Muslim persecution of Christians is unfortunately not something new for those in Nigeria, a population made up of half Muslim and half Christian people. Their upcoming presidential election awakens more fear in Nigerian Christians; the outcome of the election can put them in danger of more Muslim attacks.
LOS ANGELES, CA (Catholic Online) – Muslim-on-Muslim attacks, like Boko Haram’s brutal kidnapping of 230 Nigerian schoolgirls, are broadcasted throughout the mainstream media and receive a lot of coverage. However, attacks on Christians are rarely covered, even though they are common and happen “all around the Islamic world,” according to Raymond Ibrahim, author of the monthly report “Muslim Persecution of Christians.”
“[I] once thought [I] wouldn’t be able to continue the ‘Muslim Persecution of Christians’ report because surely, a month will come when there would be only one or two stories to write about,” explained Ibrahim to Washington Times. “But lo and behold, every month that’s gone by has produced even more atrocities, making the report much longer.”
From August 2014 to October 2014, Boko Haram and other radical Islamists obliterated 200 Christian churches as they destroyed towns and villages in northeastern Nigeria, according to Ibrahim.
Over the last four years, 1,000 churches have been destroyed.
According to Ibrahim, “Muslim attacks on Christians are not isolated incidents” over geography or some other local complaint but they are “attacks of Christianity itself.”
“A primary target for Muslim violence is a Christian church, which may be firebombed or destroyed while people are congregating inside for worship services,” Ibrahim said. “The sheer volume of the attacks on Christians in Nigeria makes it one of the worst places for them.”
Nigerians are due to vote for a new president in February; among the several cadidates is Christian incumbent Goodluck Jonathan and Muslim challenger Mohammadu Buhari.
Jonathan’s win over Buhari in 2011 started a series of massive sectarian violence; “More than 700 churches were burned, hundreds of Christians were targeted and killed, and thousands of Christian businesses and homes were torched,” stated Washington Times.
As Boko Haram’s reign of terror increased largely in recent months, the fear of another election result massacre is prominent in northern Nigeria.
Both Jonathan and Buhari are to urge their supporters to refrain from any postelection violence.
“A peaceful and smooth transition is equally essential, so that whoever is elected can quickly turn his focus to confronting and defeating Boko Haram,” Ambassador Robert P. Jackson, acting assistant secretary of state for African affairs, told the House hearing. “We are appalled by the accelerated pace and brutality of Boko Haram’s attacks. This unchecked killing must stop.”
Acho que numa situação dessas a CNBB deveria estar lastimando pelas redes católicas tais fatos, conclamando o povo à oração pelos perseguidos de forma explicita e denunciando a mídia e os governos comunistas como aliados deles, mas...
ResponderExcluirE o Vaticano, para piorar, não está também infiltrado de apoiadores de esquerdistas?
Eis a vermelha Dilma a favor do ISIS...
Mas lamenta a morte de traficante na Indonesia!
Poisé, Pedro.
ResponderExcluirImpressionante como os "intelectuais" do nosso país são tão rigorosos com os cristãos, criminalizando até o próprio pensamento cristão (hoje, pensar como um cristão é praticamente um crime na visão de algumas pessoas por aqui), mas - como diz minha mãe - "não dão um pio sequer" quando se tratam de crimes perpetrados por membros de outras religiões, como este exemplo da Nigéria, que aqui trazes.
O difícil para mim é encontrar as causas para esta diferença de tratamento. Por que este silêncio quando são nossos irmãos cristãos que sofrem violências desumanas?
Grande abraço!
Jonas
Ora, meu caro Jonas, Cristo já explicou: "O mundo Me odeia e odiará vocês também".
ResponderExcluirRezemos pelos cristãos da Nigéria, que os cristãos do mundo se tornem realmente cristãos para defendê-los.
Abraço,
Pedro Erik