Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Cristianismo. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Cristianismo. Mostrar todas as mensagens

janeiro 29, 2013

Ocidente e Islão: duas Histórias paralelas e em competição, com vocação universalista



A versão islâmica
1. A “idade da trevas” (Antiguidade da Mesopotâmia e Pérsia)
2. O nascimento do Islão
3. O Califado: a procura da Unidade Universal
4. A fragmentação: a era dos sultanatos ou emiratos
5. A catástrofe: os mongóis e os cruzados
6. O renascimento: a era dos três impérios (turco-otomano, persa safávida e mogol)
7. A penetração no Oriente do Ocidente
8. Os movimentos de reforma
9. O triunfo dos modernistas seculares
10. A reação islamista e o revivalismo islâmico

A versão ocidental
1. A génese da civilização (Egipto e Mesopotâmia)
2. A Idade Clássica (Grécia e Roma).
3. A Idade Média/”idade das trevas” (a ascensão do Cristianismo)
4. O Renascimento (cultura clássica e reforma protestante)
5. O Iluminismo (razão, ciência)
6. Revoluções (liberal, democrática, industrial)
7. A ascensão do Estado-nação e as rivalidades nacionalistas/impérios
8. A I Guerra Mundial e a II Guerra Mundial
9. A Guerra-Fria (capitalismo-liberal versus socialismo-comunista)
10. O triunfo da democracia liberal-capitalista 

maio 15, 2011

Mais de 70 feridos noutra vaga de ataques aos cristãos do Egipto



Al menos setenta y ocho personas han resultado heridas en los últimos ataques sufridos por los cristianos coptos de Egipto en la noche del pasado sábado al domingo, según el ministerio de Salud egipcio. En un primer momento se informó también de dos muertos por arma de fuego, si bien parece que ambas se encuentran finalmente hospitalizadas, aunque en estado crítico.
Los heridos se produjeron cuando varios centenares de hombres atacaron a los manifestantes —en su mayoría cristianos, pero también algunos musulmanes— que, desde hace una semana, mantienen una acampada frente a la radiotelevisión egipcia en El Cairo, en la zona de Maspero, para protestar contra la indefensión que sufre la comunidad copta. Los motivos de los atacantes no están claros, si bien podría ser una represalia por un altercado sucedido un rato antes, cuando un motorista intentó atravesar de manera agresiva el cordón de seguridad establecido por los manifestantes, llegando a dispararles con una escopeta de perdigón. De acuerdo con algunos testimonios, el motorista habría sido atrapado por los jóvenes a cargo de la seguridad del campamento, y apaleado. [...]
Ver notícia no ABC 

janeiro 02, 2011

Atentado contra Igreja cristã copta em Alexandria agita o espectro de violência confessional


L'Egypte redoutait dimanche une aggravation des tensions confessionnelles après l'attentat qui a fait 21 morts devant une église copte d'Alexandrie, pour lequel les autorités privilégient la piste du terrorisme international et la mouvance d'Al-Qaïda.
Des traces de sang étaient toujours visibles dimanche matin sur la façade de l'église des Saints à Alexandrie, mais le calme semblait revenu après les affrontements de la veille entre jeunes chrétiens et policiers.
L'émotion restait toutefois vive parmi les fidèles, qui ont assisté à la messe dominicale en scandant "Ô croix, nous sommes prêts à nous sacrifier pour toi". Samedi soir, les funérailles des victimes coptes avaient rassemblé plus de 5.000 personnes dans le cimetière chrétien de la deuxième ville du pays.
La presse égyptienne de tous bords exhortait chrétiens et musulmans à faire bloc, craignant que ce massacre commis dans la nuit du Nouvel An ne provoque une escalade des tensions.

Ver notícia na France 24

fevereiro 26, 2010

‘Os mártires modernos do Cristianismo‘ in Der Spiegel


The rise of Islamic extremism is putting increasing pressure on Christians in Muslim countries, who are the victims of murder, violence and discrimination. Christians are now considered the most persecuted religious group around the world. Paradoxically, their greatest hope could come from moderate political Islam.

Kevin Ang is cautious these days. He glances around, taking a look to the left down the long row of stores, then to the right toward the square, to check that no one is nearby. Only then does the church caretaker dig out his key, unlock the gate, and enter the Metro Tabernacle Church in a suburb of Kuala Lumpur.

The draft of air stirs charred Bible pages. The walls are sooty and the building smells of scorched plastic. Metro Tabernacle Church was the first of 11 churches set on fire by angry Muslims -- all because of one word. "Allah," Kevin Ang whispers.

It began with a question -- should Christians here, like Muslims, be allowed to call their god "Allah," since they don't have any other word or language at their disposal? The Muslims claim Allah for themselves, both the word and the god, and fear that if Christians are allowed to use the same word for their own god, it could lead pious Muslims astray.

