Persecution of Christians is the religious
persecution of
Christians as a consequence
of professing their faith, both historically and in the current
era.
Early Christians were persecuted for their faith, at the hands of
both
Jews from whose religion Christianity was
an offshoot, and the
Roman Empire which
controlled much of the land early Christianity was distributed
across. This continued from the first century until the early
fourth, when the religion was legalised by
Constantine I.
In later
centuries, Christians have been persecuted by other religious
groups including Muslims and Hindus, and by atheistic
states such as the USSR
.
There is also a long history of individual Christian sects
suffering persecution at the hands of other Christians.
Persecution of early Christians in Palestine
Early Christianity, began as a
sect among early
Jews and according to the New
Testament account,
Pharisees, including
Paul prior to his convesion to Christianity, persecuted early
Christians. The early Christians preached a Messiah which did not
conform to the expectations of the time. However, feeling that he
was presaged in
Isaiah's
Suffering Servant and in all of Jewish
scripture, Christians had been hopefull that their countrymen would
accept their vision of a New Israel. Despite many individual
conversions, a fierce opposition was found in their
countrymen.
Dissention began almost immediately with the unorthodox teaching by
Stephen at Jerusalem, and never ceased
entirely while the city remained. A year after the crucifixion
Stephen was stoned for his transgression, Saul heartily agreeing
(the man who later converted and was renamed "Paul.")
In A.D. 41, when Agrippa I, who already possessed the territory of
Antipas and Phillip, obtained the power of the procurator in Judea,
hence reforming the Kingdom of Herod, he was eager to endear
himself to his Jewish subjects and continued the persecution in
which James the lesser lost his life, Peter narowly escaped and the
rest of the apostles took flight.
After Agrippa's death, procuratorship resumed and those leaders
maintained a neutral peace, until the procurator Festus died and
the high priest Annas II took advantage of the power vacuum to
attack the Church and executed James the greater, then leader of
Jerusalem's Christians.
The New Testament says that Paul was himself imprisoned on several
occasions by the Roman authorities, stoned by Pharisees and left
for dead on one occasion, and was eventually taken as a prisoner to
Rome
. Peter and others were also imprisoned,
beaten and generally harassed. The Roman killing of 3,000 Jews
incited a revolt leading to the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D.
70, the
end of sacrificial Judaism, and the disempowering the persecutors;
the Christian community, meanwhile, having fled to safety in the
already pacified region of Pella
. The
early persecution by the Jews is estimated to have a death toll of
about 2,000. The Jewish persecutions were trivial when compared
with the brutal and widespread persecution by the Romans.
Of the eleven remaining
apostles
(
Judas Iscariot having killed
himself), only one-
John, the son
of Zebedee and Salome, the younger brother of James and the writer
of the
Book of Revelation- died
of natural causes in exile. The other ten were reportedly martyred
by various means including beheading, by sword and spear and, in
the case of Peter, crucifixion upside down following the execution
of his wife.
The
New Testament relates the
Christian accounts of
the Pharisee rejection of
Jesus and accusations of
the Pharisee
responsibility for his crucifixion. The
Acts of the Apostles depicts instances
of early Christian persecution by the Sanhedrin, the Hebrew
religious establishment of the time.This theme plays an important
part in a number of Christian doctrines ranging from the release of
Christians from obeying the many strictures of the Old Testament
Law (see
Antinomianism) to the
commandment to preach to all nations meaning to Gentiles as well as
the Hebrew people (see
Great
Commission).
Walter Laqueur argues that hostility between Christians and Jews
grew over the generations. By the Fourth century
John Chrysostom was arguing that the
Pharisees alone, not the Romans, were responsible for the murder of
Christ. However, according to Laqueur: "Absolving
Pilate from guilt may have been connected with the
missionary activities of early Christianity in Rome and the desire
not to antagonize those they want to convert."
At least by the fourth century, the consensus amongst scholars is
that persecution by Jews of Christians has been traditionally
overstated; according to James Everett Seaver,
Much of Christian hatred toward the Jews was based on
the popular misconception... that the Jews had been the active
persecutors of Christians for many centuries...
The... examination of the sources for fourth century
Jewish history will show that the universal, tenacious, and
malicious Jewish hatred of Christianity referred to by the church
fathers and countless others has no existence in historical
fact.
The generalizations of patristic writers in support of
the accusation have been wrongly interpreted from the fourth
century to the present day.
That individual Jews hated and reviled the Christians
there can be no doubt, but there is no evidence that the Jews as a
class hated and persecuted the Christians as a class during the
early years of the fourth century.
Persecution of early Christians in the Roman Empire
Persecution under Nero, 64-68 A.D.
The first documented case of imperially-supervised persecution of
the Christians in the
Roman Empire
begins with
Nero (37-68). In 64 A.D., a
great fire broke out in Rome,
destroying portions of the city and economically devastating the
Roman population. Nero himself was suspected as the arsonist by
Suetonius, claiming he played the lyre and
sang the 'Sack of Ilium' during the fires. In his
Annals,
Tacitus (who claimed Nero was in Antium at
the time of the fire's outbreak), stated that "
to get rid of
the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most
exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called
Christians [or Chrestians]
by the populace" (Tacit.
Annals XV, see
Tacitus on
Jesus). Suetonius, later to the period, does not mention any
persecution after the fire, but in an previous paragraph unrelated
to the fire, mentions punishments inflicted on Christians, defined
as men following a new and malefic superstition. Suetonius however
does not specify the reasons for the punishment, he just listed the
fact together with other abuses put down by Nero.
Persecution from the second century to Constantine
By the mid 2nd century, mobs could be found willing to throw stones
at Christians, and they might be mobilized by rival sects. The
Persecution in Lyon was preceded
by mob violence, including assaults, robberies and stonings
(Eusebius,
Ecclesiastical History 5.1.7).
Further state persecutions were desultory until the third century,
though
Tertullian's
Apologeticus of 197 was ostensibly written
in defense of persecuted Christians and addressed to Roman
governors. The "edict of
Septimius
Severus" familiar in Christian history is doubted by some
secular historians to have existed outside Christian
martyrology.
The first documentable Empire-wide persecution took place under
Maximinus Thrax, though only the
clergy were sought out. It was not until
Decius during the mid-century that a persecution of
Christian laity across the Empire took place. Christian sources
aver that a decree was issued requiring public sacrifice, a
formality equivalent to a testimonial of allegiance to the Emperor
and the established order. Decius authorized
roving commissions visiting the cities and
villages to supervise the execution of the sacrifices and to
deliver written certificates to all citizens who performed them.
Christians were often given opportunities to avoid further
punishment by publicly offering sacrifices or burning incense to
Roman gods, and were accused by the Romans of impiety when they
refused. Refusal was punished by arrest, imprisonment, torture, and
executions. Christians fled to safe havens in the countryside and
some purchased their certificates, called
libelli.
Several
councils held at Carthage
debated the
extent to which the community should accept these lapsed
Christians.
The Great Persecution
The persecutions culminated with
Diocletian and
Galerius
at the end of the third and beginning of the fourth century. The
Great Persecution is considered
the largest. Beginning with a series of four edicts banning
Christian practices and ordering the imprisonment of Christian
clergy, the persecution intensified until all Christians in the
empire were commanded to sacrifice to the gods or face immediate
execution. Over 20,000 Christians are thought to have died during
Diocletian's reign. However, as
Diocletian zealously persecuted Christians in the
Eastern part of the empire, his co-emperors in the West did not
follow the edicts and so Christians in Gaul, Spain, and Britannia
were virtually unmolested.
This persecution lasted, until
Constantine
I came to power in 313 and legalized Christianity. It was not
until
Theodosius I in the later fourth
century that Christianity would become the official religion of the
Empire. Between these two events
Julian II temporarily restored the
traditional Roman religion and established broad religious
tolerance renewing Pagan and Christian hostilities.
