The
church in Bethlehem had survived more than 1,000 years, through wars and
conquests, but its future now seemed in jeopardy. Spray-painted all over its
ancient stone walls were the Arabic letters for Hamas. The year was 1994 and
the city was about to pass from Israeli to Palestinian control. I was meeting
with the church's clergy as an Israeli government adviser on inter-religious
affairs. They were despondent but too frightened to file a complaint. The same
Hamas thugs who had desecrated their sanctuary were liable to take their lives.
The trauma of those priests is now commonplace among Middle
Eastern Christians. Their share of the region's population has plunged from 20%
a century ago to less than 5% today and falling. In Egypt, 200,000 Coptic
Christians fled their homes last year after beatings and massacres by Muslim
extremist mobs. Since 2003, 70 Iraqi churches have been burned and nearly a
thousand Christians killed in Baghdad alone, causing more than half of this
million-member community to flee. Conversion to Christianity is a capital
offense in Iran, where last month Pastor Yousef Nadarkhani was sentenced to
death. Saudi Arabia outlaws private Christian prayer.
As 800,000 Jews were once expelled from Arab countries, so are
Christians being forced from lands they've inhabited for centuries.
The only place in the Middle East where Christians aren't
endangered but flourishing is Israel. Since Israel's founding in 1948, its
Christian communities (including Russian and Greek Orthodox, Catholics,
Armenians and Protestants) have expanded more than 1,000%.
Christians are prominent in all aspects of Israeli life, serving
in the Knesset, the Foreign Ministry and on the Supreme Court. They are exempt
from military service, but thousands have volunteered and been sworn in on
special New Testaments printed in Hebrew. Israeli Arab Christians are on
average more affluent than Israeli Jews and better-educated, even scoring
higher on their SATs.
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