For three years there was a ban in place and the government confiscated Bibles that mentioned "Allah." Then on Dec. 31 last year, Malaysia's highest court reached a decision: The Christian God could also be called Allah.

Imams protested and disgruntled citizens threw Molotov cocktails at churches. Then, on top of everything, Prime Minister Najib Razak stated that he couldn't stop people who might protest against specific developments in the country -- and some took that as an invitation to violent action. First churches burned, then the other side retaliated with pigs' heads placed in front of two mosques. Sixty percent of Malaysians are Muslims and 9 percent Christians, with the rest made up by Hindus, Buddhists, and Sikhs. They managed to live together well, until now.

It's a battle over a single word, but it's also about much more than that. The conflict has to do with the question of what rights the Christian minority in Malaysia is entitled to. Even more than that, it's a question of politics. The ruling United Malays National Organization is losing supporters to Islamist hardliners -- and wants to win them back with religious policies.

Those policies are receiving a receptive welcome. Some of Malaysia's states interpret Sharia, the Islamic system of law and order, particularly strictly. The once liberal country is on the way to giving up freedom of religion -- and what constitutes order is being defined ever more rigidly. If a Muslim woman drinks beer, she can be punished with six cane strokes. Some regions similarly forbid such things as brightly colored lipstick, thick make-up, or shoes with clattering high heels.

Expelled, Abducted and Murdered

Not only in Malaysia, but in many countries through the Muslim world, religion has gained influence over governmental policy in the last two decades. The militant Islamist group Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, while Islamist militias are fighting the governments of Nigeria and the Philippines. Somalia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen have fallen to a large extent into the hands of Islamists. And where Islamists are not yet in power, secular governing parties are trying to outstrip the more religious groups in a rush to the right.

This can be seen in Egypt, Algeria, Sudan, Indonesia to some extent, and also Malaysia. Even though this Islamization often has more to do with politics than with religion, and even though it doesn't necessarily lead to the persecution of Christians, it can still be said that where Islam gains importance, freedoms for members of other faiths shrink.

There are 2.2 billion Christians around the world. The Christian non-governmental organization Open Doors calculates that 100 million of them are being threatened or persecuted. They aren't allowed to build churches, buy Bibles or obtain jobs. That's the more harmless form of discrimination and it affects the majority of these 100 million Christians. The more brutal version sees them blackmailed, robbed, expelled, abducted or even murdered.

Bishop Margot Kässmann, who was head of the Protestant Church in Germany before stepping down on Feb. 24, believes Christians are "the most frequently persecuted religious group globally." Germany's 22 regional churches have proclaimed this coming Sunday to be the first commemoration day for persecuted Christians. Kässmann said she wanted to show solidarity with fellow Christians who "have great difficulty living out their beliefs freely in countries such as Indonesia, India, Iraq or Turkey."

There are counterexamples as well, of course. In Lebanon and Syria, Christians are not discriminated against, and in fact play an important role in politics and society. And the persecution of Christian is by no means the domain of fanatical Muslims alone -- Christians are also imprisoned, abused and murdered in countries such as Laos, Vietnam, China and Eritrea.

'Creeping Genocide' against Christians

Open Doors compiles a global "persecution index." North Korea, where tens of thousands of Christians are serving time in work camps, has topped the list for many years. North Korea is followed, though, by Iran, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, the Maldives and Afghanistan. Of the first 10 countries on the list, eight are Islamic, and almost all have Islam as their state religion.

The systematic persecution of Christians in the 20th century -- by Communists in the Soviet Union and China, but also by Nazis -- claimed far more lives than anything that has happened so far in the 21st century. Now, however, it is not only totalitarian regimes persecuting Christians, but also residents of Islamic states, fanatical fundamentalists, and religious sects -- and often simply supposedly pious citizens.

Gone is the era of tolerance, when Christians enjoyed a large degree of religious freedom under the protection of Muslim sultans as so-called "People of the Book" while at the same time medieval Europe was banishing its Jews and Muslims from the continent or even burning them at the stake. Also gone is the heyday of Arab secularism following World War II, when Christian Arabs advanced through the ranks of politics.

As political Islam grew stronger, devout believers' aggression focused not only on corrupt local regimes, but also more and more on the ostensibly corrupting influence of Western Christians, for which local Christian minorities were held accountable. A new trend began, this time with Christians as the victims.

In Iraq, for example, Sunni terrorist groups prey specifically on people of other religions. The last Iraqi census in 1987 showed 1.4 million Christians living in the country. At the start of the American invasion in 2003, it was 550,000, and at present it is just under 400,000. Experts speak of a "creeping genocide."

'People Are Scared Out of Their Minds'

The situation in the region around the city of Mosul in northern Iraq is especially dramatic. The town of Alqosh lies high in the mountains above Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city. Bassam Bashir, 41, can see his old hometown when he looks out his window there. Mosul is only 40 kilometers (25 miles) away, but inaccessible. The city is more dangerous than Baghdad, especially for men like Bassam Bashir, a Chaldean Catholic, teacher and fugitive within his own country.