Some early Christians sought out and welcomed martyrdom. Roman
authorities tried hard to avoid Christians because they "goaded,
chided, belittled and insulted the crowds until they demanded their
death."
193 One man shouted to the Roman officials: "I
want to die! I am a Christian," leading the officials to respond:
"If they wanted to kill themselves, there was plenty of cliffs they
could jump off."
194 Such seeking after death is found in
Tertullian's
Scorpiace but was
certainly not the only view of martyrdom in the Christian church.
Both
Polycarp and
Cyprian, bishops in Smyrna and Carthage
respectively, attempted to avoid martyrdom.
The conditions under which
martyrdom was
an acceptable fate or under which it was suicidally embraced
occupied writers of the early Christian Church. Broadly speaking,
martyrs were considered uniquely exemplary of the Christian faith,
and few early saints were not also martyrs.
The
New Catholic Encyclopedia states that "Ancient,
medieval and early modern hagiographers were inclined to exaggerate
the number of martyrs. Since the title of martyr is the highest
title to which a Christian can aspire, this tendency is natural".
Estimates of Christians killed for religious reasons before the
year 313 vary greatly, depending on the scholar quoted, from a high
of almost 100,000 to a low of 10,000.
Persecutions of early Christians outside the Roman Empire
In 341,
Shapur II ordered the massacre of
all Christians in Persia. During the persecution, about 1,150
Christians were martyred under Shapur II. In the 4th century, the
Terving King
Athanaric began persecuting Christians, many of
whom were killed.
Persecution of Christians by Christians
As with many religions, Christianity is not a theologically
homogeneous group. There exist many denominations of Christianity,
which often find themselves at odds with each other.
Upon the establishment of official ties between the state and
Christianity, the state and the Church turned their considerable
attention to those deemed
heretics. The
first nonconforming Christian executed was
Priscillian. Many 4th century examples of such a
situation involved
Arianism, which held,
against the orthodox tradition, that
Jesus was
not "one in unity with the Father", but instead was a created
being, not on the same level with God, above humans but below
God the Father.
In the Eastern Roman Empire Emperors were established as both
Orthodox and Arian as Constantine's own sons
Constantius II,
Constantine II (who proceeded
Constantine I) were Arian. Later still, the Emperor Valens also was
an Arian. The Germanic
Goths and
Vandals adhered to Arian Christianity, establishing
Arian states in Italy and Spain. Orthodox Christians defended
themselves vigorously against these foreign Arians.
In 429 the
Vandals (who were Arians)
conquered
Roman Africa. Catholics
were discriminated against; Church property was confiscated.
Thousands of Catholics were banished from Vandal held territory.
St. Augustine, for example, died
while in a town besieged by the Arian Vandals. As it was
the fall of Rome to the Goths,
tribes who throughout their histories, were a mix of Pagan and
Arian Christians.
In the
medieval period the Roman Catholic Church moved to suppress the
Cathar heresy, the Pope
having sanctioned a crusade against
the Albigensians; during the course of which the massacre of
Beziers
took place, with between seven and twenty thousand
deaths. (This was the occasion when the papal legate,
Arnaud Amalric, asked about how
Catholics could be distinguished from Cathars once the city fell,
famously replied, "Kill them all, God will know His own."). Over
the twenty year period of this campaign an estimated 200,000 to
1,000,000 people were killed.
John Huss, a
Bohemian preacher of reformation, was burned at the
stake on July 6, 1415.
Pope Martin V
issued a bull on 17 March 1420 which proclaimed a
crusade “for the destruction of the Wycliffites,
Hussites and all other
heretic in Bohemia".
The
Crusades in the
Middle East also spilled over into conquest of
Eastern Orthodox Christians
by Roman Catholics and attempted suppression of the Orthodox
Church. The
Waldenses were as well
persecuted by the Catholic Church, but survive up to this day. The
Reformation led to a long period of warfare and communal violence
between Catholic and
Protestant factions,
leading to massacres and forced suppression of the alternative
views by the dominant faction in many countries. In the 1572
St. Bartholomew's Day
Massacre the French king ordered the murder of Protestants in
France.
Intolerance of dissident forms of
Protestantism continued, as evidenced by the exodus of the Pilgrims who sought refuge in America, founding the
Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts
in 1620. In the modern period, such events include
violence between Mormons and Protestants in the United States
during the 19th century. That century also saw
the alleged martyrdom of St. Peter the Aleut at the hands of Roman Catholic clergy in San Francisco,
California
.
Anti-Catholic
Anti-Catholicism officially began in 1534 during the
English Reformation; the
Act of Supremacy made the King of England
the 'only supreme head on earth of the Church in England.' Any act
of allegiance to the latter was considered treason. It was under
this act that
Thomas More was executed.
Queen Elizabeth I's scorn for
Jesuit missionaries led to many executions at Tyburn
. As
punishment for the rebellion of 1641, almost all lands owned by
Irish Catholics were confiscated and
given to Protestant settlers.
Under the
penal laws no Irish
Catholic could sit in the
Parliament of Ireland, even though
some 90% of Ireland's population was native Irish Catholic when the
first of these bans was introduced in 1691.
Catholic / Protestant
strife has been blamed for much of "The
Troubles," the ongoing struggle in Northern Ireland
.
This
attitude was carried to the American colonies, which would leave
England
, forming the United States
. In the English colonies, Catholicism was
introduced with the settling of Maryland
in 1634; this colony offered a rare example of
religious toleration in a
fairly intolerant age, particularly amongst other English colonies
which frequently exhibited a quite militant Protestantism. (See the Maryland Toleration Act, and note
the pre-eminence of the Archdiocese of Baltimore
in Catholic circles.) However, at the time of the
American Revolution, Catholics
formed less than 1% of the population of the thirteen
colonies.
Although there has been a strong anti-Catholic sentiment in North
America since before the dawn of the US, the feeling grew stronger
during waves of Catholic
immigration
from old
Europe.
These huge numbers of
immigrant Catholics came from Ireland
, Southern Germany
, Italy
, Poland
and Eastern Europe. Nationalist,
nativist feeling was represented by the
Know-Nothing Party. Father
James Coyle, a
Roman Catholic priest, was murdered in 1921
by the
Ku Klux Klan.
Anti-Protestant

The Bartholomew's Day massacre
-Protestantism originated in a reaction by the Catholic Church
against the
Protestant
Reformation of the 16th century. Protestants were denounced as
heretics and subject to persecution in those territories, such as
Spain, Italy and the Netherlands, in which the Catholics were the
dominant power. This movement was orchestrated by Popes and Princes
as the
Counter Reformation. This
resulted in religious wars and eruptions of sectarian hatred such
as the
St Bartholomew's
Day Massacre.
Persecution of the Anabaptists
When the disputes between Lutherans and Roman Catholics gained a
political dimension, both groups saw other groups of religious
dissidents that were arising as a danger to their own security. The
early "Täufer" (lit. "Baptists") were mistrusted and rejected by
both religio-political parties. Religious persecution is often
perpetrated as a means of political control, and this becomes
evident with the
Treaty of
Augsburg in 1555. This treaty provided the legal groundwork for
persecution of the Anabaptists.
Anti-Mormon
Members of the
Latter Day
Saint Movement, (commonly known as
Mormons) have been persecuted since the faith's
creation in the 1830s.
This drove the early Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints from New York
and Ohio
to Missouri
, where they continued to suffer violent
attacks. In 1838, Gov. Lilburn Boggs declared that Mormons
had made war on the state of Missouri, and “must be treated as
enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the state, if
necessary, for the public good.”
The Mormon community subsequently fled again to
Nauvoo, Illinois, where hostilities between Mormons,
non-Mormons and former Mormons again escalated. In Carthage,
Illinois, where
Joseph Smith was being
held on on the charge of treason, a mob with painted faces stormed
the jail and assassinated the "Mormon prophet". Smith was shot,
falling out the second-story window of the jail after which he was
shot several more times upon hitting the ground. Smith's brother,
Hyrum, was also killed in the assault.
