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The World's Most Persecuted Minority: Christians (video)(Prager University)
You Tube.com ^ | 11-10-2014 | Prager University

Posted on 11/10/2014 7:19:36 AM PST by servo1969

The most persecuted and victimized people in the world today are Christians in the Middle East. The perpetrators of the widespread destruction of that region's Christian community? Islamists. Middle East expert Raymond Ibrahim lays out the grim details.

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: Conspiracy; History; Religion; Society
KEYWORDS: christ; christianity; islam; islamists
Transcript:

Which is the most persecuted religious group in the world today? The answer in terms of sheer numbers and sheer horror might surprise you. It's Christians, specifically Christians living in Muslim-majority countries, countries where Christians often preceded Muslims by centuries. I'm not talking about "War on Christmas" type harassment; I'm talking about "know your place or we're going to kill you" persecution. Astonishingly, the Western mainstream media barely acknowledge what is happening.

Let's look closer at this issue. It tells us a lot about the world we're living in.

One hundred years ago, 20% of North Africa and the Middle East, the birthplace of Christianity, was Christian. Today, Christians make up 4% of the population. Much of that decline has occurred in the last decade. In essence Muslims are rendering North Africa and the Middle East free of Christians.

Take Egypt, for example, my ancestral homeland. In just the past two years, tens of thousands of Christian Copts have left Egypt. And many others want to leave, but they simply cannot afford to. Why they want to leave is no mystery.

On New Year's Day 2011, the Two Saints Church in Alexandria was bombed, leaving 23 Copts dead and 97 injured. In recent years dozens of Coptic churches have been attacked, many burned to the ground. In August 2013 alone, the Muslim Brotherhood and its supporters attacked and destroyed some 80 churches.

Unfortunately, Egypt is more the rule than the exception.

Hundreds of Nigerian churches have been destroyed in recent years, with especially deadly attacks reserved for Christmas and Easter church services, leaving dozens dead or mutilated. Churches have been bombed or burned in Iraq, Syria, and just about every place in the Middle East where churches still exist except Israel. Christian businesses have been torched, Christian girls have been kidnapped, sold as child brides or slaves, and had acid thrown in their faces for not being veiled. Anyone born a Muslim who converts to Christianity faces jail and possibly execution. The list of fresh atrocities by Muslims against Christians grows longer almost every day. Even in Muslim countries often portrayed as "moderate" -- Morocco, Indonesia, Malaysia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan -- Christian minorities are under legal pressure not to build churches or evangelize.

The Christians in these Muslim countries are often identical to their co-citizens in race, ethnicity, national identity, culture, and language; there is no political dispute between the Christians and Muslims, no land dispute. Vastly outnumbered and politically marginalized, these Christians simply wish to worship in peace. Instead they are hounded and attacked.

So, then, why is this happening? And why is the media making so little mention of it?

The first question is easy to answer. Christians are being persecuted in Muslim countries because they're Christians, or as the Quran puts it, "infidels," that is, non-Muslims, who are regarded by many fundamentalist Muslims as inferior. As a fundamentalist interpretation of the holy books of Islam has grown in the last fifty or so years, Christians have suffered. And in recent years, they have suffered terribly. I document this in my book, Crucified Again: Exposing Islam's New War on Christians.

If this were happening to any other group besides Christians, it would be the human rights tragedy of our time. There would be loud worldwide calls for action. But the silence in the mainstream Western media is, as they say, almost deafening.

Why?

Because Muslim persecution of Christians throws a wrench in the media's narrative that "Muslim violence is a product of Muslim grievance." That grievance is, first and foremost, portrayed as the sin of European colonialism and alleged American imperialism. In the Muslim world's mind, those two sins are personified by the Jewish State of Israel, a nation the Muslim world believes was forced upon it by the colonial powers of Europe following World War II and is currently supported by the United States.