Since the day in August 2008 when a militia abducted his father from his shop, Bashir has had to fear for his and his family's lives. Police found his father's corpse two days later in the Sinaa neighborhood on the Tigris River, the body perforated with bullet holes. There was no demand for ransom. Bashir's father died for the simple reason that he was Christian.

And no one claims to have seen anything. "Of course they saw something," Bashir says. "But people in Mosul are scared out of their minds."

One week later, militiamen slit the throat of Bashir's brother Tarik like a sacrificial lamb. "I buried my brother myself," Bashir explains. Together with his wife Nafa and their two daughters, he fled to Alqosh the same day. The city is surrounded by vineyards and an armed Christian militia guards the entrance.

Tacit State Approval

Bashir's family members aren't the only ones who came to Alqosh as the series of murders in Mosul continued. Sixteen Christians were killed the next week, and bombs exploded in front of churches. Men in passing cars shouted at Christians that they had a choice -- leave Mosul or convert to Islam. Out of over 1,500 Christian families in the city, only 50 stayed. Bassam Bashir says he won't return until he can mourn for his father and brother in peace. Others who gave up hope entirely fled to neighboring countries like Jordan and even more to Syria.

In many Islamic countries, Christians are persecuted less brutally than in Iraq, but often no less effectively. In many cases, the persecution has the tacit approval of the government. In Algeria, for example, it takes the form of newspapers reporting that a priest tried to convert Muslims or insulted the Prophet Mohammed -- and publishing the cleric's address, in a clear call to vigilante justice. Or a public television station might broadcast programs with titles like "In the Clutches of Ignorance," which describe Christians as Satanists who convert Muslims with the help of drugs. This happened in Uzbekistan, which ranks tenth on Open Doors' "persecution index."

Blasphemy is another frequently used allegation. Insulting the core values of Islam is a punishable offense in many Islamic countries. The allegation is often used against the opposition, whether that means journalists, dissidents or Christians. Imran Masih, for example, a Christian shopkeeper in Faisalabad, Pakistan, was given a life sentence on Jan. 11, according to sections 295 A and B of Pakistan's legal code, which covers the crime of outraging religious feelings by desecrating the Koran. A neighboring shopkeeper had accused him of burning pages from the Koran. Masih says that he only burned old business records.

It's a typical case for Pakistan, where the law against blasphemy seems to invite abuse -- it's an easy way for anyone to get rid of an enemy. Last year, 125 Christians were charged with blasphemy in Pakistan. Dozens of those already sentenced are on death row.

'We Don't Feel Safe Here'

Government-tolerated persecution occurs even in Turkey, the most secular and modern country in the Muslim world, where around 110,000 Christians make up less than a quarter of 1 percent of the population -- but are discriminated against nonetheless. The persecution is not as open or as brutal as what happens in neighboring Iraq, but the consequences are similar. Christians in Turkey, who numbered well over 2 million people in the 19th century, are fighting for their continued existence.

It's happening in the southeast of the country, for example, in Tur Abdin, whose name means "mountain of God's servants." It's a hilly region full of fields, chalk cliffs, and centuries-old monasteries many. It's home to the Syrian Orthodox Assyrians, or Aramaeans as they call themselves, members of one of the oldest Christian groups in the world. According to legend, the Three Wise Men brought the Christian belief system here from Bethlehem. The inhabitants of Tur Abdin still speak Aramaic, the language used by Jesus of Nazareth.

The world is much more familiar with the genocide committed against the Armenians by Ottoman troops in 1915 and 1916, but tens of thousands of Assyrians were also murdered during World War I. Half a million Assyrians are said to have lived in Tur Abdin at the beginning of the 20th century. Today there are barely 3,000. A Turkish district court threatened last year to appropriate the Assyrians' spiritual center, the 1,600-year-old Mor Gabriel monastery, because the monks were believed to have acquired land unlawfully. Three neighboring Muslim villages had complained they felt discriminated against by the monastery, which houses four monks, 14 nuns, and 40 students behind its walls.

"Even if it doesn't want to admit it, Turkey has a problem with people of other faiths," says Ishok Demir, a young Swiss man with Aramaean roots, who lives with his parents near Mor Gabriel. "We don't feel safe here."

More than anything, that has to do with the permanent place Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks, Catholics and Protestants have in the country's nationalistic conspiracy theories. Those groups have always been seen as traitors, nonbelievers, spies and people who insult the Turkish nation. According to a survey carried out by the US-based Pew Research Center, 46 percent of Turks see Christianity as a violent religion. In a more recent Turkish study, 42 percent of those surveyed wouldn't accept Christians as neighbors.