This and other events
ultimately caused an exodus by the Latter-day Saints, led by
Brigham Young, to Utah
, which was
not a part of the United States at the time.
Muslim persecution of Christians
Ottoman Empire
The
Young Turks government of the
collapsing
Ottoman Empire in
1915 persecuted
Christian populations in Anatolia,
Syria and Mesopotamia, resulting in an estimated 1.5 million
deaths, divided between roughly 0.6 million
Armenian Christians, 0.2 million
Syriac Christians and 0.3 million
Greek Orthodox
Christians.
Republic of Turkey
In modern
Turkey
, the
Istanbul pogrom was a
state-sponsored and state-orchestrated pogrom
that compelled Greek Christians to leave Istanbul
(Constantinople
), the first Christian city in violation to the
Treaty of Lausanne (see Istanbul Pogrom). The issue of
Christian genocides by the Turks may become a problem, since Turkey
wishes to join the
European
Union.
The
Ecumenical Patriarchate of
Constantinople
is still in a difficult position. Turkey
requires by law that the
Ecumenical
Patriarch must be an
ethnic Greek,
holding Turkish citizenship by birth, although most of the
Greek minority has been expelled.
The
state's expropriation of church property and the closing of the
Orthodox Theological
School of Halki
are also
difficulties faced by the Church of Constantinople.
Despite
appeals from the United
States
, the European Union
and various governmental and non-governmental organizations, the
School remains closed since 1971.
Persecution of Christians has continued in modern Turkey. On
February 5, 2006, the Catholic priest
Andrea Santoro was murdered in Trabzon
by a student influenced by the reactions following
the Jyllands-Posten
Muhammad cartoons controversy. On April 18, 2007, 3
Christians were brutally murdered in
Malatya
, the hometown of Mehmet Ali Ağca, the assassin who shot
and wounded Pope John Paul II on
May 13, 1981.
Iraq
According to
UNHCR, although Christians
represent less than 5% of the total Iraqi population, they make up
40% of the refugees now living in nearby countries. Northern Iraq
remained predominantly Christian until the destructions of
Tamerlane at the end of the 14th century.
The
Church of the East has its origin
in what is now South East Turkey
.
By the
end of the 13th century there were twelve Nestorian dioceses in a strip from Peking to Samarkand
. When the 14th-century Muslim warlord of
Turco-Mongol descent, Tamerlane (Timul Lenk), conquered Persia
, Mesopotamia and Syria
, the
civilian population was decimated. Timur Lenk had 70,000
Assyrian Christians beheaded in Tikrit
, and 90,000
more in Baghdad
.
In the 16th century, Christians were half the population of Iraq.
In 1987, the last Iraqi census counted 1.4 million Christians. They
were tolerated under the
secular regime of
Saddam Hussein, who even made one of
them,
Tariq Aziz, his deputy.
Recently,
Christians have seen their total numbers slump to about 500,000
today, of whom 250,000 live in Baghdad
. An exodus to the neighboring countries of
Syria
, Jordan
and Turkey
has left
behind closed parishes, seminaries and convents. As a small
minority without a militia of their own, Iraqi Christians have been
persecuted by both
Shi’a and
Sunni Muslim militias, and also by criminal
gangs.
As of June 21, 2007, the
UNHCR estimated that
2.2 million Iraqis had been displaced to neighboring countries, and
2 million were displaced internally, with nearly 100,000 Iraqis
fleeing to Syria and Jordan each month.
A May 25, 2007
article notes that in the past seven months only 69 people from
Iraq
have been granted refugee
status in the United
States
.
Chaldean Catholic priest Fr.
Ragheed Aziz
Ganni and subdeacons Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho, and
Gassan Isam Bidawed were killed in the ancient city of Mosul
last
year. Fr. Ragheed Aziz Ganni was driving with his three
deacons when they were stopped and demanded to convert to Islam,
when they refused they were shot.
Six months later, the body of Paulos Faraj Rahho, archbishop of
Mosul, was
found buried near Mosul
. He
was kidnapped on February 29, 2008 when his bodyguards and driver
were killed.
In 2004, five churches were destroyed by bombing. Tens of thousands
of Christians fled the country.
Lebanon - Christian casualties of war
The war in Lebanon saw a number of massacres of both Christians and
Muslims. Among the earliest was the
Damour Massacre in 1976 when Palestinian
militias attacked Christian civilians in retaliation for the
Karantina Massacre, in which
around one thousand civilians (Palestinian, Shi'ite, and others)
were murdered by Lebanese Christian militias. The persecution in
Lebanon combined sectarian, political, ideological, and retaliation
reasons.
The Syrian
regime
was also involved in persecuting Christians as well
as Muslims in Lebanon.
Sudan
In Sudan, it is estimated that over 1.5 million Christians have
been killed by the
Janjaweed, the Arab
Muslim militia, and even suspected
Islamists in northern Sudan since 1984.
[4140]It should also be noted that Sudan's several
civil wars (which often take the form of
genocidal campaigns) are often not only or purely religious in
nature, but also ethnic, as many black Muslims, as well as Muslim
Arab tribesmen, have also been killed in the conflicts.
It is estimated that as many as 200,000 people had been taken into
slavery during the
Second Sudanese Civil War. The
slaves are mostly
Dinka people.
India
In spite of the fact that there have been relatively fewer
conflicts between Muslims and Christians in India in comparison to
those between Muslims and Hindus, or Muslims and Sikhs, the
relationship between Muslims and Christians have been occasionally
turbulent. With the advent of European colonialism in India
throughout the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, Christians were
systematically persecuted in a few Muslim ruled kingdoms in
India.
Perhaps
the most infamous acts of anti-Christian persecution by Muslims was
committed by Tippu Sultan, the ruler of
the Kingdom of Mysore against the
Mangalorean Catholic community
from Mangalore
and the erstwhile South
Canara district on the southwestern coast of India.
Tippu was widely reputed to be anti-Christian.
The captivity of
Mangalorean Catholics at Seringapatam
, began on 24 February 1784 and ended on 4 May
1799.
The Bakur Manuscript reports him as having said:
"All Musalmans
should unite together, and considering the annihilation of infidels
as a sacred duty, labor to the utmost of their power, to accomplish
that subject."Soon after the
Treaty of Mangalore in 1784, Tippu
gained control of Canara.
He issued orders to seize the Christians in
Canara, confiscate their estates, and deport them to Seringapatam,
the capital of his empire, through the Jamalabad fort
route. There were no priests among the
captives. Together with Fr Miranda, all the 21 arrested priests
were issued orders of expulsion to Goa, fined Rs 2 lakhs, and
threatened death by hanging if they ever returned.
Tippu ordered the destruction of 27 Catholic churches.
Among them were the
Church of Nossa Senhora de Rosario Milagres at Mangalore
, Fr Miranda's Seminary at Monte Mariano, Church of Jesu Marie Jose at
Omzoor, Chapel at Bolar,
Church of Merces at Ullal
, Imaculata
Conceiciao at Mulki, San Jose at Perar, Nossa Senhora dos Remedios at Kirem, Sao Lawrence at Karkal
, Rosario at
Barkur
, Immaculata
Conceciao at Baidnur. All were razed to the
ground, with the exception of the The Church of Holy Cross
at Hospet
,owing to
the friendly offices of the Chauta Raja of Moodbidri
.
According to
Thomas
Munro, a Scottish soldier and the first collector of Canara,
around 60,000 of them, nearly 92 percent of the entire
Mangalorean Catholic community, were captured, only 7,000 escaped.
