Muslims attack Coptic Church and people

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Christians ON turkey's fringes

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Christians on Turkey's Fringes
Deutsche Welle

An EU report on minorities in Turkey has raised concerns over the country's treatment of its Christians. Since the Halki seminary closed in the seventies, the Church in Turkey has had no center for clerical training.

Halki, which belongs to the Orthodox church in Istanbul and is situated on the old-fashioned island of Heybeli, was closed down in 1971 by the Turkish government under a law requiring state control of all higher education institutes involved in religious training. It has never re-opened since.

Dating back to 1844, the school, which is perched on the top of the island, used to turn out well-educated, high-ranking church officials. And although it closed almost 35 years ago, the school is still in pristine condition. Father Dorotheos is one of those responsible for its upkeep.

"When the school was at the peak of its activity, there were never more than 120 students here," he said, adding that the combination of small numbers and quality of the professors ensured that students received an excellent education.

Clergy must be Turkish

Worshippers at a services at the Patriarchate in Istanbul

When the school closed, it meant the Orthodox Church had to turn to institutions outside Turkey for its leaders. The Patriarchate in Istanbul is a focal point for Turkey's Orthodox Christians, and the headquarters for the Orthodox Church and its 250 million followers, but the Turkish state refuses to recognize the church's status and insists that all members of the clergy be of Turkish nationality.

With the seminary out of action, Archbishop Meliton of the Patriarchate says his religious community is slowly being strangled. "We only have a few clergymen left. We have about 16 bishops, nine of whom are already 75 years old, with the others around 65 or 66. And we only have four or five members of the clergy with Turkish nationality," Meliton said, adding that despite attempts to communicate with the government, "there is no dialogue between the patriarchate and the authorities."

Seeking EU support

So the orthodox community is now looking to the European Union for support. At a recent EU conference organized by the European parliament's Christian Democratic parties, Archbishop Meliton drove his point home. Wilfred Martens, who is head of the Christian Democrats in the parliament, sees the closure of the school as symbolic of a wider problem.

"If the school could be reopened, it would be a positive signal of a fundamental change in Turkey," he said, stressing that "religious freedom is a fundamental right," which Turkey would have to observe if it hoped to become a member of the European Union.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I. in Istanbul, Turkey
But the EU isn't only concerned about the reopening of the school. Over the years, the Turkish authorities have confiscated property belonging to churches and hospitals, and fresh disputes emerge every month. Until recently, all churches and foundations were banned from receiving donations in the form of property.

Discriminatory practices

In the area around Istanbul's main high street, which was once home to hundreds of thousands of Christians, the sound of church bells used to be as common as the call to prayer. One of the buildings in the district used to belong to a hospital foundation run by Armenian Christians, but it was seized in 1996 after a court ruled the property could not be left to the hospital.

Armenian church in Kayseri, Turkey
The foundation organizers claim the property seizures are part of a wider pattern of discrimination against Christians in Turkey and are now taking their case to the European court. Their biggest hope is that the EU can be instrumental in putting a stop to discrimination and the domestic mentality which persists in perceiving Christians as outsiders.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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The Good News About islam

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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48926



The good news about Islam


Posted: February 21, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

I thought you might be ready for some encouraging words about Islam and its deadly branch, radical Islamism. So here it is:

The whole religion is heading toward collapse.

Actually, it's crumbling already. Take, for example, two hardcore Muslim countries, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

Since 1997, by our count, 522,000 Bangladeshi Muslims have turned to Isa, the No. 2 Islamic prophet we know as Jesus. This is often a difficult step to take in a highly repressive Muslim culture. Currently, about 10,000 a month in Bangladesh are becoming Christians. That doesn't sound like a lot in a nation of 144 million, but it's a rising number, multiplying geometrically.

Also: Just in the last year, 500,000 Pakistani Muslims have recognized Isa as Lord and become His followers. Some 240,000 of them made decisions for Him in only three days of a crusade in Lahore, the capital, in November. (In fact, the government agency that officially counts crowds stated that it wasn't 240,000, but 300,000!) Again, half a million is not an impressive proportion of a nation of 162 million, but hey, that's in just one year!

If you lack a reference point for these numbers, consider that until now, three or four Muslim converts a year was par for the course for most missionaries.

However, the Pakistan numbers aren't coming from traditional "methods." They're coming from a mind-boggling array of supernatural healings. In the large meetings in November, quite a few blind people were healed, which impressed the Pakistanis immensely. Also, some wheelchair-bound people were abruptly freed. One woman had been in a wheelchair for 40 years, and the crowd was blown away when she suddenly stood up and ran back and forth across the stage, waving her hands and shouting in joy.

The mission leader told me that very few of the healings came as a result of anyone laying hands on people. In other words, God is doing this, we aren't.

(If you wish to make a tax-deductible contribution to their future crusades, just write me at jrutz@wnd.com.)

Guns and roses are just a stopgap

Even though this long-term trend is accelerating, we still have a pressing need for short-term relief from attacks by al-Qaida, Wahhabi/Saudi-financed terrorists, Abu Sayyaf guerrillas, Hamas suicide bombers, etc. So on the military front, we absolutely must hang tough in places like Iraq and Iran.

I'm also supportive of Condi Rice and our platoons of diplomats and operatives around the world, wobbly though they may be. Talk-talk is better than bang-bang any day. And way cheaper.

