The War on Christians in the Middle East. By Michael Gerson.
The War on Christians. By Michael Gerson. Real Clear Politics, December 27, 2013. Also at the Washington Post.
What the Middle East would be like without Christians. By Christa Case Bryant. The Christian Science Monitor, December 22, 2013.
Gerson:
In some
parts of the world, Herod’s massacre of the innocents is a living tradition. On
Christmas Day in Iraq, 37 people were killed in bomb attacks in Christian
districts of Baghdad. Radical Islamists mark — and stain — the season with
brutality and intolerance.
The
violence, of course, is not restricted by the calendar. In recent months, we’ve
seen Coptic Christians gunned down in Cairo and churches burned. Thousands of
Syrian Christians have fled to Turkey. “Where we live,” said one refugee, “10
churches have been burned down. . . . When
the local priest was executed, we decided to leave.”
Across
North Africa and the greater Middle East, anti-Christian pressure has grown
during the past few decades, sometimes subtle, sometimes overt. This
persecution has gained recent attention from the archbishop of Canterbury and
the pope. “We won’t resign ourselves,” says Pope Francis, “to a Middle East
without Christians.”
The
most passionate advocate has been Prince Charles — an often underestimated,
consistently thoughtful figure. “For 20 years,” he said in a recent speech, “I
have tried to build bridges between Islam and Christianity and to dispel
ignorance and misunderstanding. The point though, surely, is that we have now
reached a crisis where the bridges are rapidly being deliberately destroyed by
those with a vested interest in doing so.”
The
growth of this persecution is sometimes used as a club against the very idea of
democracy promotion. Middle East democracy, the argument goes, often results in
oppressive Sunni religious ascendancy. Majority rule will bring the harsh
imposition of the majority faith.
But
this is the criticism of a caricature. Democracy promotion — as embraced by the
National Democratic Institute or the International Republican Institute or
Freedom House — is about human liberty protected by democratic institutions.
Securing institutional respect for minority rights is particularly difficult in
transitioning societies, as we’ve recently seen. But clinging to
authoritarianism further hollows out civil society, making the results even
more chaotic and dangerous when a dictator falls. And even marginally more
favorable dictators can’t be propped up forever, as we’ve also recently
witnessed. So it matters greatly whether America and other democracies can help
pluralism survive and shape the emerging political order.
This is
a priority for both humanitarian and strategic reasons. As William Inboden of
the University of Texas notes, there is a robust correlation between religious
persecution and national security threats. “Including World War II,” argues
Inboden, “every major war the United States has fought over the past 70 years
has been against an enemy that also severely violated religious freedom.” The
reverse is equally true. “There is not a single nation in the world,” he says,
“that both respects religious freedom and poses a security threat to the United
States.”
There
are a number of possible explanations for this strong correlation. The most
compelling is that religious freedom involves the full and final
internalization of democratic values — the right to be a heretic or infidel. It
requires the state to recognize the existence of binding loyalties that reach
beyond the state’s official views.
It took
many centuries for Christendom to achieve this thick form of pluralism. Whether
the Islamic world can move toward its own, culturally distinctive version of
this democratic virtue is now one of the largest geopolitical questions of the
21st century.
Some
argue that Muslim theology — emphasizing fidelity to its conception of divine
law — makes this unlikely (or impossible). Others point to past centuries when
Muslim majorities and rulers coexisted with large Arab-Christian populations —
a thin form of pluralism in which Christians were second-class citizens but not
subject to violent intolerance. Every major religious faith contains elements
of tribal exclusivity and teachings of respect for the other. The emergence of
social pluralism depends on emphasizing the latter above the former.
Promoting
democratic institutions is no easy task in the midst of revolution and civil
war. But even limited levers — stronger condemnation of abuses, conditioning
aid on the protection of minorities, supporting moderate forces in the region —
are worth employing when the stakes are so high. America, however, seems
strangely disengaged. “One of America’s oddest failures in recent years,” argue
Economist editors John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, “is its inability to
draw any global lessons from its unique success in dealing with religion at
home. It is a mystery why a country so rooted in pluralism has made so little
of religious freedom.”
A
recovery of that emphasis might begin with a simple commitment: not to resign
ourselves to a Middle East without Christians.