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
(Page 4 of 4)
“State security is sleeping about what is going on in the churches.”
An Egyptian journalist, who spoke on condition of anonymity, watched the scene with some surprise. “Now Salafists have the freedom to gather, while before state security would have squashed them,” she told me.
Three days later, at a packed political conference at Al- Azhar University in Cairo, I met Abdel Moneim Al-Shahat, the burly, bearded head of the Salafist movement in Alexandria. The sect had started a political party, Al Nour, and was calling for an Islamic state. Yet Al-Shahat insisted that Salafists believe in a pluralistic society. “Salafists protected churches in Alexandria and elsewhere during the revolution,” he said, insisting that the May church burnings were instigated by “Christians who felt that they were losing power [under the new regime].” He did not elaborate.
Christian leaders are understandably divided over Egypt’s incipient democratic process. Some fear it will open the way for further discrimination against Copts; others say that it will encourage Islamists to moderate their views. There is similar disagreement about the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. Christians cheered the rapid reconstruction of the three burned churches in Cairo and Sol. “They really fulfilled this commitment graciously,” Youssef Sidhom told me. And the military government has advocated a Unified Law for Places of Worship, which would remove strictures that make building a church in Egypt nearly impossible. But Sidhom says that some members of the council have cozied up to Islamic fundamentalists and the justice system has fallen short. The Copt whose ear was severed was persuaded by local government officials to drop the case. And none of those who destroyed the church in Sol have been arrested.
Sheik Mahmoud Yusuf Beheiri, 60, a Muslim community leader who lives a few blocks from the Church of St. Mina and St. George in Sol, defended the decision not to pursue the culprits, saying that doing so “would create even more hatred between people. Also, the number was so big that this would not be practical. Also, they were just crazy youth.” Beheiri told me he had sheltered some two dozen Christians whose homes were being looted, adding that he hoped he had set an example in the town. “Religious figures have a big role now,” he said. “Sheiks have to educate their youth, priests have to educate their youth, on how relationships between Muslims and Christians should be. This is the best way to prevent this from happening again.”
Down the street, in his airless office at the church, Father Basili Saad Basilios, 44, who is St. Mina and St. George’s priest, sounded less optimistic. The church burning, he said, wasn’t the first act of violence against Christians in the town. In 2000, the Copt who founded the church was shot by Muslim attackers; his murder was never solved. “If it were an isolated case, I wouldn’t have had Pampers full of excrement thrown at me on the street,” he told me. Still, he said he would “turn the other cheek” and carry on. Basilios’s predecessor as head priest couldn’t muster the same resolve. The day after the church was burned, Basilios said, he fled to Cairo, vowing never to return.
Joshua Hammer is based in Berlin. Photographer Alfred Yaghobzadeh is working on a project documenting the Copts.
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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