One million Christians had to flee Iraq. Now Christians have to flee Syria. By arming and funding Islamists the US is participating in an ethnic cleansing of one of the oldest Christian poplulations in the world.
Islamists Nearly Wipe Out Christians in
Syrian City
Anugrah Kumar, Christian
Post, Mar. 24, 2012
While the world is raising concerns over rights abuses by anti-government forces in Syria’s ongoing violent conflict, few would even know that militant Islamists have expelled the majority of Christians from the western city of Homs, according to the country’s largest church.
While the world is raising concerns over rights abuses by anti-government forces in Syria’s ongoing violent conflict, few would even know that militant Islamists have expelled the majority of Christians from the western city of Homs, according to the country’s largest church.
The Catholic news agency
Fides says it has received a note from the Syrian Orthodox Church, which
represents 60 percent of the Christians in Syria, about “an ongoing ethnic
cleansing of Christians” by members of the a militant Islamist outfit, Brigade
Faruq, which has links with al-Qaida.
The militants have expelled
90 percent of Christians in Homs, which has faced the brunt of violence related
to the uprising, and grabbed their homes, it said. They went door to door in
the neighborhoods of Hamidiya and Bustan al-Diwan forcing Christians to flee
without giving them the chance to take their belongings, it added.
Syria has witnessed
protests against the government as part of the wider Arab Spring since last
January.
About 10 percent of Syria’s
23 million people are estimated to be Christians, who have generally supported
President Bashar Assad, a Muslim from a Shiite offshoot who is autocratic but
protects religious minorities. On the other hand, the majority of the Muslims
in Syria are Sunni.
Homs had a large population
of Christians, and Muslims from the Alawite sect to which the president
belongs.
The Christian minority is
being targeted in other cities as well. Last Sunday, Giuseppe Nazzaro, the
Vicar Apostolic of Syria’s largest city of Aleppo, said a car bomb exploded in
the vicinity of the school of the Franciscan fathers in Aleppo. “By a miracle a
massacre of children was avoided, at the Center of catechesis of the Church of
St. Bonaventure: only because the Franciscan, sensing danger, made the children
leave 15 minutes before the usual time.”
There were also explosions
in Damascus. “These are bad signs for religious minorities,” the Vicar said.
However, he added, “I am confident that peace can return: for this we
Christians count on constant praying.”
Some Jesuits who have
decided to stay in the city are giving a “heroic witness,” promising to bring
comfort and humanitarian aid to people in need, the agency said.
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