Francis Buchanan gives the
numbers as 70,000 captured, from a population of 80,000, with
10,000 escaping. They were forced to climb nearly through the
jungles of the
Western Ghat mountain
ranges. It was from Mangalore to Seringapatam, and the journey took
six weeks. According to British Government records, 20,000 of
them died on the march to Seringapatam. According to James Scurry,
a British officer, who was held captive along with Mangalorean
Catholics, 30,000 of them were forcibly converted to Islam.
The young women and girls were forcibly made wives of the Muslims
living there. The young men who offered resistance were disfigured
by cutting their noses, upper lips, and ears.
According to Mr.
Silva of Gangolim
, a survivor of the captivity, if a person who had
escaped from Seringapatam was found, the punishment under the
orders of Tippu was the cutting off of the ears, nose, the feet and
one hand.
Tippu Sultan's invasion of the Malabar had an adverse impact on the
Syrian Malabar Nasrani
community of the Malabar coast.
Many churches in the Malabar and Cochin
were
damaged. The old Syrian Nasrani seminary at Angamaly which
had been the center of Catholic religious education for several
centuries was razed to the ground by Tippu’s soldiers. A lot of
centuries old religious manuscripts were lost forever. The church
was later relocated to Kottayam where it still exists to this date.
The Mor Sabor church at Akaparambu and the Martha Mariam Church
attached to the seminary were destroyed as well. Tippu’s army set
fire to the church at Palayoor and attacked the Ollur Church in
1790. Furthernmore, the Arthat church and the Ambazhakkad seminary
was also destroyed. Over the course of this invasion, many Syrian
Malabar Nasrani were killed or forcibly converted to Islam. Most of
the coconut, arecanut, pepper and cashew plantations held by the
Syrian Malabar farmers were also indiscriminately destroyed by the
invading army.
As a result, when Tippu's army invaded
Guruvayur and adjacent areas, the Syrian Christian community fled
Calicut and small towns like Arthat to new centres like
Kunnamkulam, Chalakudi, Ennakadu, Cheppadu, Kannankode, Mavelikkara
, etc. where there were already Christians.
They were given refuge by Sakthan Tamburan, the ruler of Cochin and
Karthika Thirunal, the ruler of Travancore, who gave them lands,
plantations and encouraged their businesses. Colonel Macqulay, the
British resident of Travancore also helped them.
Tippu's persecution of Christians also extended to captured British
soldiers. For instance, there were a significant amount of forced
conversions of British captives between 1780 and 1784. Following
their disastrous defeat at the
battle
of Pollilur, 7,000 British men along with an unknown number of
women were held captive by Tippu in the fortress of Seringapatnam.
Of these, over 300 were circumcised and given Muslim names and
clothes and several British regimental drummer boys were made to
wear
ghagra cholis and
entertain the court as
nautch girls or dancing girls.
After the 10 year long captivity ended, James Scurry, one of those
prisoners, recounted that he had forgotten how to sit in a chair
and use a knife and fork. His English was broken and stilted,
having lost all his vernacular idiom. His skin had darkened to the
swarthy complexion of
negroes, and moreover,
he had developed an aversion to wearing European clothes.
During the surrender of the Mangalore fort which was delievered in
an armistice by the British and their subsequent withdrawal, all
the
Mestizos and remaining non-British
foreigners were killed, together with 5,600 Mangalorean Catholics.
Those condemned by Tippu Sultan for treachery were hanged
instantly, the gibbets being weighed down by the number of bodies
they carried. The Netravati River was so putrid with the stench of
dying bodies, that the local residents were forced to leave their
riverside homes.
Tippu might have acted against Christians because he believed they
were supporting the British. It might therefore not be due to
religious prejudice. "If Tippu had opposed Christianity, a Bishop
would not attend this function," said Rt.Rev.
Joseph Roy, Bishop of
Mysore speaking on the occasion of Tippu Sultans bicentenary
celebration at Srirangapatna
. He gave examples of the secular character of
Tippu Sultan and the help he gave to the Christians even inviting
Christian Fathers from Goa,
India
to provide religious guidance to Christians in his
state. He decried the false propaganda perpetrated by
ill-informed people about Tippu's bigotry against the Christians.
'If any punishment had been meted out to anybody, it was on the
grounds of crime or disloyalty and not on religious grounds" said
Roy.
Muslims in India who convert to Christianity have been subjected to
harassment, intimidation, and attacks by Muslims. In Jammu &
Kashmir, the only Indian state with a Muslim majority, a Christian
convert and missionary named Bashir Tantray was killed , allegedly
by militant Islamists in 2006.
A Christian priest, K.K. Alavi, a 1970 convert from Islam, thereby
raised the ire of his former Muslim community and received many
death threats. An Islamic terrorist group named "The
National Development Front" actively campaigned
against him..
Pakistan
In Pakistan 1.5% of the population are Christian. Pakistani law
mandates that "blasphemies" of the Qur'an are to be met with
punishment. Ayub Masih, a Christian, was convicted of blasphemy and
sentenced to death in 1998. He was accused by a neighbor of stating
that he supported British writer,
Salman
Rushdie, author of
The
Satanic Verses. Lower appeals courts upheld the
conviction. However, before the Pakistan Supreme Court, his lawyer
was able to prove that the accuser had used the conviction to force
Masih's family off their land and then acquired control of the
property. Masih has been released.
In October 2001, gunmen on motorcycles opened fire on a Protestant
congregation in the Punjab, killing 18 people. Noone knows for sure
who the gunmen were but officials think it might be a
banned Islamic group.
In March 2002, five people were killed in an attack on a church in
Islamabad, including an American schoolgirl and her mother.
In August 2002, masked gunmen stormed a Christian missionary school
for foreigners in Islamabad, six people were killed and three
injured. None of those killed were children of foreign
missionaries.
In August 2002, grenades were thrown at a church in the grounds of
a Christian hospital in north-west Pakistan, near Islamabad,
killing three nurses.
On
September 25, 2002 two terrorists entered the "Peace and Justice
Institute", Karachi
, where they separated Muslims from the Christians,
and then murdered seven Christians by shooting them in the
head. All of the victims were Pakistani Christians. Karachi
police chief Tariq Jamil said the victims had their hands tied and
their mouths had been covered with tape.
In December 2002, three young girls were blown apart when hand
grenade was thrown into a church near Lahore on Christmas
Day.
In November 2005 3,000 militant Islamists attacked Christians in
Sangla Hill in Pakistan and destroyed
Roman Catholic,
Salvation Army and United
Presbyterian churches. The attack was over
allegations of violation of blasphemy laws by a Pakistani Christian
named Yousaf Masih. The attacks were widely condemned by some
political parties in Pakistan.
On June
5, 2006 a Pakistani Christian stonemason, Nasir Ashraf, was working
near Lahore
when he
drank water from a public facility using a glass chained to the
facility. He was assaulted by Muslims for "Polluting the
glass". A mob developed, who beat Ashraf, calling him a "Christian
dog". Bystanders encouraged the beating and joined in. Ashraf was
eventually hospitalized.
One year later, in August 2007, a Christian missionary couple, Rev.
Arif and
Kathleen Khan, were gunned down by militant Islamists in Islamabad
. Pakistani police believed that the murders
was committed by a member of Khan's parish over alleged sexual
harassment by Khan. This assertion is widely doubted by Khan's
family as well as by Pakistani Christians.
In August
2009 six Christians including 4 women and
a child were burnt alive by Muslim militants
and a church set ablaze in
Gojra
, Pakistan
when violence broke
out after alleged desecration of Qu'ran.
Egypt
While the Egyptian government does not have a policy to persecute
Christians, it discriminates against them and hampers their freedom
of worship. Its agencies sporadically persecute Muslim converts to
Christianity. The government enforces
Hamayouni Decree restrictions on building
or repairing churches. These same restrictions, however, do not
apply to mosques.
The government has effectively restricted Christians from senior
government, diplomatic, military, and educational positions, and
there has been increasing discrimination in the private sector. The
government subsidizes media which attack Christianity and restricts
Christians access to the state-controlled media.
