Tag Archives: history

Genocide

There is a genocide happening– and it’s not what you think. An ideology of intolerance and hate is actively erasing religious and ethnic diversity. Christians are being persecuted, displaced, and murdered in various regions: Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, in countries like Ethiopia, Indonesia, Nigeria, Sudan, but most notably in Christianity’s birthplace, the Middle East.

Country Christian Population (%) (1960s) Christian Population (%) (Current)
Lebanon50-6040.5
Egypt1210.5
Syria1510.2
Jordan106
Israel2.52.5
Iraq62.5
West Bank and Gaza Strip51.7
Iran0.40.35
Turkey10.2
Saudi Arabia00

But it’s not just Christians being erased in the Middle East. It is also other religious and ethnic groups: the Kurds wherever they are, the Yazidis in Iraq, the Alawites and Druze in Syria– virtually any minority. The Jews are also being erased (from the river to the sea) as well, it’s just that they are able to and willing to hit back, and hit back harder.

Country Jewish Population (%) (1960s) Jewish Population (%) (Current)
Israel80-9073
Egypt1-20.1
Jordan0.10.1
Iraq20.1
West Bank and Gaza Strip0.50.1
Iran0.50.1
Turkey0.50.1
Lebanon0.10.1
Syria10
Saudi Arabia00

The same cannot be said for Christians. Perhaps it’s due to political correctness or a misguided interpretation of values, but no country today clearly and unapologetically stands up for the Christian faith and the Western ideals it helped shape—including religious tolerance. History shows us that when the West was threatened, it responded based on a strong and distinct Christian identity—like when Charles Martel stood firm at Tours, when Pope Urban II called for the Crusades, when John III Sobieski charged at Vienna. But today, especially in the West, that identity is fading—or already gone. And that loss is not just sad; it is dangerous. Because without that identity, the West risks losing not only its culture and values, but life itself.

A Condensed History of The Holy Land

The Holy Land, centered around Jerusalem, is the region in the Middle East which is considered sacred by Judaism, Christianity, and Islam due to its significance in their respective religious histories and scriptures. It has changed hands between different ethnic groups and empires. It has seen never-ending strife. When peace comes to this land is probably when peace comes to this world.

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It’s NOT Just A Case of Land Grabbing

“It’s just a case of land grabbing.” These words from my classmate grossly oversimplified the Middle East issue. The following is not as simplified and will surely muddle up the issue. But the world is never a simple place.

Jews, along with other people, have been in the Middle East area since the dawn of civilization. After all, the area is the cradle of civilization. And where there is civilization, there have always been war (so much for being civil). During these times, kingdoms (including Jewish kingdoms) rose and fell, people migrated and immigrated. So much so that you scarcely can tell which is which and who is who.

But it was the conquest by Roman Empire that really ended the Jewish kingdoms and led to the Jewish diaspora, the scattering of the Jewish people all over the world. There they became merchants, bankers, doctors, etc. and became well-off. For this people resented them and they were oppressed: forced to live in ghettos and suffering through organized massacres. They even had a word for it: pogrom. The funny thing here is that, though they were still oppressed, the Jews were actually generally treated better in Muslim areas than in Christian areas.

At some point in time, some Jewish thinkers decided that the only way the oppression will stop is through the [re]creation of a Jewish homeland. This is the basic tenet of the movement which became known as Zionism. The Zionists worked towards this end culminating in migrations by Jews [back] to the Middle East, the pressuring on the British for the allocation of land, and the formation of Israel.

This formation came about in the midst of an attack by Arab countries (which included Lebanon) opposed to it. Israel fought off the attack and several other attacks through the years. In this forge of war, Israel became a strong country. You can’t easily oppress a strong country but the hate goes on. People do not hate Israel for what it does. People have always hated Israel. Israel does what it does because people hate them.