A New Crisis for Egypt's Copts
The toppling of Egypt's government has led to a renewal of violence against the nation's Christian minority
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Alfred Yaghobzadeh
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2011, Subscribe
Fakhri Saad Eskander leads me through the marble-tiled courtyard of the Church of St. Mina and St. George in Sol, Egypt. We pass a mural depicting St. George and the Dragon, climb a freshly painted staircase to the roof and gaze across a sea of mud-brick houses and date palm trees. Above us rises a white concrete dome topped by a gold cross, symbols of Coptic Christianity. The church—rebuilt after its destruction by an Islamic mob four months earlier—has a gleaming exterior that contrasts with the dun-brown townscape here, two hours south of Cairo. “We are grateful to the army for rebuilding our church for us,” says Eskander, a lean, bearded man of 25 who wears a gray abaya, a traditional Egyptian robe. “During the time of Mubarak, this would never have been possible.”
Eskander, the church custodian, was on the roof the night of March 4 when some 2,000 Muslims chanting “Death to Christians” arrived at the compound in fevered pursuit of a Coptic man believed to have taken refuge inside. The man had been involved with a Muslim woman—taboo throughout Egypt—setting off a dispute that ended only when the woman’s father and cousin had shot each other dead. The pair had been buried that afternoon, and when a rumor spread that another Christian was using the church to perform black magic against Muslims, “the whole town went crazy,” Eskander says.
He leads me downstairs into the chapel. As the sun filters through stained-glass windows, he and a Muslim acquaintance, Essam Abdul Hakim, describe how the mob knocked down the gates, then set the church on fire. On his cellphone, Hakim shows me a grainy video of the attack, which shows a dozen young men smashing a ten-foot log against the door. The mob then looted and torched the homes of a dozen Christian families across the street. “Before the January 25 revolution there had always been security,” Eskander tells me. “But during the revolution, the police disappeared.”
One hopeful thing did come from the attack. During the 30-year era of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who this past August was hauled to court in his sickbed to face murder and corruption charges, outbreaks of sectarian violence were typically swept under the rug. This time, YouTube videos spread on the Internet, and journalists and human rights workers flocked to Sol. In addition, Muslim leaders in Cairo, as well as Coptic figures, traveled to the town for reconciliation meetings. And the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the 20-member panel of generals that took power after Mubarak stepped down this past February, dispatched a 100-man team of army engineers to reconstruct the church. With a budget of two million Egyptian pounds (about $350,000), they finished the job in 28 days. When I got to town in July, a small contingent of troops was laying the foundation of an adjoining religious conference center that had also been destroyed.
Repairing the psychic damage will take longer. “At the beginning I was filled with hate,” Eskander tells me. Today, though he still regards his Muslim neighbors with distrust, he says his anger has abated. “I realized that not all Muslims are the same,” he says. “I have started to calm down.”
The Coptic branch of Christianity dates to the first century A.D. when, scholars say, St. Mark the Evangelist converted some Jews in Alexandria, the great Greco-Roman city on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast. (The name Copt derives from the Arabic word Qubt, meaning Egyptian.) Copts now make up between 7 percent and 10 percent of the country’s population, or 7 million to 11 million people, and are an integral part of Egypt’s business, cultural and intellectual life. Yet they have long suffered from discrimination by the Muslim majority. Violent incidents have increased alarmingly during the wave of Islamic fanaticism that has swept the Middle East.
On New Year’s Day 2011, a bomb exploded in the birthplace of the Coptic faith, Alexandria, in front of al-Qiddissin church, the largest of the city’s 60 Coptic churches, as worshipers were leaving midnight Mass. Twenty-one died. “We all rushed into the street and saw the carnage,” said Father Makkar Fawzi, the church’s priest for 24 years. “Those who had gone downstairs ahead of the rest were killed.” Alexandria “has become a focal point of the [Islamic fundamentalists], a breeding ground of violence,” says Youssef Sidhom, the editor of Watani (Homeland), a Coptic newspaper in Cairo.