In
Egypt
the government does not officially recognize
conversions from Islam to Christianity; because certain interfaith
marriages are not allowed either, this prevents marriages between
converts to Christianity and those born in Christian communities,
and also results in the children of Christian converts being
classified as Muslims and given a Muslim education. The
government also applies religiously-discriminatory laws and
practices concerning clergy salaries.
Foreign missionaries are allowed in the country only if they
restrict their activities to social improvements and refrain from
proselytizing. The
Coptic
Pope Shenouda III was internally
exiled in 1981 by President
Anwar Sadat,
who then chose five Coptic bishops and asked them to choose a new
pope. They refused, and in 1985 President
Hosni Mubarak restored Pope Shenouda III, who
had been accused of fomenting interconfessional strife.
Particularly in Upper Egypt, the rise in extremist
Islamist groups such as the
Gama'at Islamiya during the 1980s was
accompanied by attacks on Copts and on Coptic churches; these have
since declined with the decline of those organizations, but still
continue. The police have been accused of siding with the attackers
in some of these cases.
Many colleges dictate quotas for Coptic students, often around 1 or
2% despite the group making up 15% of the country's population.
There is also a separate tax-funded education system called Al
Azhar, catering to students from elementary to college level, which
accepts no Christian Coptic students, teachers or
administrators.
Hundreds of Christian Coptic girls have been kidnapped and forcibly
converted to Islam, as well as being victims of rape and forced
marriage to Muslim men.
The Copts: Persecuted Christians of Egypt By Mounir
Bishay 5/6/2009
In April 2006, one person was killed and twelve injured in
simultaneous knife attacks on three Coptic churches in
Alexandria.
In November 2008, several thousand Muslims attacked a Coptic church
in a suburb of Cairo on the day of its inauguration, forcing 800
Coptic Christians to barricade themselves in.
On September 18, 2009, a Muslim man called Osama Araban beheaded a
Coptic Christian man in the village of Bagour,
and injured 2 others in 2 different villages. He was arrested the
following day.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
is an Islamic state
that practices Wahhabism and restricts all
other religions, including the possession of religious items such
as the Bible, crucifixes, and Stars of David. Christians are
arrested and lashed in public for practicing their faith openly.
Strict
sharia is enforced. Moslims are
forbidden to convert to another religion. If one does so and does
not recant, they may be executed.
In other Muslim nations
Though
Iran
recognizes Assyrian
and Armenian Christians as a
religious minority (along with Jews and Zoroastrians) and they have
representatives in the Parliament,
after the 1979 Revolution, Muslim
converts to Christianity (typically to Protestant Christianity)
have been arrested and sometimes executed. See also:
Christianity in
Iran.
In the Philippines, the
Moro Islamic Liberation Front
and
Abu Sayyaf has attacked and killed
Christians.
In
Indonesia
, religious conflicts have typically occurred in
Western New
Guinea
, Maluku
(particularly Ambon
), and
Sulawesi
. The presence of Muslims in these regions is
in part a result of the
transmigrasi program of population
re-distribution. Conflicts have often occurred because of the aims
of radical
Islamist organizations such as
Jemaah Islamiah or
Laskar Jihad to impose
Sharia, with such groups attacking Christians and
destroying over 600 churches. In 2006 three Christian girls were
beheaded as retaliation for previous Muslim deaths in
Christian-Muslim rioting. The men were imprisoned for the murders,
including Jemaah Islamiyah's district ringleader Hasanuddin. On
going to jail, Hasanuddin said, "It's not a problem (if I am being
sentenced to prison), because this is a part of our
struggle."
In
Afghanistan
, Abdul
Rahman, a 41-year-old citizen, was charged in 2006 with
rejecting Islam (apostasy), a
crime punishable by death under Sharia
law. He has since been released into exile in the West under
intense pressure from Western governments. In 2008, the
Taliban killed a British charity worker,
Gayle Williams, for being a Christian.
In
Kosovo
, since
June 1999, 156 churches and monasteries have been damaged or
destroyed and several priests have been killed. During the
few days of the 2004
unrest in
Kosovo, 35 churches and monasteries were damaged and some
destroyed by Muslim mobs.
In
Malaysia
, although Islam is the official religion,
Christianity is mostly tolerated, however, in order to be a member
of the majority race (the Malays, one
is legally required to be a Muslim. Also, if a non-Muslim
marries a Muslim, they are legally required to convert to Islam.
There is much debate over whether Malaysia is a liberal
Islamic state or a very religious
secular state.
Full article: Freedom of religion in
Malaysia
In 2002,
a currently unidentified gunman killed Bonnie Penner Witherall at a
prenatal clinic in Sidon,
Lebanon
. She had been
proselytizing and attempting to convert
Muslims to Christianity.
Three
Christian missionaries were killed in their hospital in Jibla,
Yemen
in December 2002. A gunman, apprehended by
the authorities, said that he did it "for his religion."
Dechristianisation of France during the French Revolution
The Dechristianisation of France during the French Revolution is a
conventional description of a campaign, conducted by various
Robespierre-era governments of France
beginning with the start of the
French
Revolution in
1789, in order to eliminate
any symbol that might be associated with the past, especially the
monarchy.
The program included the following policies:
- the deportation of clergy and the condemnation of many of them
to death,
- the closing, desecration and
pilaging of churches, removal of the word "saint" from street names
and other acts to banish Christian culture from the public
sphere
- removal of statues, plates and other iconography from places of
worship
- destruction of crosses, bells and other external signs of
worship
- the institution of revolutionary and civic cults, including the
Cult of Reason and subsequently the
Cult of the Supreme
Being,
- the large scale destruction of religious monuments,
- the outlawing of public and private worship and religious
education,
- forced marriages of the clergy,
- forced abjurement of priesthood, and
- the enactment of a law on October 21, 1793 making all nonjuring
priests and all persons who harbored them liable to death on
sight.
The
climax was reached with the celebration of the Goddess "Reason" in
Notre
Dame
Cathedral on 10 November.
Under threat of death, imprisonment, military conscription or loss
of income, about 20,000 constitutional priests were forced to
abdicate or hand over their letters of ordination and 6,000 - 9,000
were coerced to marry, many ceasing their ministerial duties. Some
of those who abdicated covertly ministered to the people. By the
end of the decade, approximately 30,000 priests were forced to
leave France, and thousands who did not leave were executed.
Most of
France was left without the services of a priest, deprived of the
sacraments and any nonjuring priest faced
the guillotine or deportation to French Guiana
.
The March
1793 conscription requiring Vendeans
to fill their district's quota of 300,000 enraged
the populace, who took up arms as "The Catholic Army", "Royal"
being added later, and fought for "above all the reopening of their
parish churches with their former priests."Joes, Anthony James
Resisting Rebellion: The History and Politics of
Counterinsurgency 2006 University Press of Kentucky ISBN
0813123399. p. 52-53 A massacre of 6,000 Vendée prisoners,
many of them women, took place after the battle of Savenay, along with the drowning of 3,000 Vendée
women at Pont-au-Baux and 5,000 Vendée priests, old men, women, and
children killed by drowning at the Loire River
at Nantes
in what
was called the "national bath" - tied in groups in barges and then
sunk into the Loire.
With these
massacres came formal orders
for forced evacuation; also, a '
scorched
earth' policy was initiated: farms were destroyed, crops and
forests burned and villages razed.
There were many reported atrocities and a
campaign of mass killing universally targeted at residents of the
Vendée
regardless
of combatant status, political affiliation, age or gender.
By July 1796, the estimated Vendean dead numbered between 117,000
and 500,000, out of a population of around 800,000.
