Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Hindu Attacks on Christians in India




A new dimension of Christian persecution in India

Christian Today
The politics of Hindu nationalism, which fueled Christian persecution for over a decade in India, seems to be losing ground. With this comes the hope that India will never witness an incident like the massive flurry of attacks in Kandhamal district of eastern Orissa state in 2008 which killed around 100 Christians and displaced over 50,000 people. This wish is expected to come true, but the absence of mass violence may not ensure the safety of the Christian minority.

Since India did not see any incident of “mass violence” on Christians in the last three years, the issue of Christian persecution is increasingly being seen by the media as a passé. For example, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom recently put India on its watch-list on account of the country’s failure to bring to justice the accused in the Kandhamal violence and a few similar incidents in which the Muslim and Sikh minorities were the victims. But this found little mention in the Indian or international mainstream media.

The notion of communal peace, seen as absence of mass violence, is misleading. The frequency of attacks on Christians, which remains as high as it has been for the last 13 years in India, is an equally determining factor.

Indian Christian groups, including the Evangelical Fellowship of India, the All India Christian Council, the Global Council of Indian Christians and the Catholic Secular Forum, continue to report on violent attacks on Christians on a regular basis. It’s not surprising that India is the only country which caused Compass Direct News, a US-based agency covering Christian persecution worldwide, to start a special “Briefs” column in addition to its regular “Flash” and “Feature” stories a few years ago, thanks to the high incidence of attacks. This column – with each “India Briefs” story carrying at least five incidents – is being run until today. In the last month of April, Compass Direct News released four “India Briefs” stories in addition to two “Flash” stories on India.

Statistics by Christian groups in India clearly indicate that there has been no let up in the systematic persecution of Christians ever since it began in 1998, the year the Right-wing Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) formed a coalition government at the federal level. The BJP’s emergence coincided with the arrival of Mrs. Sonia Gandhi, a Catholic and the wife of the late prime minister of India Rajiv Gandhi, in national politics. Her appointment as the chief of the Indian National Congress party led to the political targeting of Christians by the BJP and associated Hindu nationalist forces under the pretext of religious conversions.

From 2001 to 2004, at least 200 attacks on Christians were reported each year. There were around 165 anti-Christian attacks in 2005, and 130 in 2006. The following two years, 2007 and 2008, turned out to be the most violent years, vis-à-vis Christian persecution, since the Independence of India in 1947. During the Christmas week of 2007, at least four Christians were killed and 730 houses and 95 churches torched in Kandhamal, Orissa. A repeat of violence in Kandhamal killed over 100 people and burned 4,640 houses, 252 churches and 13 educational institutions in 2008. Apart from these major incidents, 2007 and 2008 each saw around 200 attacks in various parts of the country. The year 2009 witnessed more than 152 attacks, and 2010 saw at least 149. The actual number of incidents is likely to be much higher than reported, as not all cases are formally registered or come to light.

While it is good that the Indian voters are disapproving of the use of Hindu nationalism by political parties – as was evident in the defeat of the BJP in the last two general elections in 2004 and 2009 – it may not bring much respite to the minorities. For India’s Hindu nationalists are expedient enough to adjust their strategies to suit the political mood of the country while continuing to further their agenda at a different level. It is an open secret that while there are a number of Hindu nationalist groups, some having separate legal entities and others informal groupings, they all are linked to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the leader of the movement and the ideological mentor of the BJP.

The Hindu nationalists may not let their activities become a political issue now, but they will continue to spew hate against Christians, alleging that they are converting Hindus to Christianity by inducement and coercion.

There is talk about Hindu nationalists using a moderate form of their ideology, but one essential characteristic of Hindutva, a Hindu nationalist ideology, that has remained non-negotiable for them over the years, is that non-Hindu minorities, particularly Christians and Muslims, cannot be accepted as true Indians unless they become “Hindu.”

The Hindutva ideology was articulated at a time when independence from British rule was foreseeable during the early 20th century. It was inspired by several Hindu reform movements that were birthed during the second half of the 19th century to counter “Western superiority and supremacy” that was being used to justify colonialism. At the heart of the Hindutva dream was a “nation,” as it existed before the “Muslim invasion” by Central Asian powers in the 12th century followed by the “Christian invasion” from Britain in the 18th century.

According to the RSS founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar, anyone who calls himself a Hindu is a Hindu; anyone whose father is a Hindu is a Hindu; and anyone the RSS calls a Hindu is a Hindu. And the RSS says even Christians are Hindu but they do not “behave” like one, and cannot do so because their religion originated in a foreign land.

Subjected to this ideology, many Indians – especially sections of the people in the states where the BJP and other groups have built a strong support base, such as Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh – see minorities as “outsiders” and approve of violence as a means to oppose “conversions.”