The repeated murders of Christians come, then, as no surprise. In 2006, for example, a Catholic priest was shot in Trabzon on the Black Sea coast. In 2007, three Christian missionaries were murdered in Malatya, a city in eastern Turkey. The perpetrators were radical nationalists, whose ideology was a mixture of exaggerated patriotism, racism and Islam.

Converts in Grave Danger

In even graver danger than traditional Christians, however, are Muslims who have converted to Christianity. Apostasy, or the renunciation of Islam, is punishable by death according to Islamic law -- and the death penalty still applies in Iran, Yemen, Afghanistan, Somalia, Mauritania, Pakistan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

Even in Egypt, a secular country, converts draw the government's wrath. The religion minister defended the legality of the death penalty for converts -- although Egypt doesn't even have such a law -- with the argument that renunciation of Islam amounts to high treason. Such sentiments drove Mohammed Hegazy, 27, a convert to the Coptic Orthodox Church, into hiding two years ago. He was the first convert in Egypt to try to have his new religion entered officially onto his state-issued identity card. When he was refused, he went public. Numerous clerics called for his death in response.

Copts make up the largest Christian community in the Arab world and around 8 million Egyptians belong to the Coptic Church. They're barred from high government positions, diplomatic service and the military, as well as from many state benefits. Universities have quotas for Coptic students considerably lower than their actual percentage within the population.

Building new churches isn't allowed, and the old ones are falling into disrepair thanks to a lack both of money and authorization to renovate. When girls are kidnapped and forcibly converted, the police don't intervene. Thousands of pigs were also slaughtered under the pretense of confining swine flu. Naturally all were owned by Christians.

The Christian Virus

Six Copts were massacred on Jan. 6 -- when Coptic celebrate Christmas Eve -- in Nag Hammadi, a small city 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of the Valley of the Kings. Predictably, the speaker of the People's Assembly, the lower house of the Egyptian parliament, called it an "individual criminal act." When he added that the perpetrators wanted to revenge the rape of a Muslim girl by a Copt, it almost sounded like an excuse. The government seems ready to admit to crime in Egypt, but not to religious tension. Whenever clashes between religious groups occur, the government finds very secular causes behind them, such as arguments over land, revenge for crimes or personal disputes.

Nag Hammadi, with 30,000 residents, is a dusty trading town on the Nile. Even before the murders, it was a place where Christians and Muslims mistrusted one another. The two groups work together and have houses near each other, but they live, marry and die separately. Superstition is widespread and the Muslims, for example, fear they could catch the "Christian virus" by eating together with a Copt. It comes as no surprise that these murders occurred in Nag Hammadi, nor that they were followed by the country's worst religious riots in years. Christian shops and Muslim houses were set on fire, and 28 Christians and 14 Muslims were arrested.

Nag Hammadi is now sealed off, with armed security forces in black uniforms guarding roads in and out of the city. They make sure no residents leave the city and no journalists enter it.

Three presumed perpetrators have since been arrested. All of them have prior criminal records. One admitted to the crime, but then recanted, saying he had been coerced by the intelligence service. The government seems to want the affair to disappear as quickly as possible. The alleged murderers will likely be set free again as soon as the furor has blown over.

More Rights for Christians?

But there are also a few small indications that the situation of embattled Christians in Islamic countries could improve -- depending on the extent that nationalism and the radicalization of political Islam subsides again.

One of the contradictions of the Islamic world is that the best chances for Christians seem to crop up precisely where a major player actually comes from the political Islam camp. In Turkey it is Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a former Islamist and now the country's prime minister, who has promised Turkey's few remaining Christians more rights. He points to the history of the Ottoman Empire, in which Christians and Jews long had to pay a special tax, but in exchange, were granted freedom of religion and lived as respected fellow citizens.

A more relaxed attitude to its minorities would certainly signify progress for Turkey.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,druck-680349,00.html

dezembro 29, 2008

Leituras: ‘O Evangelho Politicamente Correcto‘ de Peter Mullen


If the original gospels by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were written today, they would never get published. They are far too politically incorrect. Modern Britain would never tolerate such primitive descriptions as the blind, deaf and lunatic. And Jesus Christ was surely outrageously judgemental - promising to set the wicked on his left hand and send them to everlasting punishment. Frankly Jesus Christ was just too discriminatory. Christ's outmoded notions of sin are far too downbeat for our liberated modern times. And fancy saying that charitable works should be done secretly, when nowadays we all know to make a great song and dance about any good we do. Here then is The Politically-Correct Gospel - the only gospel that could possibly find a publisher in this, our enlightened age. And a great improvement on the stuffy, disapproving originals it is, too. Here we find accessible and inclusive language, through the beautiful phraseology of the Authorised Version. The blind have been replaced by the visually-challenged, the deaf by the hearing-impaired and the lunatics have bipolar disorder. All of the Bible's negative and repressive language on sexual morality has, thankfully, been dropped. The Politically Correct Gospel is an inclusive gospel that that truly speaks to modern People, strives to dispense with all the nonsense about guilt and sin, and seeks greatly to encourage our sense of self-esteem. (Apresentação do livro feita na contracapa).
JPTF 2008/12/29

outubro 24, 2008

‘Índia e Iraque elevam a gravidade das perseguições a cristãos no mundo‘ in La Vanguardia, 24 de Outubro de 2008


