak in the last century but it’s ongoing in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

by Clifford D. May, ISRAEL HAYOM

Grinch that I am, in the days leading up to Christmas I immersed myself in The Thirty-Year Genocide: Turkey’s Destruction of its Christian Minorities, 1894-1924.

The authors of this recently published, extensively researched, 500-page tome are Benny Morris and Dror Ze’evi, historians at Israel’s Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. “We embarked on this project in quest of the truth about what happened to the Ottoman Armenians during World War I,” they explain. What they found was “incontrovertible” proof of Turkey’s 1915-1916 genocide.

Two weeks ago, the US Senate voted unanimously in favor of a resolution, co-sponsored by Senators Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas), to “commemorate the Armenian genocide through official recognition and remembrance.”

The White House disapproved, arguing that such a statement was unhelpful given the fraught state of Turkish-American relations. Ankara has maintained that atrocities happen during times of war and turmoil, but that liquidating an entire community was never the intention.

The Thirty-Year Genocide provides ample evidence to the contrary. But it goes further, making the case that the Ottoman Empire in its final years, the Young Turks who came to power following the Ottoman collapse, and even Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, father of the modern Turkish nation, came to regard not just Armenians but all of “Asia Minor’s Christian communities as a danger to their state’s survival and resolved to be rid of this danger.”

The methods used included “mass murder, attrition, expulsion, and forced conversions. By 1924 they had cleansed Asia Minor of its four million-odd Christians.”

Among the motivations, according to Professors Morris and Ze’evi, were “fears of foreign machinations and interference, Turkish nationalism, ethnic rivalries, economic envy, and a desire to maintain political and social dominance. Perpetrators sought power, wealth, and sexual gratification.”

But there was another factor, one “politically incorrect” even to discuss: “As an ethos and an ideology, Islam played a cardinal role throughout the process, in each of its stages.”

“We are not arguing here that Islam is a single dogma, worse than other religious dogmas,” the authors explain. “Islam has various streams, and individual Muslims feel differently about questions of practice, scriptural interpretation, and moral behavior. Inherent in Islam are humanistic and moderate traditions, and, as we emphasize in our conclusion, Christians lived in relative security under Ottoman rule for centuries. Indeed, their stand was probably more secure than that of Jews or Muslims under Christian governments during the same centuries.”

Nevertheless, “Islam was an important driver” of the war against Christians. “Ottoman authorities invoked jihad to mobilize the Muslim masses to massacre and plunder. Perpetrators cited jihad and Muslim law more generally to explain and justify their actions, even to argue that these actions were obligatory. … Islam was the glue that bound together perpetrating Turks, Kurds, Circassians, Chechens, and Arabs and was the common marker of identity separating them from their Christian victims.”

Setting the historical record straight is useful. More important is to recognize that the war against Christians didn’t end in the last century. It continues to this day in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa.

The de-Christianization of Syria, Iraq, Gaza, and the West Bank is well underway. In the Islamic Republic of Iran, the estimated 300,000 Christians remaining have been prohibited by law from praying or singing in public, as Nina Shea, a religious freedom expert at the Hudson Institute, explained to Al Arabiya (ironically, one of the few media outlets covering this story). She added: “The regime wants to intimidate Christians not to celebrate their religion, act on their religion, or have any outward signs of it, like wearing a cross.”

Ms. Shea has written also about the plight of Chinese Christians. Another battleground for Christians is in Africa. In an essay for The Wall Street Journal last week, French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy writes that in Nigeria, the continent’s most populous nation, the war being waged against Christians is “massive in scale and horrific in brutality. And the world has hardly noticed.”

The perpetrators are Fulani, a large ethnic group, within which a “violent element,” Muslims possibly linked to Boko Haram, “accounted for the majority of the country’s 2,040 documented terrorist fatalities in 2018.” He adds that “whereas Boko Haram are confined to perhaps 5% of Nigerian territory, the Fulani terrorists operate across the country.”

According to Levy, the government is doing little to help victims. Many Nigerian military and government officials are themselves Fulani, President Muhammadu Buhari among them.

In Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city, a Fulani man tells Mr. Levy: “The Christians are dogs and children of dogs. …There is no place here for friends of the whites, who are impure.”

Soon after, a vendor offers Mr. Levy “portraits of Osama bin Laden and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an.” The vendor tells him “the Christians will eventually leave and Nigeria will be ‘free.’”

What I’ve recounted here cannot have made your Christmas merrier. But amid the holiday celebrations, I think you should spare a thought – perhaps even a prayer – for Christians being persecuted in faraway lands. That’s just the kind of Grinch I am.

December 28, 2019 | 5 Comments »

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  1. @ Edgar G.:
    Oregon has a Salem and a Goshen, plus a Mount Pisgah; and Illinois has a Zion. As for Palestine, Texas, Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon and his crewmates met their tragic death over Palestine in 2003.

    My heart goes out to the families who suffered in the Monsey attacks. God help them.

  2. Today’s church massacre in White Settlement, Texas, is an instance of the war on Christians closer to home. While most religious bias attacks in the U.S. are aimed at Jews, there has also been a marked increase in terror attacks on Christian churches. A disproportionate number of these have been perpetrated in Texas in recent years.

    Attacks on both Jewish and Christian places of worship have tended to target religious traditionalists and “fundamentalists” more than religious liberals.

    On average, it appears, terror attacks on U.S. Christian churches, mainly evangelical ones, seem to cause more deaths than those on synagogues. Probably because churches are even less likely to have increased security precautions than synagogues.