Much of the Western world and the Western media have largely bought at least some of this narrative. Here's how it works: Because Israel, with the backing of the United States, is stronger than its Muslim neighbors, the media, while not defending Islamic terrorism, often portray terror against Israel, America, and even Europe as the actions of understandably angry "underdogs" fighting for what they deem "justice." But what happens to this media narrative when Islamic terror is directed against a minority weaker than them--in this case, the millions of indigenous Christians throughout the Islamic world?

The answer is that, rather than abandon this narrative, the media just don't report Muslim persecution of Christians except for the most sensational cases. That's why you probably don't know that there are barely any Christians living in Algeria, Tunisia and Libya, nations where Christianity once thrived. Or, that this is happening in Egypt, Iraq, Iran, and even Lebanon.

So, yes, Christians are indeed the most persecuted religious group in the world today. But reporting it would violate the media's narrative of Christians as persecutors and Muslims as victims.

I'm Raymond Ibrahim, author of the Al-Qaeda Reader, for Prager University.

1 posted on 11/10/2014 7:19:36 AM PST by servo1969
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To: servo1969

Don’t forget the 0bama administration targeting Christians.


2 posted on 11/10/2014 7:25:53 AM PST by I want the USA back (Media: completely irresponsible. Complicit in the destruction of this country.)
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To: I want the USA back

I think people on the far left tend to be nihilistic and to them power is everything. So they see in Islam a social movement that is all about destroying everything that exists and is on a quest for total power - there is no discussion about right or wrong, it is all kill everyone who is in the way and destroy everything. I think a lot of people on the far left identify with that even though they don’t share the Islamists’ view of religion. They see savages who act with orgiastic fury against everyone and they secretly envy the savage and wish that they, too could be savages. Christians represent civilization and order and decency and these are things a savage or a wanna-be savage cannot tolerate.


3 posted on 11/10/2014 7:41:15 AM PST by Wilhelm Tell (True or False? This is not a tag line.)
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To: servo1969

The doctrine taught by Jesus of Nazareth is the finest the world will ever know. It’s sad to see forked tongued demons within and without our country persecuting people for this.

If you’re a Christian, it’s difficult to watch, but also we know that it has been foretold. From an atheist’s point of view this must seem defeatist.

If you’re a freedom loving Atheist, it must be just as difficult to watch, as Christianity and Atheism mesh easily, and a vacuum WILL be filled with something.

If you’re an Atheist full of envy, such as what goes for Democrats these days, eat my shorts.


4 posted on 11/10/2014 8:01:21 AM PST by MarineBrat (Better dead than red!)
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To: servo1969
I admire Raymond Ibrahim for his tenacity. I have but a small quibble about the terminology given the facts as he presents it ...particularly in relation to the topic.

"The Christians in these Muslim countries are often identical to their co-citizens in race, ethnicity, national identity, culture, and language; there is no political dispute between the Christians and Muslims, no land dispute. Vastly outnumbered and politically marginalized, these Christians simply wish to worship in peace. Instead they are hounded and attacked."

Providing the fact that many of these locales were once Christian majority, it serves no purpose beyond undermining his own arguments that these areas are now identified as Muslim countries. They may be Muslim majority. However, as IS/ISIS/ISIL currently purport they/pure Islam recognizes no legal 'borders' creating man-made 'nation states', opposition to the Islam-creep should not recognize any nation, not even Saudi Arabia or Iran as exclusively Islamic. Simply refer to these areas as Islam majority or Islam controlled.

5 posted on 11/10/2014 8:22:54 AM PST by wtd
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To: servo1969

If you won’t fight back, you will always be the persecuted, even by the weakest among them. I’m a Christian, but my biggest “beef” with Christianity is this “turning the other cheek” thing. We need to be looking at the parts of the bible that takes out the enemy. (Knights Templer?)


6 posted on 11/10/2014 8:51:07 AM PST by ThePatriotsFlag ($$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ DEFUND OBAMA! $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$)
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