Los violentos ataques a cristianos en India, el acoso que sufren en el vecino Pakistán, y la persecución de los caldeos en Iraq empeoran el balance de los sesenta países del mundo en que se registran graves violaciones de la libertad religiosa, según el informe anual de la asociación internacional de derecho pontificio Ayuda a la Iglesia Necesitada (AIN).

"Se aprecia un gran riesgo de que resulte comprometida la identidad de India como Estado laico, con una involución hacia un confesionalismo hindú de consecuencias impredecibles", sostienen los autores del informe, presentado ayer en la Asociación de la Prensa Extranjera. A finales del 2007, extremistas hindúes iniciaron la peor persecución anticristiana en India en decenios, sobre todo en el estado de Orissa, que se ha recrudecido desde agosto, con al menos 53 muertos, iglesias y casas arrasadas, y quizá diez mil refugiados, sin que las autoridades hayan intervenido.

En Orissa, incluso las respetadas misioneras de la caridad, la orden fundada por la madre Teresa de Calcuta, han tenido que huir. Además, están proliferando en algunos estados (India tiene estructura federal) las leyes anticonversión, que castigan a quien practica el proselitismo, pero sólo si el converso abandona la fe hindú para adoptar otro credo, no si se convierte al hinduismo.

El caso pakistaní es también gravísimo, a juicio de este informe 2008: "Los ataques suelen tener forma de fetua (veredictos emitidos por tribunales islámicos, pero con poder de condenar a muerte también a los no musulmanes), pero también hay asaltos armados a lugares de culto y secuestro de miembros de las minorías." En instrumento de represión religiosa en Pakistán se ha convertido la ley contra la blasfemia, que castiga con cárcel a quien ofende el Corán, e incluso pena de muerte a quien difama a Mahoma. Según los analistas, esta ley es usada arteramente por fundamentalistas suníes para acosar a la minoría cristiana, y a los Ahmadi, comunidad fundada en 1889 que se autodefine musulmana, pero que el islam juzga herética por sostener que Mahoma no ha sido el último profeta.

En Iraq, donde el islam es la religión oficial, el violento acoso a los cristianos, la mayoría caldeos, ha obligado a familias enteras a huir de Mosul, al ritmo de unas 20.000 familias por semana hasta ahora, según la agencia de noticias misionera AsiaNews. Su director, el religioso Bernardo Cervellera, ve un vínculo entre libertad religiosa y desarrollo económico. "Allí donde los creyentes son sometidos a vejaciones, la ausencia de libertad religiosa se traduce en una penalización para el desarrollo global del país - razonó Cervellera-. En cambio, el aumento de la libertad religiosa se convierte inmediatamente en factor de desarrollo y crecimiento."

Entre los países donde se producen violaciones más graves de la libertad de culto, el informe cita a Eritrea - donde hay dos mil personas detenidas por motivos religiosos-, Sudán, Nigeria, Arabia Saudí, Bangladesh, Indonesia y Egipto, entre otros.

