Patrick J. Buchanan
August 9 2004
"If they have persecuted me, they will also
persecute you." So Christ told his disciples, and so it has again come
to pass.
Not since Stalin's time have Christians been so savagely persecuted. But
it is no longer communists who are the great persecutors, but Islamist
mobs from Africa to the Balkans to Indonesia.
Last Sunday during evening services, terrorists detonated car bombs
outside five Catholic churches in Mosul and Baghdad. A dozen worshipers
perished. Scores of women and children were injured.
Now the Christians are fleeing. In Damascus, Rita Zekert, who heads the
Caritas Migrant Center, says that where, a year ago, the refugees were
Shiite, Sunni, Christian and Kurd in rough proportion to each's share of
the population, "nowadays, 95 percent of the people coming to us are
Iraqi Christians."
According to the New York Times, these refugees "tell of Christian
shopkeepers killed by Islamist gangs for daring to sell alcohol, of
family businesses sold to ransom stolen children ... They left Iraq,
they say, only because they were too terrorized to stay."
"All Sunday's attacks were against Catholics rather than Eastern
Orthodox churches, suggesting that Christians who owed their allegiance
to Rome had become targets in the anti-Western campaign, Catholic
clerics said," says the Financial Times, adding, "Iraq's 650,000-strong
Christian community is depleting fast. Most of the 3 million Christians
of Iraqi origin now live abroad, mainly in the U.S. and Western Europe.
Tens of thousands have moved to Syria and Jordan, many crammed into
tenement blocks, living on charity, banned from work and waiting for
visas out of the Arab world."
From Lebanon, scores of thousands of Catholics have fled in recent
decades, leaving those behind as a shrinking minority in a Muslim land
where they once flourished and, indeed, led.
Last May, in Nigeria's second city, Kano, Muslim youth went on a
midnight rampage with cutlasses, clubs and machetes, massacring 600
Christians and leaving their bodies in the streets. Sixteen churches
burned to the ground. The senior Muslim cleric in the city ordered all
Christians out. Some 30,000 were driven from their homes.
In Kosovo in March, Albanian mobs, enraged over false rumors that Serbs
were responsible for the drowning of three Muslim boys, looted and
torched 17 monasteries, churches and convents. To protect these same
Kosovar Albanians, the United States launched a 78-day bombing campaign
on Belgrade and Serbia in 1999.
All the world is today focused on Darfur in the western Sudan. Forgotten
are the millions of Christians in the southern Sudan who suffered
torture, slavery, mutilations, rapes, starvation, massacres and exile at
the hands of Sudanese soldiers after Khartoum declared Islamic law for
the nation.
Between 1974, when Indonesia invaded East Timor, and 1999, when East
Timor voted for independence, the United Nations has documented at least
120 massacres, with many involving hundreds of dead in this small
Catholic country. After independence, Indonesian troops slaughtered over
1,000 East Timorese in rage over their decision to break free of
Jakarta.
In Egypt, the 6 million Christian Copts have begun openly to protest
persecution by Muslim fanatics and local authorities. If, as President
Bush has assured us, "Islam is a religion of peace," what is going on?
Why the persecutions? Why the rampages and massacres to force peaceful
Christians to flee their homes in Nigeria, Sudan, Kosovo, Iraq, Egypt,
Indonesia?
Answer: What is going on in the Islamic world is something akin to what
happened in Europe from the Spanish Reconquista in 1492 through the
Thirty Years War. As Isabella was determined to expel the Moors and de-Islamicize
all of Spain, militant Muslims are today determined to expel all
Christians and to de-Christianize the Islamic world.
They intend not only to drive Americans out of Iraq, Saudi Arabia and
other Arab lands, but to drive the Christian minorities out – as aliens,
traitors and collaborators of the West. Islamic terrorists are engaged
in what has been called Fourth Generation warfare, warfare by non-state
actors, warfare that will not be defeated with Tomahawk missiles and
F-16s. And the militant Islamists conducting this form of warfare
against Christian minorities in their midst are only confirmed in the
justice of their jihad by America's imperial presence in Iraq and our
domination of the Middle East and Arab world.
The Western empires came and conquered the Islamic world in the 19th and
early 20th centuries. They then departed or were driven out in wars of
national liberation. But the Christian minorities who had lived
peacefully there for 20 centuries, and who were left behind when the
West went home, are now paying the price of our occupations and of
militant Islam's determination to purge and purify the Dar al Islam of
all the hated residue of the Christian West.
© 2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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