But I feel that in the long run, the spiritual salvation of large numbers of Muslims is our only hope. As one reader wrote me:

Islamic peoples drove nearly all the Christians out of the Middle East, North Africa, and parts of Europe.

Islamic peoples drove nearly all the Buddhists or Confucians out of Central Asia, back into China and Southeast Asia.

Islamic peoples have sought to destroy Israel from the beginning. They have run the Christians out of Palestine, even those in Bethlehem.

Islamic peoples are slaughtering the few remaining Christians in northern Africa, in Egypt and the Sudan.

Islamic peoples are killing Catholic and/or Dutch Reformed Christians in Indonesia.

Islamic peoples are killing Chaldean Christians in Iraq.

Islamic peoples in Lebanon killed or drove off Lebanon's Christians.

Islamic peoples in the Caucasus Mountains are killing off Christians and atheists.

Islamic peoples in southeastern Asia are killing Buddhists in Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

Islamic peoples in Nigeria are attempting to impose Sharia and kill Christians and tribals.

Islamic peoples killed 3,000 people from many nations in New York City.

His list was longer than that, but you get the idea. The one-eighth of the Muslim world that accepts militant Islam must be stopped ... and then changed to the depth of their hearts.

Neither guns nor roses can do that – they can change the behavior of the peaceful seven-eighths to a great extent, but that doesn't get down to the root issue, which was prophesied so succinctly of Ishmael ("father of the Arabs") 3,900 years ago:

He will be a wild donkey of a man; his hand will be against everyone and everyone's hand against him, and he will live in hostility toward all his brothers.

– Genesis 16:12

Those words have proven true in spades, but they do not constitute an eternal destiny. As Christians, let us reach out to Islamists, returning love for hate, and reverse 1,400 years of history.


James Rutz is chairman of Megashift Ministries and founder-chairman of Open Church Ministries. His recent book, "MEGASHIFT: Igniting Spiritual Power," announces major upgrades in human life and a coming transformation of society. If you'd rather order by phone, call WND's toll-free customer service line at 1-800-4WND-COM (1-800-496-3266).


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Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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fatwah issued authorizing nuclear weapons

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Mad mullahs issue fatwa to use nuclear weapons


Posted: February 21, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

An Iranian fatwa (holy edict) permitting the use of nuclear weapons has been issued for the first time. Mohsen Gharavian, a disciple of Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, has stated that using nuclear weapons as a counter-measure is acceptable in terms of sharia (Islamic law), depending upon the goal for which the weapons are used.

Up until now, the religious leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran have publicly declared that the use of nuclear weapons are opposed to sharia, maintaining this position to buttress the argument that Iran's nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

Gharavian, a lecturer at the religious schools of Qom, stated that:

One must say that when the entire world is armed with nuclear weapons, it is only natural that, as a counter-measure, it is necessary to be able to use these weapons. However, what is important is the goal they may be used for.

With Iran's President Ahmadinejad openly declaring that Israel must be wiped from the map of the Middle East, we are compelled to ask if Gharavian would consider killing Israeli Jews to be a purpose that sharia would consider acceptable for the use of nuclear weapons?

This fatwa marks a clear signal that the ultra-conservative spiritual leaders in Iran are in full control. Gharavian's statement takes additional importance because he is a disciple of Ayatollah Yazdi, who is also the spiritual mentor of Ahmadinejad. The Jamkaran Mosque in Qom was also the center from which Ayatollah Khomeini based his opposition to the Pahlavi dynasty before he was forced to leave Iran in exile. Devout Shiites believe that the Mahdi, the famous "lost Twelfth Iman," disappeared as a young boy down a well that is now revered within the Jamkaran Mosque.

Ayatollah Yazdi and President Ahmadinejad both profess that the Mahdi will emerge from that same well in his Second Coming, but only following an apocalypse in which the world will go through great calamities and upheavals. In September 2005, when he addressed the United Nations General Assembly, Ahmadinejad mentioned the Mahdi in describing what he considered to be his divinely appointed political mission as president of Iran.

Gharavian's fatwa was published by the IraNews news agency, suggesting that the statement had the official blessing of the Iranian regime. Iran has openly defied the world diplomatic community by deciding unilaterally to resume uranium processing at Isfahan and uranium enriching at Natanz. Now, the Mesbah Yazdi group has given the first public statement that the use of nuclear weapons is authorized on religious grounds, a further defiant step on the road toward Iran's open proclamation that the regime is pursuing nuclear weapons, not simply the peaceful use of nuclear power.

The signs that the radical fundamentalists have regained control of Iran's revolution are abundant. In recent weeks, Ahmadinejad has traveled to Damascus to give Syrian President Bashar Assad his support in the international controversy over Sryian complicity in the assassination of Lebanon's former Prime Minister Hariri. Last summer, before taking over the presidency, Ahmadinejad met in Tehran with Seyed Hassan Nasrollah, the Lebanese leader of the radical terrorist group Hezbollah.

In January this year, Moqtada al-Sadr, the young Iraqi Shiite radical cleric whose "Al-Mahdi Army" engaged in acts of terrorism in April 2004 against U.S. troops in Iraq, visited Tehran and swore to support Iran if the United States or Israel should attack Iran. Hamas member Muhammad Jamal al-Natshah, who was elected to the Palestinian legislature in late January, after being released from Israeli prison, declared that Iran would provide financial support to Hamas if Israel should cut off funds.