http://www.lavanguardia.es/lv24h/20081024/53565890388.html
JPTF 2008/10/24

abril 02, 2008

Vencer o Medo, de Magdi Allam


Magdi Allam, actual vice-director do Corriere della Sera - o mais prestigiado jornal italiano -, tornou-se recentemente objecto de atenção internacional, após ter sido baptizado pelo Papa Bento XVI na vigília de Páscoa de 2008. Tratou-se, sem dúvida, de um acto com simbolismo espiritual e religioso, mas também político. Magdi Allam nasceu no Egipto, numa família muçulmana, e o baptismo significou um abandono público do Islão e a sua conversão ao Cristianismo. Note-se que esta conversão é bastante problemática do ponto de vista tradicional da Xária (Sharia), pois a apostasia, ou seja a renúncia ou abandono do Islão, é considerada susceptível de pena de morte para o adulto masculino são. Desde os acontecimentos de 11 de Setembro de 2001 que Magdi Allam tem sido um dos personagens da vida pública italiana que mais veementemente tem denunciado o islamismo radical. Isto valeu-lhe várias críticas e inimizadas, dentro e fora de organismos do Islão italiano (sobretudo com membros do UCOII como o seu secretário, Hamza Roberto Piccardo, um ex-militante do grupo de extrema-esquerda Autonomia Operaria, entretanto convertido ao Islão). Face a diversas ameaças recebidas desde 2003, encontra-se actualmente a viver sob protecção policial. Autor de vários livros, Magdi Allam publicou em 2005 Vencer o Medo. A Minha Vida Contra o Terrorismo Islâmico e a Inconsciência do Ocidente. Trata-se de um escrito essencialmente biográfico, onde relata a sua vida desde o seu nascimento e juventude no Egipto de Nasser, até à sua ida para Itália nos anos 70, país de que é cidadão e ao qual se sente profundamente ligado e reconhecido. Neste livro começa por descrever o ambiente laico e de um Islão tolerante, que conheceu no Egipto dos anos 60 (o qual, entretanto, desapareceu progressivamente, com a ascensão Anwar el-Sadat ao poder e a crescente influência de grupos islamistas radicais como os Irmãos Muçulmanos), o radicalismo que acabou por conhecer em Itália e o desafio e perigos que o islamismo radical e jihadismo trouxeram, não só para os muçulmanos tolerantes e modernizadores, como para as próprias sociedades ocidentais. O livro termina com duas cartas abertas: uma dirigida à conhecida jornalista italiana Oriana Fallaci (autora dos polémicos livros A Raiva e o Orgulho e a Força da Razão, entretanto falecida) e outra a Tariq Ramadan (neto de Hassan al-Banna, o fundador dos Irmãos Muçulmanos no Egipto), um dos mais hábeis islamistas que actuam no Ocidente procurando tirar partido da ‘janela de oportunidade‘ conferida pela ideologia e políticas do multiculturalismo.
JPTF 2/04/2008

fevereiro 27, 2008

"Cristãos acossados na Argélia" in El Pais, 27 de Fevereiro de 2008


Hace un par de meses, la paciencia del nuncio apostólico en Argelia, Thomas Yeh, y del arzobispo católico de Argel, Henri Tessier, llegó a su límite. Tomaron entonces una iniciativa sin precedentes desde la independencia, hace 45 años: organizaron una reunión con 15 embajadores occidentales en la nunciatura.

Hace un par de meses, la paciencia del nuncio apostólico en Argelia, Thomas Yeh, y del arzobispo católico de Argel, Henri Tessier, llegó a su límite. Tomaron entonces una iniciativa sin precedentes desde la independencia, hace 45 años: organizaron una reunión con 15 embajadores occidentales en la nunciatura.

Yeh les entregó una larga lista de agravios y trabas padecidos por los cristianos desde la Semana Santa de 2006. El más grave es, según la Iglesia católica, un intento encubierto de expulsión hace nueve meses. Tras recibir una circular del Ministerio del Interior, las autoridades locales, a veces el mismo wali (gobernador), convocaron en mayo a sacerdotes y monjas para, en la mayoría de los casos, "pedirles que se marchen con urgencia" del país a causa de la amenaza de Al Qaeda.

En las grandes ciudades, como Argel y Orán, y en varios remotos lugares del desierto, sólo les solicitaron que extremaran la prudencia e "informen a la policía de sus desplazamientos". "Ninguno aceptó marcharse", recalca con orgullo el documento remitido a los embajadores.

La presencia católica en Argelia es más bien testimonial. Se resume a unos miles de fieles repartidos en cuatro diócesis -Argel, Orán, Constantina y Gharadia-, en 110 sacerdotes y monjes y 175 monjas apoyados por un centenar de laicos. Se les han añadido recientemente los protestantes evangélicos, que han logrado atraer a miles de argelinos.

En Argelia hay, según algunas estimaciones, entre 70.000 y 120.000 sobre un total de 33 millones de habitantes. "Si no nos fuimos a mediados de los noventa, cuando nos mataban como chinches -19 asesinatos en dos años-, ahora tampoco hay motivos para hacer las maletas", explica un religioso.

El arzobispo Tessier pidió en mayo audiencia con el ministro de Interior, Yazid Zerhouni, y consiguió que redactase una segunda circular que rectificaba en parte la primera, que hubiese provocado un éxodo. No siempre Interior ha actuado así. En diciembre de 2006, el presidente de la Iglesia protestante de Argelia, el pastor suizo Ueli Senhauser, se vio obligado a abandonar el país al no serle renovada su residencia. Las dificultades para la obtención de visados de entrada son cada vez mayores hasta el punto de que el arzobispo de Nîmes o la madre superiora de las Hermanas Blancas han renunciado a sus viajes.

"Aunque bien intencionada, la lista del nuncio es incompleta", señala Youssef Ourahman, un pastor evangélico de Orán. "Bajo diversos pretextos a nosotros nos han cerrado siete iglesias en 2007", prosigue este argelino que se convirtió al cristianismo hace 30 años.

Desde la reunión en la nunciatura, la tendencia persiste. Pierre Wallez, un sacerdote francés, fue condenado el 30 de enero a un año de cárcel por un tribunal de Maghnia por haber rezado, un mes antes, con un puñado de cameruneses católicos que intentaban emigrar a España.