The Hindutva ideology is still being propagated in many parts of the country, especially by pragmatic Hindu nationalist workers. But some of them have lost hope that the Hindu nation can be a reality if they use democratic ways. They have turned more extremists and are waging a war against the minorities with underground terrorist activities. Investigation agencies have arrested and are prosecuting several extremist Hindu nationalists for exploding bombs targeting minorities, mainly Muslims. Those facing terrorism charges have reportedly been behind anti-Christian violence as well.

It is difficult to anticipate how the recent development of Right-wing Hindu terrorism will play out in the future, but it seems almost certain that pragmatic Hindu nationalists will remain as active as, if not more than, they have been in the past – though in a fashion that does not attract too much attention. This will mean more attacks but less coverage by the mainstream media, which tends to look at the magnitude of an attack and fails to see it as part of a trend.

The best way to counter this new Hindu nationalist strategy is to streamline the reporting of Christian persecution and highlight statistics periodically. This may require compilation of incidents by one Christian agency which can diligently verify reports of attacks using high standards of professional, ethical reporting.

You Can Make a Difference for Coptic Christians in Egypt!!!


Coptic Christians have suffered a LOT in Egypt. But even more so now that the Arab Spring has toppled Mubarak's regime. A simple Google search of "Coptic Christians in Egypt" will yield several articles of the atrocities & injustice they face. There have been many Muslim Egyptians who have stood  in front of churches to protect them, but most Egyptians have voted to have an Islamic State & it looks like the Muslim Brotherhood will have met their secret agenda for Egypt. 


Politics aside, people are suffering. Especially Copts. Today, you have a chance to make a difference.


The Egyptian government is not responding.  Currently Egypt is being controlled by an interim government, set to be dismantled by parliamentary and presidential elections this coming September.  Most experts agree that these elections will instate a government controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood, who has historically persecuted those outside of the Islamic faith, particularly Christians.
We have an unprecedented opportunity to pressure the Egyptian government to change its laws regarding religious freedom, before a more permanent governing force rules out all opportunities for lasting change.
ICC is petitioning the interim government to take immediate steps to ensure the safety of Coptic Christians, and to repeal current laws that stifle religious freedom for all Egyptians.
Please join ICC in demanding legislative reform in Egypt in the coming months. Follow the instructions below and have your signatures back to us by July 11th.

Here’s How You Can Help

#1 Pray: The first thing you can do to help is stop right now and ask the Lord in the government structures of Egypt and in the lives of Coptic Christians who are being persecuted.
#2 Next, Review our petition
#3 Electronically Sign the petition
#4 Print out petition and take it to your friends and church and have everyone you know sign it. Send the signatures back to us so we can compile the responses. Feel free to print out extra signature pages for large numbers of sign ups. When you have collected all your signatures, please mail the signature pages to: 

ICC
PO Box 8056
Silver Spring, MD 20907
or fax them to us at (301) 585-5918.
Please get them back to us by July 11th.
Sincerely in Christ,
Jeff King
President, ICC
International Christian Concern
P.O. Box 8056
Silver Spring, MD 20907
Phone: (800) ICC-5441
Fax: (301) 585-5918
This has been a historical year for Egypt where a 30-year dictator has been overthrown and its citizens are seeking to create a new government and identity.  Amidst this turbulent change, Coptic Christians are facing increasing persecution and attacks.  We are continually receiving reports of Christians being killed and attacked, of churches being burned down, and of communities fearing for their safety.  The blood of innumerable Christians is soaking Egyptian soil.



Monday, May 16, 2011

Nakba, 3rd Intifada, Israel, & Twitter

What an amazing time to be alive. Technology has changed the world as we know it. I remember the days before we had the internet! Gosh...that makes me sound old...but at least I can tell my grandchildren what life was like pre-social network & pre-internet ahaha.

But now the internet has been able to form online communities from people all around the globe. Myspace, Facebook, & Twitter all made a huge impact on the world. And so did smart phones- with their ability to use the internet, check emails, check FB, & tweet.

Twitter has been one of the best sources for me to find out breaking news & to learn of current events happening ALL over the world.

I'm addicted to Twitter. A recent article stated that Twitter is bad for romantic relationships (see HERE). Let me explain how it all got started...

When Tunisians ousted their President- I was impressed. When I learned they used Twitter & Facebook to orchestrate it- I was impressed. Then I realized I could follow Tunisians & journey with them through their "revolution" on Twitter. So I did. I was refreshing my page a thousand times a day & re-tweeting other people's experiences, like getting shot at, where they were going to meet, etc. Then Egypt had their "revolution." Then I started following news agencies like FoxHeadlines, CNN, Gulf News, Jerusalem Post, Guardian, Reuters, & self-proclaimed journalists who would write about their experiences in the Middle East, complete with pictures & video footage.

I was able to see inside a hospital & see dead Libyans because of Twitter. Not that I wanted to see that, but the people involved made it that available.

And even now with Syria not allowing any media in- the major global news agencies are resorting to using amateur video captured by cell phones- all through Twitter & Facebook! So since I was already mesmerized by feeling a part of certain world events, it was only natural for me to be hooked to Nakba (The mourning of the existence of Israel), The 3rd Intifada, & Israel.