Iran is also rushing to conclude with China a $100 billion deal that will allow a Chinese government-controlled oil company to develop the vast oil and natural-gas holdings in Iran's Yadavaran field. The goal is to complete the deal before a U.S.-led motion might cause the Security Council to consider imposing additional sanctions on Iran for violations in their nuclear program.

Iran will hold in euros foreign currency reserves from the sale of oil and natural gas to China. With China's increasing dependency upon Iran for energy resources, the Iranians have suggested that China should diversify into euros a greater portion of their nearly $1 trillion in foreign currency reserves. With approximately 75 percent of China's foreign currency reserves currently held in dollars, a move by the Chinese to the euro could depress the value of the dollar, making more costly the U.S. Treasury's need to sell massive debt into the international markets to maintain our large and growing twin trade and budget deficits.

Now, ahead of the International Atomic Energy Agency's scheduled March 6 meeting in Vienna to vote on referring Iran to the Security Council, the IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei has suggested that Iran might be permitted to enrich a small quantity of uranium for "research and development" purposes. ElBaradei has told diplomats recently that a pilot enrichment program at Natanz is Iran's bottom-line, "a reality" the world may have to learn to live with. With this statement, the prospect looms that Iran may once again have won the negotiating game of chess, by winning the concession of even the IAEA that Natanz and Isfahan can continue operating.

Even should the IAEA vote to send the Iranian portfolio to the Security Council, Russia and China appear ready to veto any meaningful sanctions. In the next few weeks, we will most likely see the United States forced to admit that the Bush administration strategy since the second inauguration of allowing the IAEA and the E.U.-3 to lead negotiations with Iran may simply amount to a waste of time.

Iran has also begun suggesting that the Russian proposal to enrich uranium on Russian soil, possibly with the assistance of an international consortium pledging to provide enriched uranium to Iran will be acceptable, as long as Iran can also continue enriching uranium on Iranian soil. What reason does the world community have to believe that Iran will only enrich a small amount of uranium when Iran has consistently violated agreements with the IAEA?

With Iran and Hamas both declaring that Israel has no legitimate reason to survive and with diplomacy failing to contain the Iranian nuclear program, increasingly the military option is the only option left with any promise of stopping Iran from having nuclear weapons that the mullahs now declare can be used in accordance with Islamic law. What more do we need to see before we conclude that Israel and America are inevitably headed to war with Iran?


Purchase Jerome Corsi's "Atomic Iran," the definitive shocking expose of nuclear terror


Jerome R. Corsi received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972 and has written many books and articles, including co-authoring with John O'Neill the No. 1 New York Times best-seller, "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry." Dr. Corsi's most recent books include "Black Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of Oil," which he co-authored with WND columnist Craig. R. Smith, and "Atomic Iran: How the Terrorist Regime Bought the Bomb and American Politicians."

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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rome taking hard line on islam?

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Bishop decries silence on Islamic violence against Christians

Palestinian students burn a Danish flag in the West Bank city of Hebron, during a demonstration to protest against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed published in Europe some weeks ago. Pope Benedict XVI stepped into the furore caused by the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed for the first time with an appeal for mutual respect for the world's religions.(AFP/Hazem Bader)
Rome, Feb. 20 (CWNews.com) - A prominent Roman prelate has complained that Western governments and international organizations are silent in the face of anti-Christian violence in the Islamic world.

Bishop Salvatore Fisichella, speaking to the Italian daily Corriere della Sera, said that international leaders must "abandon the path of diplomatic silence, which is no longer sustainable." World leaders can no longer remain neutral, he said, in the face of mounting violence which has been widely reported in the press but studiously ignored in diplomatic circles.

Bishop Fisichella is a highly regarded figure in the Church in Rome. He serves as rector of the Lateran University and chaplain to the Italian parliament, as well as an auxiliary bishop of Rome. He argued that world leaders should put pressure on the leaders of the Islamic world to assume their proper responsibilities and curb violence against Christians and other religious minorities. In particular, he said, action should be expected from the Arab League, the European Union,a nd the UN.

Government leaders, the Italian bishop continued, must cease to count on a "myopic neutrality" and demand that Islamic states offer the same rights to other faiths that Muslims receive in the Western world. The recent spate of violence in Islamic countries, spurred by reactions to the Danish cartoons, illustrates the problem that Muslim governments have in recognizing religious freedom, he said. "One cannot understand why societies fear freedom, and why they are afraid of Christians, who preach brotherhood and pardon," he added. While some Muslims may be incited to violence by propaganda, Bishop Fisichella continued, their government leaders should be well aware of the facts, and recognize that Christians are law-abiding contributors to their societies.

In any case, Bishop Fisichella said, the violence endured by Christians is far more serious than any offense against Muslims in the Western world. He observed: "You cannot put a cartoon on the same level as the assassination of a priest." He was speaking after a massacre of Christians in Nigeria on February 18, which in turn followed the murder of a Catholic missionary priest in Turkey earlier in February.

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Christians, Islam and the Future of Europe
Chiesa

How, and why, Islam can be part of “Catholic” Europe. On two conditions: a strong Christianity, and Muslim self-reform. A conference held in Denver, Colorado, at the invitation of the archdiocese

by Sandro Magister

Christianity and Islam are inseparable in Europe. There are five and a half million Muslims in France, and it is projected that their number will double within twenty years. There are already more of them than there are French Catholics who go to Mass every Sunday.