A Wallez se le aplicó una ley, aprobada hace dos años, que prohíbe cualquier culto no musulmán fuera de los edificios expresamente autorizados. Wallez rezó en medio de un bosque porque es allí donde malviven los subsaharianos. "La Iglesia católica de Argelia no comprende esta sentencia", señaló un comunicado del obispado de Orán.

Una semana después, un tribunal de esa ciudad condenó a tres pastores evangélicos a tres años de cárcel y una multa individual de 500.000 dinares (5.200 euros) por blasfemar y quebrantar la fe musulma, dos delitos recogidos en la ley de 2006.

Bouabdallah Ghamallah, el ministro de Asuntos Religiosos, insiste en sus intervenciones en que en Argelia "hay libertad de culto", pero justifica los veredictos. Los que montan iglesias clandestinas en garages, sótanos o casas particulares "caen en la ilegalidad", subrayó. "Desprecian la legislación y se colocan fuera de la ley".

"Un extranjero que pide a un argelino que cambie de religión atenta contra su dignidad", sostuvo Ghamallah ante los micrófonos de la radio pública. "Tenemos la impresión de que asistimos a un renacimiento del proselitismo del siglo XIX", se lamentó.

"Desde hace un tiempo, el proselitismo", denuncia, por su parte, el jeque Bouamran, presidente del Alto Consejo Islámico, "se ha convertido en un fenómeno más visible y cínico que antes de la independencia", cuando los padres blancos franceses recorrían el país. Por eso invitó públicamente a los servicios de seguridad a que tomen cartas en el asunto. Si la seguridad debe investigar es porque esos grupos tienen vínculos con Occidente. Los evangélicos "buscan constituir una minoría que dará un pretexto a las potencias extranjeras para inmiscuirse en los asuntos internos de Argelia", advirtió el ministro Ghamallah.

El presidente del Consejo de los Ulemas (doctores de la ley islámica), Abderramán Chiban, confirmó la injerencia extranjera cuando narró, la semana pasada, su entrevista con un diplomático de EE UU que le preguntó por "la persecución de los cristianos". "Le respondí que los musulmanes sí que están siendo perseguidos por los cristianos en sus países", afirmó con aplomo.
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/Argelia/acosa/cristianos/elpepiint/20080227elpepiint_1/Tes?print=1
JPTF 2008/02/27

junho 18, 2007

“Milhares de Igrejas vão fechar nos próximos anos Reino Unido” in Times, 15 de Fevereiro de 2007


Thousands of churches face closure, demolition or conversion in the next decade with experts warning of the imminent demise of some branches of the Christian religion in Europe. In some parts of the country, the closing churches are even being turned into centres of worship for other faiths. A disused Methodist chapel in Clitheroe on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, is the latest, just granted planning permission to become a mosque for the town’s 300 Muslims. There are more than 47,000 churches in Britain today. More than seven out of ten of the population, 42 million people, count themselves Christian. It sounds a lot. But behind the figures lies a story of apparently irreversible decline in the country’s established religion. Where Christianity is growing, on the Pentecostal and evangelical wings, worshippers often prefer modern, functional warehouse-style buildings to the traditional neo-Gothic landscape of British ecclesiastical architecture.

Just one-tenth of the nation’s Christians actually goes to Church, a trend that is seeing churches are closing at a rate even faster than new mosques are opening. Latest figures show that practising Muslims will in a few decades outnumber practising Christians if current trends continue.

A generation ago, the churches in Britain seemed unassailable. Although the first mosques in Britain opened at the end of the 19th century, by 1961 there were just seven mosques, three Sikh and one Hindu temple in England and Wales. This compared with nearly 55,000 Christian churches. Sometimes, with denominations such as the Methodists split into three different types, there could be as many as seven or eight churches in one small town to cater for all the Catholics, Anglicans and different groups of Protestants.

By 2005, churches had plummeted 47,600. According to latest data from the organisation Christian Research, another 4,000 will go in the next 15 years.

In the Church of England alone, still with 16,000 churches on its book, 1,700 churches have been made redundant since 1969 when the Pastoral Measure enabling this process came into effect, although the Church is anxious to emphasise that more than 500 have also opened during that time. The new Fresh Expressions initiative is also having a dramatic impact, and although Sunday attendance is under one million, monthly attendance figures give the established Church 1.7 million regular worshippers. Since the 1960s however, the number of mosques now active in Britain has grown to equal almost exactly the number of Anglian churches closed in Britain. The Islamic website Salaam has 1,689 mosques in its data base.

Anglicans distressed about their church’s decline can take heart from the fact that none of these is in one of their churches. Covenants attached to redundant Anglican churches makes it almost impossible for them to be used by another faith. None have become mosques and just two have become Sikh gurdwaras. Also, the Church of England has opened more than 500 new churches since 1969.

