By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com)
TURKEY (ANS. SEPT. 5, 2015) Fifteen Turkish
Protestant congregations and their leaders have been targeted since Aug.
27 by an ongoing campaign of death threats sent to their Facebook,
email, websites and mobile telephones.
According
to a story by World Watch Monitor (WWM), the threats followed the style
and jargon typically used by the so-called Islamic State (IS), vowing
to kill, massacre and behead apostates who the messages accused of
having “chosen the path that denies Allah” and “dragged others into
believing as you do… As heretics you have increased your numbers with
ignorant followers.”
“Threats are not anything new for the Protestant community who live
in this country and want to raise their children here,” the Association
of Protestant Christians in Turkey said in a press release on Sept. 1.
Te release continued, “But with the recent increase in systematic
threats, from this country's west to east and north to south, in
different cities, we think that these messages, coming close together
and resembling each other, are coming from the same source.”
A copy of one message seen by WWM displayed the IS flag and called itself “those who go to jihad.”
It warned, “Perverted infidels, the time that we will strike your necks is soon. May Allah receive the glory and praise.”
WWM said that most of the messages included a direct quote from the
Al-Ahzab chapter of the Quran, which threatens “those who spread false
news… Accursed, they shall be seized wherever found and killed with a
horrible slaughter.”
A link was also posted for an Arabic video subtitled in Turkish on
YouTube titled, “The religious proofs why apostates should be killed.”
One pastor attacked over both email and SMS messages told WWM,
“They are saying things like they had been waiting for us to return to
Islam, and that we are responsible for other Muslims turning to Christ,
that our time is up and that Allah will give them our heads.”
The majority of Turkish Protestant congregations are former Muslims who have converted to Christianity.
In contrast to most Muslim-majority nations, WWM reported, Turkish
citizens have the legal right to change their religious identity or
leave blank the religion column on their IDs.
Church leaders who received the messages were encouraged by the
association to notify the police and public prosecutors in their local
area regarding the threats.
WWM reported a Turkish pastor said, “They are saying things like
they had been waiting for us to return to Islam, and that we are
responsible for other Muslims turning to Christ, that our time is up and
that Allah will give them our heads.”
Turkey's stance towards IS
Turkey's apparent ambivalence over the past year towards the
Islamic State fighting on its borders for control over large sections of
neighbouring Syria and Iraq remains under the international spotlight.
But in early August, WWM reported, the state-controlled Religious
Affairs Directorate issued its first condemnation of the jihadist group
as a “terrorist” organiztion, officially declaring it “non-Muslim.”
Condemning the self-proclaimed IS Caliphate for its
“twisted"”portrayal of Islam and the Quran, the Turkish government then
released a detailed report to inform the public about the group's
tactics, slogans, operations and interpretation of Islam through weekly
sermons, fatwas (religious edicts) and Quran courses.
Within just 10 days, WWM reported, IS responded with a new video
directly threatening Turkey and its president, warning the people of
Turkey against “atheists, crusaders and devils who fool them and make
them a slave of the crusaders.”
Vowing to conquer Istanbul soon, the speaker, using the alias Abu
Ammar, called on the Turkish people to abandon democracy, secularism and
human rights and instead follow Sharia.
Speaking in fluent Turkish on the seven-minute clip, which WWM said
was distinctly amateur in comparison with the jihadists' usual slick
videos, the man was later identified as a 47-year-old Turkish citizen
who had taken his wife and children to Syria to join IS in 2014.
For more information visit www.worldwatchmonitor.org
Photo captions: 1) A worship service in Turkey. 2) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About the writer: Jeremy
Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, a
freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy Junction, New
Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter, www.joyjunction.org. He
has a master's degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. His newest book is "From Destitute to Ph.D." Additional
details on "From Destitute to Ph.D." are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com.
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