A new cathedral church was built twelve years ago in Evry, to the south of Paris. It is recognized as the masterpiece of one of the most famous architects in the world, Mario Botta of Switzerland. During Sunday Mass, it is half-empty. But the nearby mosque is overflowing with the faithful. The imam of the mosque, Khalil Merroun, asserted in an interview: “The Catholic Church should not feel Europe belongs to it. The advice I give my Catholic colleagues is to ask themselves why their faithful don’t live their spirituality.”

But what sort of spirituality inspires the new cathedral in Evry? The church looks like a cylinder cut off diagonally at the top, with a crown of trees at its summit, and a barely visible cross. The interior is almost entirely barren of figurative art. The bare walls, which should pulsate with the transcendent, in reality remain mute, unable to convey the revelation that has come down from God. There are no visible traces of this revelation capable of showing the way to the faithful along their journey.

Even in Rome, in the capital of the Catholic Church, there are signs of this disorientation. On Sunday, March 26, Benedict XVI will go to Tor Tre Teste to visit a parish on the outskirts of Rome, where the secularized American Jew Richard Meier - another of today’s greatest architects - planned and constructed a church which is itself a masterpiece of line, surface, and light, but remains taciturn in translating this emotional impulse into reality and sacrament, into a concrete manifestation of the earthly and heavenly Church.

THE ERUPTION OF RELIGION INTO THE PUBLIC SPHERE

These examples are the reflections in architecture, and sacred architecture at that, of the loss of identity seen in Europe today, which has manifested itself in the failure to mention “Christian roots” in the controversial preamble of the European Union’s constitutional treaty. For a part of European culture today, the public square should be impenetrable against Christianity. And Christianity should be entirely cut off from the European civilization in which it has its roots and to which it gives nourishment.

But exactly the opposite is happening today in the world, and also in Europe: everywhere there is an impetuous return of religion to the public square.

Here “religion” means: the Catholic Church, reinvigorated by the political charisma of pope Karol Wojtyla and by the theological guidance of Benedict XVI; the Protestant Churches of the American evangelical strain; the Orthodox Churches, with their Byzantine model of conjunction of throne and altar. Then there is Judaism, interwoven with the extremely concrete destiny of Israel, a people, a land, and a state. Then there is Islam, in which faith, politics, and sacred law tend to blend into one, and in which, wherever voting is conducted today, the consensus goes to parties that are strongly inspired by Koranic law: the most recent and overwhelming case being that of Palestine.

Everyone can see the failure of the prophecy of the privatization of religion. But many lack the clarity of thought and the courage to recognize it and act accordingly.

A Pakistani paramilitary soldier stands near the burnt stuff of St. Saviour's church, which were set on fire by angry Muslims mob, in Sukkar, 560 kilometers (348 miles) northeast of Karachi, Pakistan, Monday, Feb 20, 2006. Police have accused 23 people of arson and damaging property in the torching of two churches during a protest about the burning of Islam's holy book in a southern city, an official said. (AP Photo/Pervez Khan)
The Muslims are asked to accept the ground rules of democracy. But the process must also work in reverse: Islam, like all the other religions, must be permitted to put its principles of faith into effect in the civil order – as long as these are compatible with the charter of principles that neither Islam nor the West may reject, the charter valid for all, principles “conveyed to us unmistakably by the quiet but clear voice of conscience" (words of Benedict XVI to the Muslims, in Cologne).

The case of Iraq is an exemplary one. What fell with Saddam Hussein was not an imaginary “secular” state purified of fundamentalist beliefs, but an atheistic system crudely copied from European models of a Nazi stamp, which asserted itself through the bloody repression of Shiite Islam and the Kurds. And in contrast, the new Iraqi state, whose constitution has been approved, will be genuinely secular only if its political configuration permits and reflects the full expression of the Islamic religion on the public scene, in respect for the plurality of faiths and for the different traditions.

The existence of political configurations with religious characteristics does not belong to the past alone, but is the present and future of societies worldwide.

The American model of the democratic public sphere and of a widespread religious presence is not the only one from which inspiration may be drawn.

In Europe, there is the Italian model of equilibrium between the secular state and the Catholic Church, with a mutually recognized agreement (called “concordato”) between the two sovereign powers, which is completed by agreements with each of the other religions.

It is natural that countries under Muslim rule should develop their own appropriate models of the interweaving of politics and religion.

“DUAE CIVITATES”

The connection between the two forms of citizenship – profane and sacred, earthly and heavenly – is an essential characteristic not only of the Church and of Christians, and not even of the West alone, where this characteristic was born beginning with Plato and Aristotle.

These two Greek philosophers were the first to open the order of society to a higher, transcendent order, thereby un-divinizing the “powers of this world” and freeing man from his slavery in their regard.

In Christianity, the great theoretician of the twofold earthly and heavenly citizenship was Saint Augustine, in his masterpiece “The City of God,” written shortly after the invasion of Rome by the “barbarians” in 410, a shock that might be compared to the one we received on September 11, 2001.

Augustine’s theory – which is profoundly biblical – left a huge imprint on Christian culture and history. But it was not only studied in books. It also speaks through architecture, works of art, and churches.

As I have recalled, there are today churches that reflect the loss of Christian roots in their structure. But so are there countless churches, built century after century in the Christian world, which give visible witness to the interweaving of the heavenly and earthly “duae civitates,” two cities.

An emblematic instance of this is the cathedral of Monreale in Sicily, erected in the twelfth century by the Norman kings who a few decades earlier had liberated the island from Muslim domination.

