Thursday 13 September 2012

Playing politics with the global war on Christians


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Christina - - -
To: Donald - - -
Sent: Thursday, 13 September 2012, 3:05
Subject: Fw: CathNews--National curriculum at risk/Asian gender selection/Abbott's low-key Catholicism  

Dear Don, 
Greetings from Down Under where we are at present welcoming lovely Spring weather.
Many thanks for all your inspiring emails.
I am forwarding this Cath News bulletin as it has an interesting article about the attack on Latroun and the general situation for minority groups in Israel.
. . . Chris.

--- On Wed, 12/9/12, Church Resources <database@churchresources.com.au> wrote:


  http://www.cathnews.com/article.aspx?aeid=33152
CathNews website - CathNews is a service of Church Resources. It is a daily news service with prayer, meditation and Catholic website reviews. It is the most visited Catholic website in Australia, providing a mix of news, opinions, features and prayer updated daily. The newsletter is available free of charge by email. As of September 2010, there were more than 157,000 email subscribers and almost 160,000 unique visits to the site every month. 

Playing politics with the global war on Christians
Published: September 11, 2012

Most people, most of the time, are fundamentally decent. Hence if they knew that there's a minority facing an epidemic of persecution - a staggering total of 150,000 martyrs every year, meaning 17 deaths every hour - there would almost certainly be a groundswell of moral and political outrage, writes John Allen in NCR Online.
There is such a minority in the world today, and it's Christianity. The fact that there isn't yet a broad-based movement to fight anti-Christian persecution suggests something is missing in public understanding.
In part, of course, the problem is that unquestionable acts of persecution, such as murder and imprisonment, are sometimes confused with a perceived cultural and legal "war on religion" in the West, a less clear-cut proposition. In part, too, it's because of the antique prejudice that holds that Christianity is always the oppressor, never the oppressed.
Yet as with most things, politics also has a distorting effect, and a story out of Israel last week makes the point.
On Tuesday, the doors of a Trappist monastery in Latrun, near Jerusalem, were set ablaze, with provocative phrases in Hebrew spray-painted on the exteriors walls, such as "Jesus is a monkey." The assault was attributed to extremist Jews unhappy with the recent dismantling of two settlements on nearby Palestinian land.
Founded in 1890 by French Trappists, the Latrun monastery is famed for its strict religious observance. Israelis call it minzar ha'shatkanim, meaning "the monastery of those who don't speak." Ironically, it's known for fostering dialogue with Judaism, and welcomes hundreds of Jewish visitors every week.
Tuesday's attack was not an isolated incident. In 2009, a Franciscan church near the Cenacle on Mount Zion, regarded by tradition as the site of Christ's Last Supper, was defaced with a spray-painted Star of David and slogans such as "Christians Out!" and "We Killed Jesus!" According to reports, the vandals also urinated on the door and left a trail of urine leading to the church.
Last February, the Franciscan Custodian of the Holy Land wrote to Israeli authorities to appeal for better protection after another wave of vandalism struck a Baptist church, a Christian cemetery and a Greek Orthodox monastery. That time, slogans included "Death to Christianity," "We will crucify you!" and "Mary is a whore."


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