Other Early Modern persecution
Christianity was banned for a century in
China by Emperor Kangxi of the
Qing
Dynasty
after the Pope forbade Chinese
Catholics from venerating their relatives
or Confucius. Mr. Ye Xiaowen, China's Religions Retrospect and Prospect,
Hong Kong, 19 February 2001
Communist States
Soviet Union
After the
Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks undertook a massive program to
remove the influence of the Russian Orthodox Church from the
government and Russian
society, and to make the state atheist. Tens of thousands of churches were
destroyed or converted to other uses, and many members of clergy
were imprisoned for anti-government activities. An extensive
education and propaganda campaign was undertaken to convince
people, especially the children and youth, to abandon religious
beliefs. This persecution resulted in the martyrdom of millions of
Orthodox followers in the 20th century by the Soviet Union, whether
intentional or not.
This persecution spread not only to the Orthodox, but also other
groups, such as the
Mennonites, who
largely fled to
the Americas.
Before
and after the October Revolution of November 7, 1917 (October 25
Old Calendar) there was a movement within the Soviet Union
to unite all of the people of the world under
Communist rule (see Communist
International). This included the Eastern European bloc
countries as well as the Balkan States. Since some of these Slavic
states tied their ethnic heritage to their ethnic churches, both
the peoples and their church were targeted by the Soviet and its
form of
State atheism. The Soviets'
official religious stance was one of "religious freedom or
tolerance", though the state established atheism as the only
scientific truth (see also the Soviet or committee of the All-Union
Society for the Dissemination of Scientific and Political Knowledge
or
Znanie which was until 1947 called the
The League of the Militant
Godless and various
Intelligentsia groups). Criticism of atheism
was strictly forbidden and sometimes resulted in imprisonment. Some
of the more high profile individuals executed include
Metropolitan Benjamin of Petrograd,
Priest and scientist
Pavel Florensky
and Bishop
Gorazd
Pavlik.
The Soviet Union was the first state to have as an ideological
objective the elimination of religion. Toward that end, the
Communist regime confiscated church property, ridiculed religion,
harassed believers, and propagated atheism in the schools. Actions
toward particular religions, however, were determined by State
interests, and most organized religions were never outlawed.
It is
estimated that 21 million Russian
Orthodox
Christians were martyred in the
gulags by the Soviet government, not including
torture or other Christian
denominations killed.
Some actions against Orthodox priests and believers along with
execution included
torture being sent to
prison
camps,
labour camps or
mental hospitals.The result of this
militant atheism was to transform the
Church into a persecuted and martyred Church. In the first five
years after the Bolshevik revolution, 28 bishops and 1,200 priests
were executed.
The main target of the anti-religious campaign in the 1920s and
1930s was the Russian Orthodox Church, which had the largest number
of faithful. A very large segment of its clergy, and many of its
believers, were shot or sent to labor camps. Theological schools
were closed, and church publications were prohibited. In the period
between 1927 and 1940, the number of Orthodox Churches in the
Russian Republic fell from 29,584 to less than 500. Between 1917
and 1940, 130,000 Orthodox priests were arrested.The widespread
persecution and internecine disputes within the church hierarchy
lead to the seat of
Patriarch of
Moscow being vacant from 1925-1943.
After Nazi Germany's attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, Joseph
Stalin revived the Russian Orthodox Church to intensify patriotic
support for the war effort. By 1957 about 22,000 Russian Orthodox
churches had become active. But in 1959 Nikita Khrushchev initiated
his own campaign against the Russian Orthodox Church and forced the
closure of about 12,000 churches. By 1985 fewer than 7,000 churches
remained active.
In the Soviet Union, in addition to the methodical closing and
destruction of churches, the charitable and social work formerly
done by ecclesiastical authorities was taken over by the state. As
with all private property, Church owned property was confiscated
into public use. The few places of worship left to the Church were
legally viewed as state property which the government permitted the
church to use. After the advent of state funded universal
education, the Church was not permitted to carry on educational,
instructional activity for children. For adults, only training for
church-related occupations was allowed. Outside of sermons during
the celebration of the divine liturgy it could not instruct or
evangelise to the faithful or its youth. Catechism classes,
religious schools, study groups, Sunday schools and religious
publications were all illegal and or banned. This caused many
religious tracts to be circulated as illegal literature or
samizdat. This persecution continued, even after
the death of Stalin until the
dissolution of the Soviet
Union in 1991. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the Russian
Orthodox Church has recognized a number of
New Martyrs as saints, some executed during
Mass operations of the
NKVD under directives like
NKVD
Order No. 00447.
People's Republic of China
The
communist government of the People's Republic of China
tries to maintain tight control over all
religions, so the only legal Christian Churches (Three-Self Patriotic Movement
and Chinese
Patriotic Catholic Association) are those under the Communist Party of China
control. Churches which are not controlled by the government
are shut down, and their members are imprisoned.
In 2009, Christians must worship in registered, regulated churches.
According to the Jubilee Campaign, an interdenominational lobby
group, about 300 Christians caught attending unregistered churches
were in jail in 2004.
Gong Shengliang, head of the South China Church, was sentenced to
death in 2001. Although his sentence was commuted to a jail
sentence,
Amnesty
International reports that he has been tortured.
19th and 20th century Mexico
In the nineteenth century,
Benito
Juárez confiscated a large amount of church land. The
Mexican government's campaign against the
Catholic Church after the
Mexican
Revolution culminated in the 1917 constitution which contained
numerous articles which Catholics considered violative of their
civil rights: outlawing monastic religious orders, forbidding
public worship outside of church buildings, restricted religious
organizations' rights to own property, and taking away basic civil
rights of members of the clergy (priests and religious leaders were
prevented from wearing their habits, were denied the right to vote,
and were not permitted to comment on public affairs in the press
and were denied the right to trial for violation of
anticlerical laws). When the Church publicly
condemned these measures which had not been strongly enforced, the
atheist President
Plutarco Calles
sought to vigorously enforce the provisions and enacted additional
anti-Catholic legislation known as the Calles Law. Weary of the
persecution, in many parts of the country a popular rebellion
called the
Cristero War began (so named
because the rebels felt they were fighting for Christ
himself).
The effects of the persecution on the Church were profound. Between
1926 and 1934 at least 40 priests were killed. Where there were
4,500 priests serving the people before the rebellion, in 1934
there were only 334 priests licensed by the government to serve
fifteen million people, the rest having been eliminated by
emigration, expulsion and assassination. By 1935, 17 states had no
priest at all.
During the Spanish Civil War
Persecution of Catholics before and at the beginning of the Spanish
Civil war, involved the murder of almost 7,000 priests and other
clergy, as well as thousands of lay people, because of their faith.
The
Republican government which had come to power in Spain
in 1931
was strongly anti-Catholic, secularising education, prohibiting
religious education in the schools, and expelling the Jesuits from the country. On June 3, 1933
Pope Pius XI issued the encyclical
Dilectissima Nobis, in which he
described the expropriation of all Church buildings, episcopal
residences, parish houses, seminaries and monasteries. By law, they
became property of the Spanish State, to which the Church had to
pay rent and taxes in order to continuously use these properties.
"Thus the Catholic Church is compelled to pay taxes on what was
violently taken from her" Religious vestments, liturgical
instruments , statues, pictures, vases, gems and similar objects
necessary for worship were expropriated as well. Numerous churches
and temples were destroyed by burning, after they were
nationalized. All private Catholic schools from
religious orders and Congregations were
expropriated. The purpose was to create solely secular schools
there instead.
Pope Pius XI, who faced
similar persecutions in the USSR and Mexico, called on Spanish
Catholics to defend themselves against the persecution with all
legal means.
During the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939, and especially in the
early months of the conflict, individual clergymen and entire
religious communities were executed by leftists, which included
communists and anarchists. The death toll of the clergy alone
included 13 bishops, 4,172 diocesan priests and seminarians, 2,364
monks and friars and 283 nuns, for a total of 6,832 clerical
victims.