Its dimensions are grandiose, comparable to those of Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome. But, above all, its interior walls are covered with gold-enameled mosaics with a total surface area of six thousand, three hundred and forty square meters. Along the walls there are scenes from the Old and New Testaments Above the royal throne, at the top of the nave, there is an image of Christ crowning the Norman king William the Second. Above the bishop’s throne, which is across from the royal throne, there is an image of William the Second offering the new cathedral to Mary. And in the apse (see photo) here is a colossal Christ extending a blessing with his right hand, and holding in his left the book of the Gospels opened on the words, in Latin and Greek, “I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness.” The Christ in the apse is the Risen One, the “Pantokrator,” he who rules over all, and who surrounds with his light, with his gaze, with his power the Christian people that walks upon this earth, and gathers in the church to celebrate the sacred liturgies.

The cathedral of Monreale is the epiphany, the visible manifestation of the “Civitas Dei”: the city of God which unites within itself, under the absolute reign of Christ, both the heavenly city of angels and saints, which is represented in the mosaics, and the earthly city of men in pilgrimage upon the earth, in which the Christian faithful mingle with those still awaiting the proclamation of the Gospel, and with all those who reject God to the point of creating the antithesis of his city, the “civitas diaboli,” the city of the devil.

Like the city of God, also the Church is heavenly and earthly at the same time, and its earthly component will be mingled with the city of all the men until the Last Judgment. And so, the interweaving of politics and religion finds its paradigm in these two cities.

It is a paradigm that can be applied not only to the Christian and Western world, but also to the Islamic world, to catch what is similar or different in Christianity and Islam.

What distinguishes Islam is that it has at its center the sacred battle of its faithful, not only on behalf of the one God and against idolatry, but also for the assertion of the “umma,” the worldwide Muslim community, against the city of devil identified with the non-Muslims.

Into the continual interpenetration of the heavenly and the earthly that characterizes the city of God in the Christian conception, Islam introduces points of rupture.

From the time that Mohammed broke away from the Jewish community in Medina, Islam has thought of itself as a community in perpetual exodus upon this earth, journeying toward a destination that is utterly beyond earthly history.

Islam is essentially prophetic, always in a battle march towards a world that is beyond, while Christianity is, instead, prophetic, priestly, and kingly, and the cosmic Christ as “Pantokrator” is the same one who offers himself, here and now, in the “daily bread” of his body and blood in the Eucharist.

For Islam, Mohammed is “the prophet,” the last and greatest of all the prophets, and his prophecy is always in act; while for Christianity, the age of prophecy ended when the Son of God “came down from heaven” in the man Jesus.

For Christians, the city of God is already present in history, although, being mingled with history, it has not yet been revealed in its fullness; while for the Muslims the only manifestation of God that has entered history is his uncreated, eternal, immutable word – the Koran.

Does this mean that, in an Europe now more or less consciously Christian, there is no room for Islam? The answer is no, there is room for Islam.

This is above all because, in spite of differences and conflicts, Islam has always been part of Europe, and is one of its constitutive elements.

You find it in the Moorish arches on the exterior of the apse of the cathedral of Monreale. You find it in its cloister, the center of its fountain displaying an Arab-style column shaped like a palm tree. The great Muslim mosque of Cordoba, begun in the eighth century in Spain, is likewise a forest of Roman columns, and is adorned with mosaics in the pure Byzantine style. The entire medieval world of the Mediterranean, both Christian and Muslim, had as its common source the heritage of ancient Rome.

A GLOBAL EUROPE

As a civilization, Europe has much wider boundaries than those we imagine today, when we make these coincide with the political boundaries of the European Union.

The Europe first spoken of by the historian Herodotus in the fifth century before Christ was initially identified with Greece. But the undertaking of Alexander the Great widened its area immensely, all the way to central Asia and India. This is where the Hellenistic “koinè” was born, with Greek as its common tongue. And Rome extended its empire throughout this region, which included both shores of the Mediterranean, the valley of the Nile, stretching east all the way to the kingdom of the Parthians, and north to the Danube, the Rhine, and Britain.

The culture that generated European civilization was the Greco-Roman culture, which later became Greco-Roman-Christian.

In the West, after the barbarian invasions, it was reborn with its focal point moved farther to the north, as the Carolingian empire, which continued to call itself “holy” and “Roman.”

In the East, it maintained its center in the “Second Rome,” Constantinople, and continued as the Roman-Christian Byzantine Empire, with an intimate marriage of religion and politics that continues until today.

It was from these two Romes not yet divided by schism – sent by both the patriarch of Constantinople and the pope – that Cyril and Methodius set off in the ninth century in order to spread Christianity through the Slavic northeastern portion of Europe: this underwent a new powerful geographic expansion, but retained the closest of ties with its place of origin, as shown by the name of “The Third Rome” that Moscow would give itself in the sixteenth century.

It was within this civilization, and not necessarily in opposition to it, that Islam was born and expanded beginning in the seventh century, gradually conquering the southern shore of the Mediterranean and the Sicily, penetrating Spain, and contending the area of the Roman-Christian Byzantine empire in the East.

The rupture in commercial and cultural ties that intervened for a while between the northern and southern shores of the Mediterranean – identified by later historiography as a rift between Mohammed and Charlemagne – does not change the fact that both sides of these civilizations, Christian and Muslim, continued as the inheritors and interpreters of the same Greco-Roman-Christian heritage, which was germanicized, or slavicized, in the first case, and islamicized in the second. Islam, as found in history, is unthinkable without the structure, institutions, and cultural features of the Greco-Roman-Christian “commonwealth” in which it developed.