I have been paying close attention because as a Christian, Israel is IMPORTANT in Biblical prophecy. Yes, I support Israel because God says that He will keep his covenant with David & exalt Israel, as well as the Bible stating that nations who support Israel will be blessed. Sadly, many Israelis today have forgotten what their prophets had said to their forefathers:


These are the commands, decrees and laws the LORD your God directed me [Moses] to teach you to observe in the land that you are crossing the Jordan to possess, 2 so that you, your children and their children after them may fear the LORD your God as long as you live by keeping all his decrees and commands that I give you, and so that you may enjoy long life. Hear, Israel, and be careful to obey so that it may go well with you and that you may increase greatly in a land flowing with milk and honey, just as the LORD, the God of your ancestors, promised you.
 Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. 5 Love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. 6 These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. 7 Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. 8 Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. 9 Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates.
 10 When the LORD your God brings you into the land he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to give you—a land with large, flourishing cities you did not build, 11 houses filled with all kinds of good things you did not provide, wells you did not dig, and vineyards and olive groves you did not plant—then when you eat and are satisfied, 12 be careful that you do not forget the LORD, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery.
 Fear the LORD your God, serve him only and take your oaths in his name. 14 Do not follow other gods, the gods of the peoples around you; 15 for the LORD your God, who is among you, is a jealous God and his anger will burn against you, and he will destroy you from the face of the land. 16 Do not put the LORD your God to the test as you did at Massah. 17 Be sure to keep the commands of the LORD your God and the stipulations and decrees he has given you. 18 Do what is right and good in the LORD’s sight, so that it may go well with you and you may go in and take over the good land the LORD promised on oath to your ancestors, 19 thrusting out all your enemies before you, as the LORD said.

 20 In the future, when your son asks you, “What is the meaning of the stipulations, decrees and laws the LORD our God has commanded you?” 21 tell him: “We were slaves of Pharaoh in Egypt, but the LORD brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand. 22 Before our eyes the LORD sent signs and wonders—great and terrible—on Egypt and Pharaoh and his whole household. 23 But he brought us out from there to bring us in and give us the land he promised on oath to our ancestors24 The LORD commanded us to obey all these decrees and to fear the LORD our God, so that we might always prosper and be kept alive, as is the case today. 25 And if we are careful to obey all this law before the LORD our God, as he has commanded us, that will be our righteousness.” (Deuteronomy 6)
I quoted this chapter not only to remind Israelis to NOT forget their God, but to also teach Muslims (who supposedly believe in the Torah & Bible), that the Prophet MOSES received words from Allah that the Holy Land was given to the children of Jacob (aka Israel) because Allah promised to give them their own land. Allah does NOT break his promises. So the land belongs to the Jews. Muslims, you say you believe in the Torah & you say Moses is one of your prophets- yet you disregard holy texts that are older than your Quran & you disrespect your precious prophet, Moses, by calling him a liar. In fact, it has even been written in the Quran that the land belongs to the Jews:
Surah 5:20 Recall that Moses said to his people (the Jews), “O my people, remember GOD’s blessings upon you: He appointed prophets from among you, made you kings, and granted you what He never granted any other people.
21 “O my people, enter the holy land (Israel) that GOD has decreed for you, and do not rebel, lest you become losers.”
So with my fascination with being kept up to date on historical events around the world on Twitter, to my Biblical literacy- It has been educational & entertaining seeing what Palestinians believe & said as well as what Israeli's believe & said.

In just a few screen shots I'd like to welcome you to the fight:























What was that again Palestine? it's YOUR land? Are you SUUUUURE? 
Surah 5:20 Recall that Moses said to his people (the Jews), “O my people, remember GOD’s blessings upon you: He appointed prophets from among you, made you kings, and granted you what He never granted any other people.
21 “O my people, enter the holy land (Israel) that GOD has decreed for you, and do not rebel, lest you become losers.
 
Someone brought this to my attention:

Ali says:
"And how many Muslims know that THIS is stated in the Koran??? Sura 17:104 The Jews’ return from 19 centuries of exile is actually the fulfillment of Islamic prophecy!
Surah 17:104 says that And we said to the Children of Israel afterwards, “Go live into this land. When the final prophecy comes to pass, we will summon you all in one group.”‘IF the Koran is the TRUTH, then the truth will prevail. And the Jews have returned to their land.
Praise the Lord."


Sunday, May 15, 2011

Meet Khalil, an Egyptian Muslim Saved by Jesus




Khalil started memorizing the Qur’an at a very early age and developed what he called a love for the word of God.  As he grew older, he started reading books on Islam and the interpretation of the Qur’an.  By sorting out Muslims from non-Muslims according to the Qur’an’s teaching, he ended up considering his own parents infidels.  Little things such as a woman not wearing a veil would make her a non-Muslim according to the way he understood the Qur’an.  If a man didn’t grow a beard he would be considered a non-Muslim. 