Since the New Year’s Day bombing, sectarian attacks against Egypt’s Copts have escalated. Forty Egyptians died in 22 incidents in the first half of this year; 15 died in all of 2010. Human rights groups say the breakdown of law and order in the first months after Mubarak’s ouster is partly to blame. Another factor has been the emergence of the ultraconservative Salafist Muslim sect, which had been suppressed during the Mubarak dictatorship. Salafists have called for jihad against the West and the creation of a pure Islamic state in Egypt. “They announced that their role is to defend ‘real Islam,’” says Watani’s Sidhom, “and that the tool they would use is the early Islamic penal code.”
In one incident this past March, Salafists attacked a 45-year-old Copt in the Upper Egyptian town of Qena, slicing off his ear. The Muslims claimed the man had had an affair with a Muslim woman. “We have applied the law of Allah, now come and apply your law,” the assailants told police, according to the victim’s account. Salafists were also blamed for the violence that erupted in Cairo on May 8, after a rumor spread that a female Christian convert to Islam had been kidnapped and was being held captive in a Cairo church. Led by Salafists, armed crowds converged on two churches. Christians fought back, and when the melee ended, at least 15 people lay dead, some 200 were injured and two churches had been burned to the ground.
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Comments (4)
Quite clearly it is wrong to be attacking and killing people but it's also important to keep in mind that not all Muslims are like that. There are millions of Muslims in the world but only a select few denominations are extremists who will attack. We should remember not to allow our perspective of Muslims to be skewed by these extremists; many moderate Muslims would not even claim the extremists to be part of their religion. Muslim does not equate with terrorist, they are people just like all of us who are poorly represented in the news by a marginal select few who are performing atrocities.
Posted by Kaity Anstrom on November 10,2011 | 07:47 PM
We must be cautious not to judge, and be just as they are. "You do err, not knowing the Scriptures."
Remember there are 2 fathers. We are either of our father God, or of our father the Devil. There is no in between.
"By their fruits you shall know whether they be of God." "Now abide these 3...Faith, Hope, Love. And the greatest of these is love."
Where there is nothing but hate (even our own) we are not of our father God, but of our father the Devil.
There is no "religion" existant that has been free of its abominations. But the true Christian is not part of any religion. "Religions" are man made. The true Christian is a diciple of Jesus Christ. A very, very different thing.
We err when we look at any population or "religion" and expect anything of them other than baseness. Outside of Christ there is no good. "Narrow is the path that leads to salvation, and FEW there are that find it." Know the Scriptures (the truth) and it will set you free.
Remember this world is destined for destruction and being made anew. Don't expect goodness. Expect persecution, death, wars and rumors of wars...expect things to get worse because they will. Far worse. Salvation is individual...a personal relationship with the Savior. Not based on race or religion.
Man is inherently evil...not inherently good. (Know the Scriptures again.) Watch your expectations, as every unfulfilled expectation will always lead to a resultant frustration, clear in the postings seen above.
Posted by Lloyd Hedberg on November 6,2011 | 01:02 PM
This article illustrates the truth that prosperity will never come to the Arab world in spite of all the oil until and unless they acknowledge the fundamental rights of man, as elicited by Thomas Jefferson in our Declaration of Independence and embodied by the US Constitution. They could start by guaranteeing the freedom of religion, & prosecuting the islamist mobs that kill & pillage those whose religion differs from their own.
However, I do not expect those savages to do that.
Posted by Robert Black on October 17,2011 | 04:36 PM
Apparently, this so-called "Arab Spring" was meant to only apply to the Islamic citizens of the region. Anyone who does not conform to that is seen as "fair game", it seems.
"Arab Spring", my eye! All that has been achieved is exchanging one despotic government in Egypt for another. That simple, that plain.
Posted by Odyssey8 on October 11,2011 | 05:30 PM