Of course, Islam is also that which subjugated and extinguished the blossoming Churches of the Christian East and of northern Africa.

It is that which extended its domain beyond the Spain, even coming to the point of assaulting and sacking the Rome of the popes, in 847.

It is that which destroyed the holy places of Jerusalem and reconquered the land of Jesus which had been temporarily lost with the Crusades.

It is that which brought Constantinople to its knees in 1453, and more than a century later was defeated and beaten back at Lepanto, and yet did not retreat, but instead, another century later, put Vienna to the siege.

But in the meantime, Europe was ravaged by bloody wars among its own Christian members with Islam as the ally of first one and then another kingdom. For many centuries, Islam was treated as a legitimate power within the concert of nations and European public law.

It was only much later, in the nineteenth century, when the Ottoman Empire was in full decline, that the European culture of Enlightenment origin drew a boundary between a civilized Europe and a despotic, backward Europe, including within this “inferior” Europe, together with Islam, the Roman Catholic Church as well.

The same period, from the nineteenth century forward, saw also the birth of the myth of a bygone golden age, an age of peaceful multicultural dialogue between Islam and the Judaeo-Christian world, an age said to have taken place now in Sicily, now in Spain, now in Baghdad.

In reality, much of this is legend. Even in Andalusia when it was ruled by the Almoads, which is so frequently remembered and praised, Jews and Christians were second-class citizens and were systematically harassed, and the two great exponents of that so-called golden age – the Jew Maimonides and the Muslim Averroes, the great translator and interpreter of Aristotle – both ended their lives in exile.

EUROPEAN ISLAM

Therefore, the current temptation to exclude Turkey from Europe has understandable reasons behind it, which Joseph Ratzinger brought to light before he was elected pope.

But this push to exclude the idea that Christianity and Islam can interact on positive terms is the perverse effect of very recent developments.

It’s been just a few decades, not centuries, since the Armenians in Turkey were exterminated, and the Greek Orthodox expelled.

It’s been just a few decades since the Jews disappeared from the Arab countries and the Maghreb.

It’s been just a few decades since the numerous Spaniards, Italians, and Frenchmen – both Jewish and Christian – disappeared from Algeria.

It’s been just a few decades that Alexandria in Egypt has been inhabited solely by Arab Muslims, and is no longer the cosmopolitan city that it had always been before, where Greeks and Italians mingled with the Egyptians.

It’s been just a few decades that the Christian minorities in the Arab countries of the Middle East have been reduced even further in number, depopulated by an exodus to the West. Not to mention what happened at the end of the twentieth century in the former Yugoslavia, where the clash of civilizations theorized by Samuel Huntington was made tangible in conflicts between Catholics, Orthodox, and Muslims, with the massacre and expulsion of peoples guilty of having trespassed upon centuries-old political and religious boundaries.

Of course, there is no comfort in the fact that a radical Islamist party like Hamas won the elections last January 25 in Palestine.

But if one looks at these events in the perspective of centuries – and if one looks at the recent outbreak of religion into the public square – the alternative to Islamist radicalism cannot be the “secular” Islam dreamt of by many in the West, both intellectuals and governors.

This “secular” Islam is the pet project of authoritarian regimes with no future, like that of Syria, or of rare secularized authors and businessmen, almost all of whom have left their countries of origin and have practically no following in the Muslim world.

Historically, a “secular” Islam of great power and breadth, which also gave rise to a stable modern state, is that of the Turkey of Kemal Ataturk. But even within Turkey this “secular” form of Islam has been noticeably on the decline for a while, and the government is now held by a party that is conservative, democratic in some partial features, and openly religious.

Also in Palestine, the defeat of Fatah – the party of the late Yasser Arafat – in the recent elections marked the end of a superimposed “secular” system of power, inspired by old socialist and nationalist European models. The victory of Hamas is the affirmation of a party that has understood how to re-Islamicize society. And this affirmation was obtained through democratic procedures, by a vote.

But democracy is not merely a procedure; it is a culture, a culture made of individual liberty and of free interaction between politics and religion. And it is here that Hamas and the other neofundamentalist parties now on the rise – most of them connected to the Muslim Brotherhood, which has a great deal of influence over Islamic immigrants in Europe – find themselves in check.

They have no responses to the problem of governing diverse groups. And this is precisely what made Europe into a civilization at once united and varied, on its Greco-Roman-Christian foundation, not excluding but rather including Islam.


For this reason, there are two obligatory steps along the way to integrating the Muslims within the Europe of today and tomorrow.

These are the self-reform of Islam, and the education of minds.

The first step is very difficult, but possible. It is difficult because the Koran is not the equivalent of what the Sacred Scriptures are for Christians, but rather the equivalent of Christ, the Eternal Word of God come down to earth. And thus the Muslim does not see the Koran as open to interpretation and adaptation, as the Sacred Scriptures are, which are “divinely inspired” but still written by men.

But it is possible because in the Muslim world – above all among the Shiites, but also among the Sunnis, from Morocco to Turkey to Indonesia – there are nevertheless currents that acknowledge and practice various interpretations of the Koran, and some of these are capable of incorporating its principles with modern democracy. Together with his former theology students, Benedict XVI dedicated a meeting of study last September at Castelgandolfo to precisely this varied approach to divine revelation on the part of Muslims.