He considered the Christians his worst enemies and started getting involved in attacks against Christians and churches.  The Islamic Group, dedicated to the overthrow of the secular government of Egypt and the installation of a strict Muslim government, recruited him into their ranks, appointing him as a local leader. His group became involved in kidnapping a famous moderate Muslim writer who had dared to criticize the Islamic Group.

Eventually, the authorities arrested Khalil and most of the group’s members.  He spent two years in prison, undergoing torture, and upon his release left Egypt for Yemen in company with other radical Muslims.  From this base of operations, they continued in their plans for an armed insurrection in Egypt.

Their plans, however, were discovered by local authorities, many of them were re-arrested, and the military option was all but abandoned.  Back in Egypt they had to downplay all of their activities.  Upon reading an article in the Cairo newspaper about Christians arrested in Egypt for proselytizing, Khalil and his group decided that it was “past time” to do something for the sake of Islam.

 Given their small numbers, however, they decided their battle would be an intellectual one, researching and writing a book proving that Mohammed is the True Prophet of God, and that the Bible of the Christians and Jews is a corrupted text. 

Khalil was chosen by his Emir, the leader of the Islamic Group, to do the research and write the book.  He objected strenuously at first, but eventually took on the job, which he described as the “most distasteful thing” he had ever done.

When he had completed reading the Bible and cross-referencing what he had read with numerous Islamic books, Khalil was astonished to discover that the Bible was neither inaccurate nor corrupted.  Instead, he was astonished at the Bible’s teachings on forgiveness and unconditional love, as reflected in the life and words of Jesus.  He was particularly stunned to read how Jesus had warned his followers about persecution and how, two thousand years later, that persecution was taking place exactly as Jesus had said it would.  His reading of the Bible helped him understand why Christians in Egypt never retaliated against the Muslims, and why it was always easy for them to forgive and forget.  As much as he hated reading the Bible, he fell in love with its message and teachings.

Nonetheless, he had a job to do, and he continued with dogged determination, electing to prove that Jesus is not God and was never crucified.  Studying the Qur’an for this purpose, he put together all of God’s qualities and attributes as the Qur’an talks about them, and then searched the Qur’an for Jesus’ attributes.  According to the Qur’an, God is the creator, the healer, the provider, the only one who can raise the dead to life, the only one that performs miracles, the only one who judges perfectly, and the like.  To his shock, Khalil discovered that these are the same attributes the Qur’an assigns to Jesus (Isa), proving to Khalil that Jesus and God were, indeed, one.

Growing doubts now made Khalil’s life miserable.  He had always loved Islam and had always believed that the only way to God was through Mohammed.  But if Jesus and God were one, then who is Mohammed and what is the way to heaven?

One day, the Emir came to visit Khalil in his house and discovered all the research that Khalil had documented (the deity of Jesus, the Qur’an not being the word of God, etc.).  He couldn’t believe what he read.  He told Khalil that he would kill him if he shared his heretical ideas with any Muslim and that he was now considered an infidel.

Khalil, however, could not turn from the conviction that Christianity was the right way.  Wanting to learn more, he decided to join a church.  Since he was notorious as a zealous Muslim, no one believed him.  Everyone refused to meet with him, even pastors.  He was disappointed and thought maybe he was wrong after all; maybe the Christian faith wasn’t the way to heaven.  However, a voice inside him told him not to look to people.

One day as he was trying to make a phone call at a café, his attaché was stolen.  The bag contained all of his research papers, his Bible and his identity card.  He was terrified because everything he had written would be considered blasphemous, and the bag also contained his ID card.  He rushed home, troubled and tormented.  In his room he started repenting for all that he had done and thought that God was punishing him for daring to think that Mohammed was not sent from God and that the Qur’an was not the word of God.  He repented, washed himself, and pulled his rug out to pray, but he couldn’t bend his knees nor open his mouth to say one word of the Qur’an.  He sat down and said, “God you know that I love you, and I know that you want me on the right path. God, I can’t resist anymore. All that I did, I did trying to please you.  Please pull me out of this darkness.”

That night, Khalil slept in a way he hadn’t slept for years.  In a dream, he saw a man, who came to him and told him that he was the one for whom Khalil had been searching.  Khalil didn’t know who the man was.  The man told him to look in the Book (the Bible).  Khalil said the Book and all his papers were lost, to which the man replied, “The book never gets lost.  Get up and open your closet and you will find it. The rest of your papers will be returned to you by the end of the week.”

Khalil woke up from the dream and opened his closet.  His very own copy of the Bible was inside the closet on a shelf.  Knowing that he had seen Jesus, he hurried to his mother’s room, awoke her, and begged her forgiveness for his years of harshness and ill treatment of the family.  His search for reconciliation didn’t end with his family either.  As the sun rose that same morning, Khalil took to the streets, greeting friends and strangers alike.  He sought out the Christian owners of businesses whom he had robbed, or mistreated, and begged their forgiveness too.