Redundant Anglican churches tend to get turned into houses, offices or restaurants instead. In Cheltenham, 19th-century St James’ is now Zizzi’s, an Italian pizza restaurant, with an enormous pizza oven in the sanctuary.

But Methodist churches, down from 14,000 in 1932 to 6,000 at present and closing at the rate of 100 a year, are often sold with no restrictive covenant attached. Even where one is attached, it can be reversed by appeal to Methodist head office.

Inayat Bunglawala, of the Muslim Council of Britain, said: “In 1990, when I left had just left university, there were about 400 mosques in the UK. In the last 17 years it has gone up three-fold. Many existing mosques are also being refurbished and enlarged. In Bolton where I was born, the mosque we used to go to was a converted church.”

Belgium-based Chris Gillibrand, a regular commentator here and who campaigns against the closures of Roman Catholic churches throughout Europe on his weblog, said: “On present demographic trends, the self-destruction of European Catholicism will be complete in twenty years. Priests and laity share responsibility. In stark contrast to Muslim communities, Catholic families are smaller and the fullness of the faith has not been passed to their children, who are often lapsed.”

He continued: “It is ironic when so many churches are being transformed into cultural centres that real culture is so endangered. Living culture is much more than a half-remembered history and exhibitions of meaningless modern art, whose main purpose is often just to shock.”

According to Peter Guillery of English Heritage, the trend is not new. Brick Lane’s 18th century Huguenot church in London’s East End became a Methodist chapel in 1819. It was converted into east London’s main Orthodox Jewish synagogue from 1898 and then into a mosque in 1976, this last adaptation staving off demolition after a ten-year search for an alternative use.

Multi-faith use is growing. Art and Christianity Enquiry, a Christian arts trust, is next month planning a seminar on how many buildings in Britain are actually being shared by different faiths groups.

And pockets of Christianity are still surging ahead. London’s TA Property Consultants has more than 300 evangelical and pentecostal churches on its book, looking for premises that can accommodate congregations of 500 worshippers or more.

But overall the present growth in places of worship for other faiths is unprecedented, for new builds as well as conversions.

Oxford professor Ceri Peach has recorded how town and city planners are becoming more flexible. From demanding that temples and mosques were hidden away, behind factories or rows of trees, some are starting to allow discreet pinaccles and minarets. Others are even permitting “the bold and the magnificent”. In a recent paper for The Geographical Review, he warned: “The new cultural landscape of English cities has arrived. The homogenised, Christian landscape of state religion is in retreat.”

There is an interesting case study we looked at in Clitheroe in Lancashire. When the small Muslim community that has been settled in this small town on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales for 40 years sought permission to turn a derelict Methodist chapel in the town into a mosque, the letters page of the Clitheroe Advertiser was flooded for weeks with protests. Ribble Valley council finally approved it at the end of December, but it will be years before the battle is forgotten. In many respects, the story of this chapel’s decline as a Christian centre of worship and renaissance as a Muslim one encapsulates the difficulties facing both the Muslim and the Christian communities in Britain.

Mount Zion Methodist Chapel survived for 55 years but was closed as a church way back in 1940. It was then made over to industrial use, and the choir stalls made way for Singer sewing machines. From 1992 it was used by Lappet Manufacturing, making 40,000 high-quality headscarves a week for export to Muslims in Saudi Arabia. They moved out in 2004. Meanwhile, Clitheroe’s Muslims tried for years to establish a place of worship in the town, but never got their plans approved. At one point, the council was even criticised for maladministration by the Local Government Ombudsman for the way it reached a decision not to sell land for a mosque.

When the chapel proposals came up before the council, nearly 1,000 people signed letters objecting, compared to 429 who supported it. Members voted eight to five in favour last December.

The chapel, which will take about 18 months to restore and convert, will become a community centre as well as a mosque. Ironically, when LS Lowry painted the chapel in his picture A Street in Clitheroe, he embellished it with a few fancy pinnacles of his own. As one local told The Times: “If it was good enough for Lowry, why can’t it be good enough for us?”

Registered mosques in UK (figures from Christian Research)
2005 - 635
Projections
2010 - 685
2020 - 800
Many mosques are not registered however.
The website Salaam.co.uk has 1,689 mosques in its database.
Churches in the UK
2005 -47,635
Projections
2010 - 46,735
2020 - 43,890
Alternative uses found for the 1,696 Church of England churches made redundant since 1969 include:
Civic, cultural or community - 245
Residental - 223
Arts, crafts, music and drama - 38
Light industry, office, shopping - 62
Demolition - 374
Worship by other Christian bodies - 121 (Source: Church Commissioners)
JPTF 2007/06/18
http://timescolumns.typepad.com/gledhill/2007/02/thousands_of_ch.html