‘House church’ prompts Muslims to attack Christian homes in Alexandria, Egypt
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT (ANS, July 2, 2016) --
Recent visits by a Coptic priest to Moussa’s home in a village outside
Alexandria, Egypt, gave locals reason to think a Christian place of
worship was springing up in their midst.
Apart
from housing the family of six on the ground floor, the top two floors
of the building were to discreetly serve as a place where Christians
could gather, in the absence of any other place in the village they
could use.
And,
although the number of casualties may not cross the world-attention
threshold, the story of what happened in al-Bayda-1, a settlement
outside Alexandria, is indicative of a pattern faced by minority
Christians in Egypt when failure of the rule of law and religious
prejudice become the order of the day.
On
Friday, 17 June, after the Muslim noon prayers, angry worshippers
gathered outside the home of Naim Aziz Moussa, after word had spread
that the local Christian was turning his house into a ‘church,’
according to World Watch Monitor www.worldwatchmonitor.org
"More
than 5,000 people, including young and old, men and women, mobbed my
home. They were shouting: ‘One way or another, we’ll bring the church
down to the ground’," he said.
World
Watch Monitor explained it has often proved legally impossible to issue
church building permits in the country, a sore point of contention for
Coptic Christians, Egypt’s oldest group of Christian believers. Despite
various attempts, the bid to pass legislation to remove various hurdles
remains elusive.
Besides
the 46-year-old farmer and his family, the village of al-Bayda-1 is
home to some 80 Christian households. Situated on the Alexandria-Cairo
Desert Road, the slum-like settlement falls within Amreyya, a district
of Alexandria that is heavily influenced by fundamentalist Muslim
Salafists, who, locals report, make no secret of their disdain for
Christians.
The
nearest church is over 5 kilometers away in another village -- a
considerable distance, given poor transport and an area where
high-density population means people already live in close quarters.
Moussa, also known as Maurice, had in 2009 donated part of his building to the church, the news agency reported.
World
Watch Monitor stated that some widely-circulated media, including Fox
News, have reported that 80 homes were torched. However, World Watch
Monitor, based on reports from local sources, learned that at least two
homes, including Moussa’s, suffered extensive damages, while 10
Christian homes were looted.
Building
material, fittings and fixtures believed to have been gathered to make
the "house church" were destroyed, the agency said in details supplied
to ASIST News Service.
"No church will stand here in the village. It’s either us or you, infidels!" Moussa recalled the angry mob as saying.
"The
building was ransacked, including our home. My brother’s nearby new
flat was also destroyed," said Moussa, who, together with another of his
brothers, was injured in the chaos.
In
line with what has become an all too familiar pattern, nearby Christian
homes were pelted with stones, the news agency reported. "At least five
Copts were injured. Women and children were caught in the panic,"
Moussa added.
Nearby church priest Fr. Karas was said to have narrowly escaped from the angry crowd, while his car was smashed.
"They were crying out: ‘Islamic! Islamic! We don’t want churches in Amreyya!’" Moussa said.
"It
seemed all too convenient that the Amreyya Police Chief and other
ranking officers happened to be doing their prayers this Friday at the
twin al-Bayda-2 village merely 5 kilometers away," he said. "As the
police arrived at the scene, angry Muslims were shouting, while their
women were showing signs of jubilation that the police were there. They
were shouting out in support of the police, while at the same time
stressing their rejection of the church on Islamic grounds.
"The
police chief could see me bleeding from my wounds. I complained to him
about what happened to me. He said I deserved this, and more. Meanwhile
our attackers carried the chief on their shoulders and cried out in
support: ‘People and police are one!’"
According
to Sabri Shawki, another local Coptic Christian, the police took 19
Christians, himself included, in a van. "I thought they were taking us
to the station. But they only whisked us outside the village and left us
there," said Shawki.
"The
police did nothing to protect the Christians. Right in their presence,
more Christian properties were attacked. Fr. Karas’s car was smashed yet
again," added Moussa, saying a number of the attackers then joined the
police chief for evening Muslim prayers right in front of the
Christians’ homes, while using loudspeakers.
The
police eventually rounded up six Muslims and six Christians, including
Moussa. One of the Copts detained, Harvey Fawzi, was an outsider who
happened to be at the scene at the wrong time.
World
Watch Monitor said that according to local sources, the six Muslims
were shortly released in time for their evening breaking of the Ramadan
fast, while the six Copts were kept for longer. At 10 p.m. that night
the Christians were charged with "building without permission" – an
anomaly, says Moussa, as every building in the slum village is built
without permission.
After midnight the Copts were released on bail after also being charged with "praying without permit."
"When
at the police station, I requested the officer to take me to hospital
as my head was bleeding. I was kept till midnight, before being allowed
to go to the hospital, where I was stitched," Moussa said.
Since
17 June, Moussa, together with his wife, who is pregnant, their four
children, and his brother’s family, have not been allowed to go back
home.
"We’re
sleeping rough. The security forces are not allowing us to go back
home, unless we opt for extrajudicial conciliation," he said. "The
police tell me I can only go home if I agree to reconcile with my
opponents."
Despite pressures to relinquish their legal rights, the Moussas are adamant in their faith.
"I
stand for justice. We have suffered a lot. If the law means anything, I
will have justice first," said Moussa, who is distraught that his
attackers sit amicably with policemen right outside the home he cannot
now go to.
World Watch Monitor says the Moussas’ wait for justice may be long.
"The
Amreyya Police Chief tells me the law won’t help me. He taunts me that
my cousin cannot get his land back despite a legal ruling in his favor,"
Moussa said, referring to Hamdi Makanoti, whose story World Watch
Monitor covered last year.
World
Watch Monitor explained that building new churches and re-modelling old
ones is restricted in Egypt. The agency stated that still, in numerous
cases Christians have set up churches in the basements of their
residential buildings, or through establishing NGOs and eventually using
their premises for worship.
Photo
captions: 1) The anti-Christian crowd welcomed the arrival of the
police to their slum village of al-Bayda-1 (Courtesy World Watch
Monitor). 2) Fr. Karas's car was smashed during the violence. The police
were immediately at the scene, which Moussa said he thought was
suspicious. (Courtesy World Watch Monitor). 3) Michael Ireland.
About
the writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. To help partner
with Michael in ministry, log-on to: https://ACTINTL.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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