In addition to murders of clergy and the faithful, destruction of
churches and desecration of sacred sites and objects were
widespread. On the night of July 19, 1936 alone, some fifty
churches were burned.
In Barcelona
, out of the 58 churches, only the Cathedral was
spared, and similar desecrations occurred almost everywhere in
Republican Spain. All Catholic churces in the Republican
zone were closed. The desecration was not limited to Catholic
churches, as synagogues and Protestant churches were also pillaged
and closed. Some small Protestant churches were spared.
The terror has been called the "most extensive and violent
persecution of Catholicism in Western History, in some way even
more intense than that of the
French
Revolution."The persecution drove Catholics to the
Nationalists, even more than would have been expected, as these
defended their religious interests and survival.
Franco's Spain
In
Franco's authoritarian Spain, Protestantism was
deliberately marginalized and persecuted. During the Civil War, the
government persecuted the country's 30,000Protestants, and forced
many Protestant pastors to leave the country. Once authoritarian
rule was established, non-Catholic Bibles were confiscated by
police and Protestant schools were closed. Although the 1945
Spanish Bill of Rights purportedly granted freedom of
private worship, Protestants suffered legal discrimination
and non-Catholic religious services were not permitted publicly, to
the extent that they could not be in buildings which had exterior
signs indicating it was a house of worship and that public
activities were prohibited.
Nazism
Nazi Germany
Hitler and the Nazis enjoyed widespread support from traditional
Christian communities, mainly due to a common cause against the
anti-religious German Bolsheviks. Once in power, the Nazis moved to
consolidate their power over the German churches and bring them in
line with Nazi ideals.The Third Reich founded their own version of
Christianity called
Positive
Christianity which made major changes in its interpretation of
the
Bible which said that
Jesus Christ was the son of God, but was not a
Jew and claimed that Christ despised Jews, and that the Jews were
the ones solely responsible for Christ's death. Thus, the Nazi
government consolidated religious power, using allies to
consolidate Protestant churches into the
Protestant Reich Church, which was
effectively an arm of the Nazi Party.
Dissenting Christians went underground and formed the
Confessing Church, which was persecuted as
a subversive group by the Nazi government. Many of its leaders were
arrested and sent to concentration camps, and left the underground
mostly leaderless. Church members continued to engage in various
forms of resistance, including hiding Jews during the
Holocaust and various attempts, largely
unsuccessful, to prod the Christian community to speak out on the
part of the Jews.
The Catholic Church was particularly suppressed in Poland because
of the Church's opposition to many of Nazi Party's beliefs. Between
1939 and 1945, an estimated 3,000 members, 18% of the Polish
clergy, were murdered; of these, 1,992 died in concentration camps.
In the annexed territory of
Reichsgau Wartheland it was
even harsher than elsewhere. Churches were systematically closed,
and most priests were either killed, imprisoned, or deported to the
General Government. The Germans
also closed seminaries and convents persecuting monks and nuns
throughout Poland. In
Pomerania, all but
20 of the 650 priests were shot or sent to concentration camps.
Eighty
percent of the Catholic clergy and five of the bishops of Warthegau
were sent to concentration camps in 1939; in the city of Breslau
(Wrocław), 49% of its Catholic priests
were killed; in Chełmno
, 48%. One hundred eight of them are regarded
as blessed martyrs. Among them,
Maximilian Kolbe was canonized as a
saint.
Protestants in Poland did not fare well either. In the Cieszyn
region of Silesia every single Protestant clergy was arrested and
deported to the death camps.
Not only
were Polish Christians persecuted by the Nazis, in the Dachau
concentration camp
alone, 2,600 Catholic priests from 24 different
countries were killed.
Outside mainstream Christianity,
Jehovah's Witnesses were
direct targets of the Holocaust, for their refusal to swear
allegiance to the Nazi government. Many Jehovah's Witnesses were
given the chance to deny their faith and swear allegiance to the
state, but few agreed. Over 12,000 Witnesses were sent to the
concentration camps, and estimated 2,500-5,000 died in the
Holocaust.
Neo-Nazism
The
white power skinhead
movement in the United States and Europe (especially
Scandinavia) has some anti-Christian factions.
These factions, stemming from racist Nazi doctrines, see
Christianity as weak, Jewish-influenced and futile. They consider
Nazism as the perfect combination of Nordic symbology and
Satanic will-to-power. White power skinheads are
often responsible for vandalizing Christian churches, but have
little mainstream influence.
In Japan
Tokugawa Ieyasu assumed control over
Japan
in 1600. Like Toyotomi Hideyoshi, he
disliked Christian activities in Japan. The
Tokugawa shogunate finally decided to ban
Catholicism, in 1614 and in the mid 1600's demanded the expulsion
of all European missionaries and the execution of all converts.
This marked the end of open Christianity in Japan. The
Shimabara Rebellion, led by a young
Japanese Christian boy named
Amakusa Shiro Tokisada, took place in 1637.
After the
Hara Castle fell, the
shogunate forces beheaded an estimated 37,000 rebels and
sympathizers. Amakusa Shirō's severed head was taken to
Nagasaki for public display, and the
entire complex at Hara Castle was burned to the ground and buried
together with the bodies of all the dead.
Many of the Christians of Japan continued for two centuries to
maintain their religion as
Kakure
Kirishitan, or hidden Christians, without any priest or other
pastor. Some of those who were killed for their Faith are venerated
as the
Martyrs of Japan by the
Catholic Church,
Anglican Church,
Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America and the
Episcopal Church.
Although Christianity was later allowed under the
Meiji era, Christians again were pressured during
the period of
State Shinto.
Hindu Persecution of Christians in India
In
India
, there is an increasing amount of violence being
perpetrated by Hindu Nationalists
against Christians. The increase in anti-Christian violence
in India bears a direct relationship to the ascendancy of the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Incidents of violence against Christians have occurred in many
parts of India.
It is especially prevalent in the States of
Gujarat
, Maharashtra
, Uttar
Pradesh
, Madhya
Pradesh
and New
Delhi
. The
Vishva
Hindu Parishad (VHP), the
Bajrang
Dal, the
Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) are the most responsible organizations
for violence against Christians. These organizations, which are
off-shoot organizations of their umbrella organization, the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS) also known as the
Sangh
Parivar, and local media were involved in promoting
anti-Christian propaganda in Gujarat. The
Sangh Parivar and related organisations have
stated that the violence is an expression of "spontaneous anger" of
"vanvasis" against "
forcible
conversion" activities undertaken by missionaries. These claims
have been disputed by Christians a belief described as
mythical and
propaganda by
Sangh Parivar; the Parivar objects in any case to all conversions
as a "threat to national unity".
In recent years, there has been a sharp increase in violent attacks
on Christians in India. From 1964 to 1996, thirty-eight incidents
of violence against Christians were reported. In 1997, twenty-four
such incidents were reported. In 1998, it went up to ninety.
Between January 1998 and February 1999 alone, there were one
hundred and sixteen attacks against Christians in India. Between 1
January and 30 July 2000, more than fifty-seven attacks on
Christians were reported. The acts of violence include
arson of churches, forcible conversion of Christians
to Hinduism, distribution of threatening literature, burning of
Bibles, murder of Christian priests and
destruction of Christian schools, colleges, and cemeteries. The
attacks often accompanied by large amounts of anti-Christian hate
literature.
In some cases, anti-Christian violence has been co-ordinated,
involving multiple attacks.
In 2007
Orissa violence Christians were attacked in Kandhamal, Orissa
,
resulting in 9 deaths and destruction of houses and
churches. Nearly twelve churches were targeted in the attack
by Hindu activists. Human rights groups consider the violence as
the failure of the state government that did not address the
problem before it became violent. The authorities failed to react
quickly enough to save human lives and property.
Foreign Christian missionaries have also been targets of attacks.