Over the ensuing months, Khalil grew in his new faith, gradually winning the confidence and trust of local Christians and finding fellowship at a church.  He was baptized and continues to brave physical attacks and threats against his life, because he feels that no price is too great to pay for the One who gave everything for him.

Watch the movie of his transformation Below in 3 parts! Or in wmv version Here



The U.S. Government Condemns Burning Quran, But they Burn Bibles

Have you seen this yet??? It is a fact based video about how the US Government upholds the Quran higher than the Bible- which they declare is garbage, THUS, violating the Bill of Rights & Constitution.




Click Bibles Burned by U.S. Military to read more info



Now, the video above describes Christians as the 'bad guys.' Distributing a Bible is wrong? Oh, b/c it's "proselytizing." THOSE were the Bibles that the U.S. Military ended up burning in Afghanistan.

It is NOT wrong that the soldiers wanted to distribute Bibles in the local language instead of "trying to learn the language." The film director sat in a couple of services & gatherings. Did he not think ANY of the soldiers were trying to learn the language? Maybe they were individually making an attempt, but they are limited in what they can do. They can't just go out into the street & preach in the local tongue.

The film director made this documentary & sent it to Al-Jazeera FIRST. What a traitor. Not only is he a traitor, but he was used by the enemy (Satan) to attempt to stop the furtherance of the gospel. Very bad...BUT...as Christians know....our God makes beauty out of ashes. He brings good out of what was intended to be evil.

You can kill a Christian, burn his Bible, & attempt to silence Christians like in Pakistan- but there is NO stopping the Holy Spirit from doing the work. Many Muslims come to Christ by dreams alone.

Bottom line, this was a documentary aired on Al-Jazeera, slanted to make Christians look bad & fake.

Hooray to the soldiers who will obey God rather than man! May God give them wisdom to share the good news of Jesus Christ to the Afghans! 

Pakistan’s ‘Blasphemy’ Laws Pose Growing Threat



Not even children are exempt from possibility of triggering Islamic rage.

