Five Years On: What Has the Arab Spring Meant for Christians?
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
MIDDLE EAST (ANS – Dec. 30, 2015)
-- The Arab Spring, which began just over five years ago (December 18,
2010), started with a wave of protests in Tunisia followed by other Arab
countries. It was positively acclaimed as a social movement demanding
an end to human rights violations, government corruption and poverty.
“Yet, so far,” says World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
the outcome is largely contrary to what the original protesters
intended, and since Christians are a minority in all Arab countries,
they have been especially affected, mostly for the worse.
“In
Egypt the revolution resulted in immediate new freedoms that Christians
had not experienced before. However after all the upheavals of the last
few years, there was no assurance it would last. “
Egyptian
Christian, Diana Melek says: “The revolution came to the church shaking
it. The revolution shook all of us. They were sleeping and they were
shaken awake and they got up, and then they went back to sleep again.
First I called it a miracle, it was full of flowers, so it was spring,
it seemed a godly spring.”
WWM
states that Christians across the Middle East thought that new
governments would provide them with human rights, and the right to be
free to believe in Jesus Christ. But as elections were held, new hard
line Islamist political parties, like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt,
succeeded in getting into power.
Under
the old authoritarian rule, the position of Christians’ minority rights
was, to a certain extent, safeguarded. The ousting of dictators like
Colonel Khaddafi in Libya and Hosni Mubarak in Egypt left a power vacuum
that benefited Islamist fundamentalists, and also criminal gang,” it
says.
“The
anti-Christian sentiments of these groups means that violence against
both historical Christian minorities and new believers from Muslim
backgrounds has increased.
“The
Arab Spring has also birthed the emergence of Islamic State which
continues to make international headlines for its barbarity of ethnic
cleansing of Christians in Syria and Iraq.
“Because
of the on-going chaotic and threatening situation across the region
many of the last of the Christian communities continue to leave their
native countries en masse, which is a massive blow in the birthplace of
the faith. Since the Syrian civil war began in 2011, 700,000 Christians
have fled the country.”
Syrian
Christian Wael Haddad: “We had to pray for Syria, maybe from 40 or 50
years ago. Every time we asked ‘Please, Lord, bring a revolution, a
spiritual revolution. [God] shake, shake the nest!’ …But maybe we didn’t
think about how the Lord will allow this to happen to His Church.”
Photo
captions: 1) An Arab Spring protestor. 2) An Arab Spring Rally. 3) Dan
Wooding reporting for ANS from outside the Kurdistan Parliament in
Erbil, Northern Iraq.
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About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning author, broadcaster
and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents,
and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he
has been married for 52 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter,
and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. He is the author of some
45 books and has two TV programs and one radio show in Southern
California, and has reported widely for ANS from all over the Middle
East, including from Northern Iraq.
** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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