In a
well-publicised case Graham Staines,
an Australian missionary, was burnt to death while he was sleeping
with his two sons Timothy (aged 9) and Philip (aged 7) in his
station wagon at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar district in
Orissa
in
January 1999. In
2003, the Hindu nationalist activist
Dara Singh was convicted of leading
the gang responsible.
In its
annual human rights reports for 1999, the United
States Department of State
criticised India for "increasing societal violence
against Christians." The report listed over 90 incidents of
anti-Christian violence, ranging from damage of religious property
to violence against Christians pilgrims.
According to Rudolf C Heredia, religious conversion was a critical
issue even before the creation of the modern state. Whereas
Nehru wanted to establish a "a secular state
in a religious society"
Gandhi opposed the
Christian missionaries calling them as the remnants of colonial
Western culture. He claimed that by converting into Christianity,
Hindus have changed their nationality.
Attacks on nuns, churches and Christian refugees across India
produced fears that Hindu extremists were planning to target
minority communities as the country prepared for a general election
in 2008. A representative of the local government in Orissa
estimated that more than 500 people died as a consequence of the
anti-Christian pogrom launched by Hindu fundamentalists. He said he
personally authorised the cremation of at least 200 bodies. In July
2, 2008 a priest was murdered by an obscure local group called
Nepal Defence Army, which wanted Hinduism restored as the state
religion, and has claimed responsibility for the murder of Johnson
Moyalan. Religious scholar
Cyril
Veliath of
Sophia University
stated that the Hindu attacks on Christians were the work of
individuals motivated by "disgruntled politicians or phony
religious leaders" and where religion is concerned the typical
Hindu is an "exceptionally amicable and tolerant person (...)
Hinduism as a religion could well be one of the most accommodating
in the world. Rather than confront and destroy, it has a tendency
to welcome and assimilate."
In September 14, 2008, the Hindu fundamentalist organizations
Bajrang Dal directed a wave of attacks
against Christian churches, convents and prayer halls in the Indian
city of Mangalore. The attacks started in response to the
allegation by the Bajrang Dal that the
New Life Fellowship Trust, a
non-denominational Christian Church, was indulging in forceful
religious conversion of Hindus. Another reason was that the book
Satyadarshini in which New Life Trust had denigrated and
defamed Hindu gods. Over 20 churches were attacked during the
course of the attacks, nearly all of them belonging to the Roman
Catholic community. In the aftermath, the Viswa Hindu Parishad
(VHP) gave a 3-month deadline for New Life Fellowship Trust (NLFT)
to stop all conversion activities in Mangalore, in response to the
alleged conversions.
Accusation that Anti-Conversion Laws are Insitutionalisation of
Hindutva
Recent waves of anti-conversion laws in various Indian states
passed by some states is claimed to be a gradual and continuous
institutionalization of
Hindutva by the
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour of the US State
Department. Some Hindu groups argue that Christian missionaries use
inducements such as schooling to lure poor people to the faith. As
a result, they have launched movements to reconvert many tribal
Christians back to Hinduism.
Most of the anti-conversion laws are brief and leave a lot of
ambiguity, which can be mis-used for inflicting persecution. Legal
experts believe that both conversion activities and willful
trespass by missionaries upon the sacred spaces of other faiths can
be prosecuted under Section 295A of the Indian Penal Code, and as
such there is no need for anti-conversion laws by individual states
and they should be repealed. A consolidation of various
Anti-Conversion or "Freedom of Religion" Laws has been done by the
All Indian Christian
Council.
In the past, several Indian states passed anti-conversion bills
primarily to prevent people from converting to Christianity.
Arunachal
Pradesh
passed a bill in 1978. In 2003, Gujarat State
, after religious riots in 2002 (see 2002 Gujarat violence), passed an
anti-conversion bill in 2003.
In July 2006, Madhya Pradesh government passed legislation
requiring people who desire to convert to a different religion to
provide the government with one-month's notice, or face fines and
penalties.
In August 2006, the Chhattisgarh State Assembly passed similar
legislation requiring anyone who desires to convert to another
religion to give 30 days' notice to, and seek permission from, the
district magistrate.
In February 2007, Himachal Pradesh became the first
Congress Party ruled state to adopt
legislation banning illegal religious conversions.
In Africa
Madagascar
Queen
Ranavalona I called "Ranavalona the
Cruel" (reigned 1828-1861) issued a royal edict prohibiting the
practice of Christianity in Madagascar
, expelled British missionaries from the island, and
persecuted Christian converts who would not renounce their
religion. People suspected of committing crimes — most went
on trial for the crime of practising Christianity — had to drink
the poison of the tangena tree. If they survived the
ordeal (which few did) the authorities
judged them innocent.
Malagasy
Christians would remember this period as
ny tany maizina,
or "the time when the land was dark". By some estimates, 150,000
Christians died during the reign of Ranavalona the Cruel. The
island grew more isolated, and commerce with other nations came to
a standstill.
Nigeria
In the 11
Northern states of Nigeria
that have introduced the Islamic system of law, the
Sharia, sectarian clashes between Muslims and
Christians have resulted in many deaths, and some churches have
been burned. More than 30,000 Christians were displaced
from their homes Kano
, the
largest city in northern Nigeria.
See also
References
Sources
- Changing Gods: Rethinking Conversion in India. Rudolf
C Heredia. Penguin Books. 2007. ISBN 0143101900
- W.H.C. Frend, 1965. Martyrdom and
Persecution in the Early Church
- Let My People Go: The True Story of Present-Day Persecution
and Slavery Cal. R. Bombay, Multnomah Publishers, 1998
- Their Blood Cries Out Paul Marshall and Lela Gilbert,
World Press, 1997.
- In the Lion's Den: Persecuted Christians and What the
Western Church Can Do About It Nina Shea, Broadman &
Holman, 1997.
- This Holy Seed: Faith, Hope and Love in the Early Churches
of North Africa Robin Daniel, Tamarisk Publications, 1993.
ISBN 0-9520435-0-5
- In the Shadow of the Cross: A Biblical Theology of
Persecution and Discipleship Glenn M. Penner, Living Sacrifice
Books, 2004
- Catholic Martyrs of the Twentieth Century: A Comprehensive
World History by Robert Royal, Crossroad/Herder & Herder;
(April 2000). ISBN 0-8245-1846-2
- Islam's Dark Side - The Orwellian State of Sudan, The
Economist, 24 June 1995.
- Sharia and the IMF: Three Years of Revolution,
SUDANOW, September 1992.
- Final Document of the Synod of the
Catholic Diocese of Khartoum, 1991. [noting "oppression and
persecution of Christians"]
- Human Rights Voice,
published by the Sudan Human Rights Organization, Volume I, Issue
3, July/August 1992 [detailing forcible closure of churches,
expulsion of priests, forced displacement of populations, forced
Islamisation and Arabisation, and other repressive measures of
the Government].
- Khalidi, Walid. "All that
Remains: The Palestinian Villages cupied and Depopulated by Israel
in 1948." 1992. ISBN 0-88728-224-5.
- Sudan - A Cry for Peace, published by Pax Christi International, Brussels, Belgium,
1994
- Sudan - Refugees in their own country: The Forced
Relocation of Squatters and Displaced People from Khartoum, in
Volume 4, Issue 10, of News from Africa Watch, 10 July 1992.
- Human Rights Violations in Sudan, by the Sudan Human
Rights Organization, February 1994. [accounts of widespread
torture, ethnic cleansing and crucifixion of pastors].
- Pax Romana statement of Macram Max
Gassis, Bishop of El
Obeid
], to the Fiftieth Session of the UN Commission
on Human Rights, Geneva, February 1994 [accounts of widespread
destruction of hundreds of churches, forced conversions of
Christians to Islam, concentration
camps, genocide of the Nuba people,
systematic rape of women, enslavement of children, torture of
priests and clerics, burning alive of pastors and catechists,
crucifixion and mutilation of priests].
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