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Dramatic Testimony from Israel of Muslims Who Converted to Christianity

By 

Jay Sekulow

June 21, 2011

3 min read

Israel

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Terrence McKeegan and Gregor Puppinck, Counsels for our European Centre for Law and Justice (ECLJ), are in Israel and the Palestinian Territories, at the request of the United Nations Expert on Religious Freedom, to help facilitate the fact-finding mission there.

 

JERUSALEM ­  For the past week, our ECLJ team has been organizing a large and diverse range of meetings in both Israel and the Palestinian Territories on the situation of religious freedom. We have met with over three dozen Christian leaders from nearly every Christian denomination all over the Holy Land.  These meetings have given us a better understanding of the religious and political situation of the tiny Christian minority, which now comprises just 2% of the population here.

 

In addition, the ECLJ team had the great opportunity to organize four joint meetings with the United Nations Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Religion and local Christian leaders. Because of the general climate of fear in many of the Christian communities in the Holy Land, many of the UNs meetings with the Christian leaders would not have happened without our involvement. For the same reason, nearly all of the people we interviewed expressly requested their full anonymity.

 

The first meeting with the UN was a roundtable discussion in Jerusalem of a dozen individuals, including leaders from the Lutheran, Episcopal, Evangelical, Catholic, and Christian non-governmental organizations (NGOs).  The ECLJ also organized joint meetings with the UN in the two most historically Christian towns in the Holy Land, Bethlehem and Nazareth, which have both experienced a dramatic exodus of Christians in recent years.  Some leaders referred to the situation in these towns as an invasion and gave detailed accounts of coordinated efforts by Muslims to seize Christian properties. The final meeting with the UN was held with one of the three patriarchs of Jerusalem, with our attendance requested by their office. 

 

Perhaps our most impressive meeting was one arranged by our colleague at CBN News with five Christians who had converted from Islam.  This meeting, which for security reasons was held in an olive tree grove, was extremely powerful.  These brave converts detailed their conversion experiences, but also testified to the persecution they have suffered as a result. They have been subjected to repeated interrogations and permanent discrimination, including the inability to find work because of their faith.  One recounted his story of being tortured and imprisoned by Palestinian officials for many months.  As the penalty for apostasy in Islam is death, most of these converts have been forced to find protection in Israel or abroad.  Many others who are not known publicly to be converts hide their Christian faith from their community, and even their families.   

 

During the meetings, a number of leaders expressed grave concern that the Christian community in the Holy Land is in serious jeopardy of extinction.  Most of them worried about the growing risk of seeing a future Palestinian State run by an Islamic extremists.  Many have resigned themselves to prepare for more suffering, and even, as one Christian leader said, to be martyrs for their faith.

 

 

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