As for the second step toward the integration of Muslims into Europe, the education of minds, last August 20 Benedict XVI insisted upon this in his meeting in Cologne with some of the exponents of the Muslim community in Germany.

After condemning in biting words the acts of terrorism carried out “as if this could be something pleasing to God,” the pope addressed the Muslims present there as follows:

“You guide Muslim believers and train them in the Islamic faith. Teaching is the vehicle through which ideas and convictions are transmitted. Words are highly influential in the education of the mind. You, therefore, have a great responsibility for the formation of the younger generation. As Christians and Muslims, we must face together the many challenges of our time.”

This is the interreligious and intercultural dialogue between Christians and Muslims that Benedict XVI wants.

He has asked his “dear Muslim friends” for unity of action “in the service of fundamental moral values conveyed to us unmistakably by the quiet but clear voice of conscience.”

This is a voice that speaks to all, and which the pope trusts will be listened to and acted upon by all. It is a voice that commands Europe to believe in its own Christian identity: the generator of a great civilization of which the Muslims are a part.

http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7116

Cardinal to Muslims: reciprocate on religious freedom

Cardinal Angelo Sodano,
the Vatican Secretary of State
Vatican, Feb. 21 (CWNews.com) - Muslims should reciprocate the respect that Christians show for religious freedom, the Vatican Secretary of State argues.

Cardinal Angelo Sodano, speaking to reporters at a reception in Rome on Monday evening, avoided any specific reference to the Danish cartoons which have been a focal point of anger in the Islamic world. But the implications of his statements were evident.

Christians should not claim a "freedom to offend," the cardinal said. But others should not claim "the freedom to destroy us."

Cardinal Sodano said that governments have an important role to play in "defending the reciprocity" that should exist on questions of religious freedom. He suggested that the topic of religious liberty for minority groups should be brought up in negotiations with Islamic countries.

The cardinal said that religious freedom should not be founded merely on "tolerance"-- which, he pointed out, is a negative concept-- but on respect for the beliefs of every individual. On that point, he added, Church and state should work together.

Cardinal Sodano spoke to reporters at a reception hosted by the Italian ambassador to the Holy See: an annual affair marking the anniversary of the Lateran Accords which, in 1929, established the current status of the Vatican as a sovereign state. This year's reception also marked the anniversary of a new concordat between Italy and the Holy See, signed on February 18, 1984.

The February 20 reception was attended by many leading Italian political figures, including President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. The latter told reporters that he had spoken with Vatican officials about the anti-Christian violence in some Islamic countries, assuring the prelates that his government understood and shared their concerns.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Bishop Warns Against jihadist victory In Kossovo

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http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7133

An unidentified Orthodox priest at Gracanica, a Kosovo Serb enclave Kosovo Bishop Warns Not to Hand Jihadists a Victory
CNSNews.com

By Sherrie Gossett
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
February 23, 2006

(CNSNews.com) - A leading Serbian Orthodox bishop, visiting the U.S. on a mission of "peace and understanding," has warned the international community against granting independence to Kosovo, saying such a move would hand a victory to radical Muslims and their jihadist supporters.

Kosovo's independence from Serbia would also mean "a virtual sentence of extinction" for minority Serbs in the province, according to Dr. Artemije Radosavljevic, the bishop of the Serbian cities of Raska and Prizren.

He met with Cybercast News Service during a recent 20-day tour of the U.S. to discuss the fate of the troubled province, which is formally known as Kosovo and Metohija. This month, international talks are set to begin regarding Kosovo's final status.

Kosovo, which is part of the sovereign country of Serbia and Montenegro, has been a U.N. protectorate since North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces bombed Yugoslavia between March and May of 1999 to compel the Serb-dominated government of Slobodan Milosovic to withdraw its forces from Kosovo.

The NATO bombings were launched in response to an alleged genocide being conducted against Kosovar Albanians by the Serbs. But when the bombing campaign ended, ethnic cleansing allegedly took place with Albanians, who are predominantly Muslim, targeting Christian Serbs and other minorities such as Turks, Roma (gypsies), Ashkali and Muslim Slavs.

The violence, including rape, murder, torture and the burning of villages, was witnessed and documented in hundreds of pages of United Nations (U.N.), NATO Kosovo Force (KFOR) and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) documents.

"Detaching Kosovo from democratic Serbia would mean a virtual sentence of extinction for my people in the province -- the larger part of my diocese -- who continue to face unremitting violence from jihad terrorist and criminal elements that dominate the Albanian Muslim leadership," Dr. Artemije said.

The ethnic cleansing that followed the NATO campaign has prompted an exodus of approximately 240,000 Serbs and minorities from the region.

Arguing that a "pure mono-ethnic and mono-religious Kosovo" could result from independence, the bishop said the move would "definitely be used to strengthen what we call the 'white al Qaeda,'" a reference to the recruitment of terrorists with European features.

"This [al Qaeda] would definitely be in grave contest and even more dangerous that the one we know so far from bin Laden ... because they could very [easily] melt within other populations ... ." Granting independence would be a "tragedy," he said.

Dr. Artemije also referred to allegations made by Thomas Gambill, a former OSCE security chief, who previously told Cybercast News Service that Kosovo is a lawless region "owned" by the Albanian mafia, characterized by continuing ethnic cleansing and subject to increasing infiltration by al Qaeda-linked Muslim jihadists.

