K.S. Rajan (15
Feb 2012)
"PERSECUTION OF
CHRISTIANS IN IRAN"
FAITH UNDER FIRE
Persecution of Christians soars in Iran
'Islam expanded through violence, so it isn't surprising they'd
resort to it again'
Published: 2 days ago
author-imageby Michael CarlEmail | Archive
Michael Carl is a veteran journalist with overseas military
experience and experience as a political consultant. He also has
two Master's Degrees, is a bi-vocational pastor and lives with
his family in the Northeast United States.More
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Reports coming out of Iran say persecution of Christians is only
growing more bold and brazen, as Iranian authorities once again
raided a house church – this time in Shiraz – and arrested
between 6 to 10 members of the congregation.
The detainees are being held in an undisclosed location.
Jihad Watch publisher Robert Spencer says that the Iranians
don’t know that they’re doing the very thing that will produce
more Christians.
“They don’t know that Christianity grows amid persecution,”
Spencer said. “Islam has expanded through violence and
intimidation, so it isn’t at all surprising that they’d resort
to it again.”
Clare Lopez, a senior fellow with the Center for Security Policy
agrees, speculating that if the Iranian mullahs know persecution
grows the Christian church, they don’t care. They’re following
their sworn duty as Muslims.
“The issue has little to do with perceptions of how Christianity
might respond,” Lopez said, “but rather with the obligation
under Islamic doctrine to put and keep dhimmis in their ‘place’
within Muslim society.
“The forces of Shariah Islam are in the ascendant all over the
Middle East these days,” Lopez continued, “and with the
new-found sense of empowerment combined with what is perceived
as Western complicity and weakness in the face of that
situation, it is to be expected that all religious minorities,
but especially Christians and Jews, increasingly will feel the
brutality of Islamic supremecism.”
Lopez says Americans need to remember that Islam doesn’t focus
on “Western” values and political ideas.
“Remember, pluralism and tolerance are totally Western ideas,
completely foreign to Islam and certainly the Middle East,”
Lopez said. “Recall that Persian history, aside from the brief
interlude of the Pahlavi dynasty in the 20th Century, was one of
dynasty, jihad and vicious anti-Semitism.
“Islam is supremacist, and whenever it feels the ability to
dominate and suppress non-Muslims, that is what will occur,”
Lopez said, “which is completely in accord with the Pact of Umar
and Islamic law on treatment of ‘People of the Book.’ This is
from Sura 9.29, the Sura of the Sword.
“In reality, what we are seeing now is the ‘default position’ of
Islam,” Lopez added.
“Iranian authorities know that Western Church authorities –
whether Catholic, Protestant, or others – have not risen to the
defense of Egyptian Copts or Iraqi Christians, whose situation
has been far worse than what Iranian Christians have faced
recently,” Lopez said.
Political Islam”> President Bill Warner agrees, saying that
for the most part, the Iranians feel no need for concern over
what Western Christians think. Warner adds that any Western
complaints are short-lived.
“Why should they care what the Christian world and the rest of
the Kafir world think?” Warner asked. “We never do anything,
except for a few mentions in the media, which are temporary. We
have no ability to bear a grievance.”
Warner also notes the number of Christians who die weekly.
“Christians die by the dozens each week from Egypt to Nigeria.
What church has had a prayer service for the martyrs? No, they
are not martyrs, just a denied statistic,” Warner said.
Warner’s estimate is accurate. Voice of the Martyrs reports that
since 2010, over 200 Nigerians have been killed by violent
attacks from the Boko Haram terrorist group.
VOM also reports that since the overthrow of President Hosni
Mubarak, attacks against Christians have become more frequent
and more violent.
Warner also notes an ironic reality between the media and the
North American church.
“In today’s world, the media have higher morals than religious
leaders,” Warner said. “The media will mention it. The religious
leaders will ignore it. Islam has a license to do whatever it
wants.”
Lopez also notes that Iran may feel a slight degree of
diplomatic pressure.
“The Iranian regime at one and the same time feels under assault
itself (sanctions, nuclear program pressure, Sunni regional
enmity and dominance) and still feels confident it can get away
with what it’s doing to these Christians,” Lopez said. “I think
we will see this regime lashing out in various and expanding
ways as the current Sunni-Shi’ite power rivalry plays out across
the Middle East chessboard.”
Lopez notes that feeling of pressure, however, will easily
disappear if the nuclear program continues to develop on
schedule.
“If it is allowed to demonstrate a deliverable nuclear
capability, its behavior will become completely impervious to
outside influence,” Lopez said. “But no one should expect
Islamic authorities, who are bursting with confidence in the
wake of their takeover of North Africa and with sights now set
on Syria, Jordan, Yemen and more, to be responsive to anything
but massive publicity combined with credible, serious pressure
imposed by the international community.
“Why should they?” she asked. “They think they are on an
inexorable, inevitable rise, and they see the West, especially
the U.S., actually aiding and supporting their rise to power on
the one hand and on the other, falling all over themselves to
appease them.
“They see Western-allied Middle Eastern