05/13/2011 Pakistann(CDN)-Pakistan’s notorious “blasphemy” laws can put even children at risk, and Christians say the days when they could teach their offspring pat answers to protect them from accusations of disparaging Islam or its prophet seem to have passed.
A 30-year-old Pakistani woman who grew up in Lahore said her Christian parents taught her formula answers to keep from falling prey to accusations under the blasphemy statutes, such as “I am a Christian, I can only tell you about Him.” But even then, before radical Islamists began influencing Pakistani society as they have in recent years, schoolchildren were taught not to discuss religion, she said.
“We knew never to get into religious discussions with others,” she said. “We had them at home – our parents would put us through the drill of asking us tough questions to see how we answered. Only now I realize that was practice for school.”
In this way, she was imbued with the fundamentals of the Christian faith and at the same time learned that she should discuss it only with her parents, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Though the Christian faith is inherently evangelistic, the need to remain silent is even more important today, she added.
“Christians constantly face questions like, ‘What do you think of the Quran, do you like it?’ and, ‘What do you think of Muhammad?’” she said. “One answer is, ‘As a Christian I have only read the Bible, I can’t read Arabic.’ These questions used to be easier to answer, we had formulas. But those are not working any more. We just tell children ‘Don’t talk about religion in school.’ This is shaky ground now.”
The blasphemy statutes signal to non-Muslims that they are second-class or “dhimmi” status citizens who must stay within narrow social boundaries, leave or be killed, she said.
Some parents don’t even tell their children about Jesus, because they are scared they will go to school and say something wrong,” she said. “One street kid did not know anything except about the blasphemy law. When her mother was asked why she did not teach her daughter about Jesus instead of the blasphemy law, she replied, ‘If I tell her too much, she will talk about it on the street, and someone will kill her or charge her with blasphemy.’”
The street child, she said, was afraid to tell her what church she attended.
“She said the mullah in the shop behind us was listening, and as she said that, I saw the man nearly fall off his chair from trying to listen to us,” she said.
An entire generation, Christians fear, is growing up not knowing their faith for fear that it will lead to potentially disastrous schoolyard talk. Moreover, children required to take Islamic studies in school are in danger with a single misstep.
“If they write anything or misspell anything to do with the prophet Muhammad, they can be in serious danger,” the source said. “In fact, the other side of this is that they are made to answer questions saying what a wonderful man he was.”
Christian kids in predominantly Muslim areas don’t have friends to play with, as even a cricket game can be risky, she said. Adults are equally fearful.
“People in offices are silenced into submission,” she said. “The fear is creating aggression.”
Conviction under Section 295-C of the blasphemy law for derogatory comments about Muhammad is punishable by death, though life imprisonment is also possible. Curiously, accusers in blasphemy cases cannot repeat the alleged derogatory comments without risk of being accused of blasphemy themselves. Section 295-B makes willful desecration of the Quran or use of an extract in a derogatory manner punishable with life imprisonment. Section 295-A prohibits injuring or defiling places of worship and “acts intended to outrage religious feelings.” It is punishable by life imprisonment, which in Pakistan is 25 years.
Law Leading to LawlessnessA district court judge last November stunned the nation and the international community by handing down a death sentence to a Christian mother of five for allegedly speaking ill of Muhammad.
Subsequently three politicians spoke out against the blasphemy law that put Asia Noreen (also called Asia Bibi) in prison. Two of them have been killed for standing up for Noreen and against the blasphemy law. One is in hiding for fear of her life.
Noreen, mother two children and stepmother to three others, has been in prison in solitary confinement since June 2009, accused of having blasphemed against Muhammad, after a verbal disagreement with some women in the village of Ittanwali, near Lahore. If she is released from prison, her life will be at risk. Her husband and children are on the run, receiving constant threats from Muslims who say they will take justice into their own hands.
Thousands of Pakistanis who think and believe differently than mainstream Muslims are at risk of being slandered under the blasphemy law, and those who live in poverty or are illiterate are particularly vulnerable. Personal vendettas from neighbors, co-workers and rivals are the most common reasons blasphemy law cases are filed, according to Paul Marshall of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom.
Most victims are Muslims, but non-Muslims or minority Muslims suffer disproportionally,” said Marshall. “Ahmadis [an unorthodox Islamic sect] are probably proportionally the greatest victims. There are more victims from mobs and vigilantes than from the government itself, but the government bears responsibility because it does not protect the victims.”
Suspected Islamic extremists in Faisalabad shot dead two Christians about to be acquitted of blasphemy charges on July 19, 2010. The Rev. Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his 30-year-old brother Sajid Emmanuel were shot days after handwriting experts on July 14 notified police that signatures on papers denigrating Muhammad did not match those of the accused. Expected to be exonerated, the two leaders of United Ministries Pakistan were being led in handcuffs under police custody back to jail when they were shot.
Christian Lawyers’ Foundation President Khalid Gill said the two bodies bore cuts and other signs of having been tortured, including marks on their faces, while the brothers were in police custody.
Most recently, 40-year-old Arif Masih, of a village near Faisalabad, was arrested from his house on April 5 after Muslims accused him of ripping pages of the Quran and writing a threatening letter ordering them to become Christians. His brother claims that a neighbor fabricated the accusations in order to acquire property adjacent to that of Masih’s. 
Though the much-abused blasphemy law is punishable by death, at times vigilantes have taken matters into their own hands. At least eight Christians accused of blasphemy are estimated to have been killed since 1986. The number of Muslims accused of blasphemy and killed extra-judicially may be twice that figure.
For secular-educated Pakistanis, the blasphemy law has come to symbolize the measure to which extreme Islam has overtaken society. In the span of three months, radical Islamists murdered two of the nation’s most outspoken leaders against the blasphemy law. On Jan. 4 Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab Province, was murdered, and on March 2 parliamentarian Shabaz Bhatti, who as federal minister for minority affairs was the only Christian cabinet member, was assassinated in Islamabad.
A third official, Sherry Rehman, a parliamentarian from Karachi, led an effort to reform the blasphemy law after Noreen was sentenced to death last year. Taseer, Bhatti and Rehman were the most vocal about injustices Noreen has suffered and their disapproval of the law. Rehman, in hiding since Taseer’s murder, is said to be next on the Islamic terrorists’ hit list.
Noreen’s case drew little attention before she received the death sentence. One advocate said he believes that had her case not drawn so much attention, she would have been quietly acquitted by a higher court without criticism abroad or at home. Now her release would look like a win for the “Christian” West, he said.
“Hence, we are not going to have any concrete benefit out of whatever decision comes on her,” said Asif Aqeel, leader of the Community Development Initiative. “I don’t see any decision having some fruitful result.”
Aqeel concurred with other Christians that the blasphemy law has led to a steep drop in freedom of expression. Mosques in neighborhoods where blasphemy cases are filed become centers for inciting people to the streets, where destruction ensues. Since Noreen’s death sentence in November, sermons against changing the blasphemy law are commonly broadcast from mosques, especially in neighborhoods where there is a Christian presence.
“People do not talk, and it is proving an embargo on thinking,” Aqeel said. “It has caused vigilante justice, and several incidents have taken place. After that, now whenever this issue arises, people become afraid that it might turn into a demolition of the entire place.”
Victims of the blasphemy law cannot hope for justice from local police, who “do not dare to declare innocent anyone accused of blasphemy,” Aqeel said, and often lower court judges and magistrates do little to give them their rights. “Now the slogan is that the one who sympathizes with the blasphemer is also a blasphemer,” he said, pointing to the deaths of Taseer and Bhatti.
Pakistan is moving increasingly towards a state driven by fear of extremists, where even moderate politicians make conservative choices to appease Islamist threats, according to Sara Taseer Shoaib, daughter of the late Taseer. 
“Pakistan is definitely becoming more right-wing and extremist when it comes to religion,” she said. “Religious parties are gaining a cult following, and even moderate leaders are trying to gain popularity and votes by taking a right-wing position.”
The reasons for this shift to the ultra-right, she said, are many: conservative issues like defense of the blasphemy law serve to deflect attention from the real issues of poverty and lack of hope; there is an increasing trend to blame all woes on the West; and there is a prevailing sense of a need to defend Islam as the perception remains that it is under global attack.
Shoaib said her father spoke about Noreen as a member of Pakistan’s poor, disenfranchised minority. Determined to defend her and the rights of others like her, Taseer had visited Noreen in prison before he died.
“He felt that she was a victim of the ambiguity of this law, and [that] she was unable to defend herself fairly,” she said. “[He felt that] she was the prime candidate where the unfairness of this law could be brought to light. He wanted an amendment to the law which is man-made.”
The source from Lahore said that fear among Christians after Taseer and Bhatti’s death is palpable. Christians feel left alone, not knowing who to trust.
“Everything seems to have snowballed,” she said. “People are really, really scared. Someone who you see as out there defending you and speaking for you has been silenced; someone just goes up to him and shoots him.”
She said Christians feel that the mentality of their Muslim fellows has hardened as the Pakistani Taliban and other extremist elements seem to be holding the government and people’s minds hostage.
“For the extremists, it’s no longer making Pakistan a Muslim country, but how they use Pakistan to promote the cause of Islam across the world,” she said. “It’s not for love of the nation, or national identity, but entirely about religious identity. That completely isolates those who do not subscribe to the same views … you are on the street in terms of identity and your social belonging in the community.”
Growing Issue
Aqeel said blasphemy looms larger in Pakistani minds and anti-Christian sentiment is growing for both socio-economic and global reasons.
In today’s impoverished Pakistan, and after U.S.-led wars in Muslim-majority Iraq and Afghanistan following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, people see even Pakistani Christians as allies of the West threatening their identity, he said. Poverty and a religion that upholds violence as a means to an end only fuel this mob mentality, he said. 
“This has helped create a sense of alienating the Muslim world, and that the ‘blasphemous’ West is trying to snatch the values by movies and technology and globalization and trying to capture areas of the Islamic world,” Aqeel said. “Because of this, their sense of insecurity has made them more religious.”
As a result, blasphemy has become a larger issue, he said.
Pakistan’s law against defaming religion was amended in 1982 to include desecrating the Quran and in 1986 to include disparaging Muhammad. Since then, at least 37 blasphemy law suspects have been killed while in police custody, according to Aqeel.
On March 15, Qamar David, 55, died while serving a life sentence in a prison in Karachi for alleged blasphemy. Prison authorities claimed that David died of a heart attack, but his supporters have called for an investigation, as he had received threats and was subject to beatings and mistreatment from prison authorities. (See “Pakistani Christian Sentenced for ‘Blasphemy’ Dies in Prison,” March 15.)
While the murders of Bhatti and Taseer have helped to remove a “Defamation of Religions” resolution from United Nations consideration – for now – the assassinations have also brought any movement toward amending Pakistan’s blasphemy laws to a standstill.
“Although there is a section of media that is highlighting the issue of blasphemy, the situation hardly allows any movement or legislation on this subject,” said a Pakistani lawyer on condition of anonymity. “In my experience in the past 24 years, I have not seen [such a] stalemate condition, mainly due to the violence and terrorist threat that prevails.”   
PRAY FOR PAKISTAN!!!