Gambill's remarks were confirmed in official documents and by a United Nations official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"In our past visits here, we did indicate and tried to provide information sufficient to show there's a lot of evidence about the terror and the mafia taking stronghold in Kosovo," Dr. Artemije said. "We are worried this truth has not been accepted or did not go any further ... We have faith that in the future this truth will be known, unfortunately, we are afraid it might be too late for the Christians in Kosovo."

The Serbian bishop described the life of Serbs and other minorities in Kosovo as "extremely difficult."

"Basic civil rights are completely non-existent. Their security of their own life doesn't exist. Any assistance regarding schools or health care, etcetera, is very meager ... ," he said.

Before NATO's bombing campaign, then-President Bill Clinton estimated publicly that 100,000 ethnic Albanians had been killed. Within weeks of NATO's bombing campaign, however, the estimate was greatly revised downward. A subsequent five-month U.N. investigation found 2,108 bodies and, several months after the NATO mission, USA Today reported that the figures appeared to have been "greatly exaggerated."

Andrew Bacevich, professor of International Relations at Boston University, told USA Today that in order to justify the NATO bombings, "they needed to tap that memory of the Holocaust."

Recent reports reviewed by Cybercast News Service indicate that in 1999, slightly more than 4,000 Albanians were killed and approximately 1,700 non-Albanians were killed. Some 2,500 are still missing, according to data from the Commission for Abducted and Missing Persons.

Cybercast News Service asked Bishop Artemije whether he believed allegations that President Clinton had exaggerated the figures in order to generate support for the war.

"I couldn't say that he was the one who was lying, but definitely he was getting or using false information," the bishop stated. "... It seems to us it was important to fabricate these figures in order to justify and prepare the intervention of NATO in Kosovo."

Diplomats and analysts critical of the situation in Kosovo have told Cybercast News Service that the religious persecution is part of a political strategy of violence, which if successful in winning the independence of Kosovo, could trigger similar violent secessionist movements throughout neighboring states and countries.

Those same officials also express concern about radical Islamic elements existing on Europe's doorstep, in a province already plagued with illegal arms and narcotics trafficking.

Bishop Artemije's remarks to Cybercast News Service were translated by his Washington, D.C., representative.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Man Faces Death Penalty For Becoming Christian

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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=49345

FAITH UNDER FIRE
Man faces death penalty
for becoming Christian
Despite ouster of Taliban by U.S., court still prosecutes ex-Muslim


Posted: March 19, 2006
1:59 p.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

Despite the fact the hardline Taliban regime is no longer in power, an Afghan man faces possible execution for allegedly abandoning his Islamic roots and becoming a Christian.

"Yes that's true, a man has converted to Christianity. He's being tried in one of our courts," Supreme Court judge Ansarullah Mawlavizada told the Middle East Times.

The case centers on Abdul Rahman, believed to be 41, who converted from Islam to Christianity some 16 years ago. His relatives reportedly notified authorities about the conversion.

The constitution in Afghanistan is based on Shariah law, which states any Muslim who rejects his or her religion should be sentenced to death.

"We are not against any particular religion in the world. But in Afghanistan, this sort of thing is against the law," the judge told the Associated Press. "It is an attack on Islam. ... The prosecutor is asking for the death penalty."

If he indeed is sentenced, Rahman would be the first person punished for leaving Islam since the Taliban was ousted by American-led forces in late 2001, in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the U.S.

Prosecutor Abdul Wasi says he offered to drop the charges if Rahman made the switch back to Islam, but the defendant is maintaining his Christian beliefs. The judge is expected to rule within two months.

About 99 percent of Afghanistan's 28 million people are Muslims, with the rest mostly Hindus.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Egypt Threatens Demolition Of Coptic Monastery

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The Egyptian government threatened to demolish a Coptic Orthodox
monastery's recently built guesthouse. The local governer issued a
decree, on Monday, March 20, 2006, that allows the monks of Dare
Saleeb monastery in the Egyptian city of Millawi only five days to
file an appeal before bulldozers demolish the structure.

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         Dare Saleeb (Monastery of the Cross) is located in the al

Hoor region of the city of Millawi. A structure of noted historical
value, the Coptic Orthodox monastery houses not only one of Egypt's
largest cross altar paintings but the bodies of deceased luminaries
such as Saint Abu Fana and scientist and writer Father Mensi Yohanna.
Monks have responded to the needs of religious pilgrims, tourists, and
other visitors seeking spiritual insight by constructing a guesthouse
on the monastery's property.

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         According to monks within the monastery, General Sayyid

`Othman Ismaeel—president of the city maglis or governing council—on
Monday issued a notice of demolition to Bishop Dimetrios. The notice
allowed the monastic community only five days to appeal against the
demolition of the guesthouse, which city officials allege was
constructed without proper permits.

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         Members of the local Coptic community have reacted to the

edict by organizing a massive sit-in protest. As of Monday, March 20,
Coptic youth began positioning themselves inside the guesthouse in
anticipation of the demolition scheduled for five days hence. A monk
has reported one youth leader as stating, "We prefer to be run over by
bulldozers than relinquish the monastery to the attackers."

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         Dare Saleeb has also been the target of several other

recent attacks from hostile community members, including
desert-dwelling Arabs who have stormed the monastery in their attempt
to claim as their own the property where the guesthouse now stands.
Attacks have become so frequent that the monastery unsuccessfully
petitioned the city for permission to construct a protective fence.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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