by Raymond Ibrahim
 Reuters
 reported last week that "Most Christians living near Egypt's border 
with Israel [in the town of Rafah in Sinai] are fleeing their homes 
after Islamist militants made death threats and gunmen attacked a 
Coptic-owned shop." Photos of desecrated churches and Christian property
 show Arabic graffiti saying things like "don't come back" and "Islam is the truth."
 Reuters
 reported last week that "Most Christians living near Egypt's border 
with Israel [in the town of Rafah in Sinai] are fleeing their homes 
after Islamist militants made death threats and gunmen attacked a 
Coptic-owned shop." Photos of desecrated churches and Christian property
 show Arabic graffiti saying things like "don't come back" and "Islam is the truth."
All media reports
 describe the same sequence of events: 1) Christians were threatened 
with leaflets warning them to evacuate or die; 2) an armed attack with 
automatic rifles was made on a Christian-owned shop; 3) Christians 
abandoned everything and fled their homes.
Anyone following events in Egypt knows that
 these three points—threatening leaflets, attacks on Christian property,
 followed by the displacement of Christians—are happening throughout 
Egypt, and not just peripheral Sinai, even if the latter is the only 
area to make it to the Western mainstream media. Consider:
Genocidal Leaflets
On August 14, El Fegr
 reported that leaflets were distributed in areas with large Christian 
populations, including Upper Egypt, offering monetary rewards to Muslims
 who "kill or physically attack the enemies of the religion of Allah—the
 Christians in all of Egypt's provinces, the slaves of the Cross, 
Allah's curse upon them…"
As a testimony to just how safe the jihadis
 feel under Egypt's new Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi—who just freed
 a militant jihadi responsible for the burning of a church
 leaving several Christians dead—the leaflets named contact points and 
even a mosque where Muslims interested in learning more about killing 
Christians should rally "after Friday prayers where new members to the 
organization will be welcomed."
On the same day these leaflets were 
distributed, a separate report titled "The serial killing of Copts has 
begun in Asyut" noted that a Christian store-owner was randomly targeted and killed by Salafis.
Muslim Attacks on Christian Properties and Persons
For months, Arabic-Christian media have 
been reporting ongoing stories of Muslim "gangs" and "thugs" attacking 
Christian homes, abducting the residents, including women and children, 
and demanding ransom monies—not unlike what is happening to Christians 
in Iraq and Syria. In one particular case,
 the Muslim gang attacked the home of a Coptic man, "releasing several 
gunshots in the air, and threatening him either to pay or die." The gang
 "picked this specific village because Copts form 80% of its 
inhabitants." Such reports often conclude with an all too familiar 
postscript: Christians calling police for help and filing complaints, 
all in vain.
A Coptic Solidarity
 report from August 20 titled "Copts in Upper Egypt Attacked, Beat, 
Plundered," tells of just that—how Christians are being beat, their 
businesses set on fire, and their properties plundered (see also here and here for similar reports). Likewise, according to Al Moheet,
 a new human rights report indicates that, in Nag Hammadi alone, there 
are dozens of cases of Muslim gangs abducting Christian Copts and 
holding them for ransom. Concerning these, the Coptic Church is daily 
asking for justice and receiving none.
Christian Displacements
The exodus of Copts from their homes also has become an ongoing crisis, so much so that a recent statement
 by the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt lamented the 
"repeated incidents of displacement of Copts from their homes, whether 
by force or threat." The statement also made clear that what happened in
 Sinai is no aberration: "Displacements began in Ameriya, then they 
stretched to Dahshur, and today terror and threats have reached the 
hearts and souls of our Coptic children in Rafah [Sinai]."
Indeed, back in February, a mob of over 3,000 Muslims attacked and displaced Christians
 in the region of Ameriya, due to unsubstantiated rumors that a 
Christian man was involved with a Muslim woman. Christian homes and 
shops were looted and then torched; "terrorized" women and children who 
lost their homes stood in the streets with no place to go. As usual, it 
took the army an hour to drive 2 kilometers to the village, and none of 
the perpetrators were arrested. Later, a Muslim Council permanently 
evicted eight Christian families and confiscated their property, even as
 "Muslims insisted that the whole Coptic population of 62 families must 
be deported."
A few weeks ago in Dahshur, after a Christian laundry worker accidently burned the shirt of a Muslim man,
 the customer came with a Muslim mob to attack the Copt at home. As the 
Christian defended his household, a Muslim was killed. Accordingly, 
thousands of Muslims terrorized the area, causing 120 Christian families to flee. One elderly Coptic woman returned home from the bakery to find the area deserted of Christians.
 Rioting Muslims looted Christian businesses and homes. Family members 
of the deceased Muslim insist that the Christians must still pay with 
their lives.
The same time the media reported about the 
displacement of Christians from Rafah, a quarrel between two school 
girls—a Christian and a Muslim—ended when several "heavily-armed" Muslims stormed the home of the Christian girl,
 causing her family and three other Christian families to flee the 
village. When the father returned, he found that all his saved money and
 possessions had been plundered. When he asked police for help, the 
officer replied, "I can't do anything for you, reconcile with them and 
end the problem."
-----
Indeed, this has been the same attitude of 
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood led government: in all of the above cases, 
the government looked the other way, or, when called on it, denied 
reality. Thus the Coptic Holy Synod made it a point to assert in its 
statement that "nearly one month ago the media had published the 
violations against the Copts but the Egyptian authorities have not taken
 the necessary measures to protect the Egyptian families, who have the 
right to live safely in their homes." As for the Rafah incident—the only
 incident to reach the mainstream media—Prime Minister Hisham Qandil denied
 that Christians were forced to flee, saying "One or two [Christian] 
families chose to move to another place and they are totally free to do 
so like all Egyptian citizens."
Such governmental indifference is 
consistent with the fact that, despite promising greater representation 
for Egypt's Christians, President Morsi just broke his word by allowing only one Copt—a female—to represent the nation's 10-12 million Christians in the newly formed cabinet.
Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source:  http://www.investigativeproject.org/3761/guest-column-egypt-christians-distraughtCopyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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