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Reality

Get your tissues ready.



If you would like some more information on how you can help make a difference, click http://www.persecution.org/how-you-can-help/

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Modern Story of Job in 2011 in Nigeria



Can one NOT choke up when reading this??? Here is a modern day story of the trials like Job. Except this man is not rich. Well....not by possessions but certainly rich in faith! Even after all but 1 of his kids were killed, even after his wife was killed, even after his village was attacked- he still is faithful to God. Can you imagine? Your wife & children murdered- but not just them- members of your own church were killed too! What do you do?? Do you still hold a Sunday service? What do you say to the survivors? He is holding on to his faith, but what about those who are angry & want revenge? His posture is one of reliance on God. He decides to pray for his 'enemies' rather than chooses to avenge because he knows that it is GOD who vindicates.  Wow......

Let me be honest. Being involved in ministry for many years, you kind of lose touch with reality in a sense. You think that because you are serving God, you're going to be safe- even though you know trials are apart of life, you don't expect injustice.


I was at a women's tea at a church a few years ago & this pastor's wife got up to speak. She does a lot of missionary work in South America because that's where her parents have been for years. But she said something that was so disturbing...

She was describing flying on a plane. Saying that everyone else was scared about the flight but she wasn't. She said that the only reason why the plane was not going down was because SHE was on it & about to do God's work.

I was shocked that an older, experienced, godly woman would say such absurdities. I looked around at my table with my mouth hanging to see if ANYONE got that. I looked at the pastor's wife who was still speaking to see if she was going to correct herself or explain what she had said better- but she didn't.

That is naive thinking. NAIVE. All we have to do is remember Jesus' words: "They hated me first so they will hate you too."

Then we look at the disciples who died a martyrs death. Then look at all the missionaries who have died while doing God's work- even by the very people they were helping to feed, clothe, care for.

When I first arrived to Kuwait I read a book about a young girl's experience during an inner city outreach. She was from the midwest & her parents were hesitant to let her do an internship in an inner city. But she went & was there for a few months. She got accustomed to the environment. One day her & her friend were walking around a rough neighborhood when they were separated. This innocent young girl ended up getting raped by one of the men in the inner city. It was an eye opening experience for her. She didn't believe that God would actually let anything happen to her like this, but it did.

And as I started seeing just how much persecution was going on in this part of the world- I started to question God. I know that suffering is part of God's will. Jesus suffered, so will we. I know that persecution for our faith was inevitable- Jesus said it would happen. But knowing these things conceptually is different from seeing it happen or experiencing it yourself.

All of a sudden I didn't feel safe anymore. I didn't feel like God would protect me from anything. So while over here, I've been struggling with this whole thing. So this story, though tragic, is inspiring:

Islamic extremists target Christian village near Bogoro, Bauchi state.

KURUM, Nigeria, May 10 (CDN) — As she lay on the ground after being shot and then slashed with a machete, Dune James Rike looked into her husband’s tear-filled eyes and asked, “Is this the end between us, so we shall not be together again?”

Pastor James Musa Rike told Compass he held the hands of his dying, 35-year-old wife and told her, “Hold on to your faith in Jesus, and we shall meet and never part again.”

Muslim extremists who attacked Kurum village, in the Bogoro local government area of Nigeria’s Bauchi state, had already killed two of the couple’s children in a rampage that began Wednesday (May 4) at midnight. Rike, pastor of a Church of Christ in Nigeria (COCIN) congregation in Kurum, next heard the cries of his 13-year-old daughter, Sum James Rike, a few yards away.

“I rushed to my daughter, only to discover that she too was cut with a machete on her stomach, and her intestines were all around her,” he said. “I held her hand and began to pray, knowing she too was about to die. She told me that the Muslim militants told her they would kill her and “see how your Jesus will save you.” 

The girl told her father that she responded by telling them that Jesus had already saved her, and that by killing her they would only be making it possible for her to be with Him. Pastor Rike prayed for her as she died.

Shooting and setting homes on fire, the Muslim extremists killed 12 other Christians in the attack. Bauchi police reported 16 people dead – one man, three women and 12 children. 

Pastor Rike said that when the attackers reached his house, they tried to force their way into their bedrooms.

“I opened a backdoor, and we ran out into the dark night while the militants pursued us,” he said. “They shot my wife and two of our kids as they tried to escape.”

Pastor Rike said that after killing the two children, Faith James Rike and 1-year-old Fyali James Rike, the assailants cut his wife’s abdomen with a machete. 

“I was shocked at what I saw,” he said. “I knew my wife would not last long, and the only thing I did was to encourage her to hold on to her faith in Jesus.”

The Muslim extremists set more than 20 houses ablaze before leaving the village, he said.

Pastor Rike and his son survived the attack, and he said his adopted daughter, Whulham James Rike, was injured and receiving treatment at the General Hospital in Bogoro. He said five others others were also receiving hospital treatment.

Among those killed, church sources said, were Murna Ayuba; Angelina Ezekiel; Dorcas Sunday; Asabar Toma; Rhoda Joseph; Dhunhgwa Zakka; Bukata Amos; Ishaku Amos; Kalla Amos; Amos Daniel; Samidah Joel; and Changtan Joel.

The Muslim jihadists also stole money and the other valuables from the Christian village as they withdrew, church sources said. 

The area has a history of sectarian violence, and the attack follows the death of hundreds of people in Bauchi and other northern states last month after Muslims rioted over the April 16 election of a Christian, Goodluck Jonathan, as president. He defeated a Muslim candidate, Muhammadu Buhari. Saying more than 200 church buildings were burned, Christian leaders in northern Nigeria have called for a federal probe into the violence, in which Christians mounted counter attacks.

Northern Nigeria climbed to 23rd place in 2010 from 27th in 2009 on Christian support organization Open Doors’ World Watch List of nations with the worst persecution. 

The church where Pastor Rike ministers has about 30 members and has been in existence for more than 50 years. Those killed were members of the three churches in the village – the COCIN church, St. John’s Catholic Church and an Evangelical Church of West Africa congregation. 

Pastor Rike said the incident has strengthened his faith in Jesus. 

“Whatever is the situation, I will never forsake Christ,” he said. “All human beings are created by God, and our attackers must know that they need to abandon anything that will lead them to destroy creations of God.”


Nigeria’s population of more than 158.2 million is almost evenly divided between Christians, who make up 51.3 percent of the population and live mainly in the south, and Muslims, who account for 45 percent of the population and live mainly in the north. The percentages may be less, however, as those practicing indigenous religions may be as high as 10 percent of the total population, according to Operation World
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