Embattled
Coptic Christians are Fleeing Egypt
By Charles M. Sennot,
Boston Globe 18 January 1999
EXCERPTS:
AL KOSHEH, Egypt - On a sweltering night last summer, the bodies of two slain Christian
men were dumped in the center of the Christian neighborhood of this remote village on the
banks of the upper Nile River
In the weeks after the Aug. 14 murder, the victims' families and local Christian
leaders presented evidence that the killing was done by a gang of five Muslims. But local
police ignored their claims and rounded up 1,000 Christians from the town for questioning.
Christians charge that police subjected dozens of people, including women and small
children, to beatings and torture to force statements from them to frame a Christian for
the crime. He now faces the death penalty.
Egyptian officials have reacted predictably, critics say, by concerning themselves more
with masking the perception of a Muslim- Christian divide in Egypt than in investigating
the case.
The government thus far has done nothing to reprimand the local police, all of whom are
Muslim.
Instead, they arrested a prominent Coptic bishop for speaking out against the alleged
injustices and a leading human rights worker for doing the same. Both face charges of
fomenting sectarian strife.
A five-count indictment against the bishop includes a charge of threatening national
security, which carries the death penalty.
"What happened in Al Kosheh is a very sad chapter for our country," said
Bishop Wissa, the frail, 60-year-old Coptic cleric, on the October night he was arrested.
"We have traditionally got along with our Muslim neighbors. But the situation is
deteriorating from bad to worse. We have spoken out and now I may face the death penalty
for doing so. How can I say nothing when this is happening to our people?"
Egypt's nearly six million Copts, by far the largest Christian population in the Middle
East, have for centuries coexisted with Muslims.... Today they are an embattled minority,
and they are leaving in significant numbers
The Coptic church estimates that more than 1 million Christians have left for the
United States, Europe, and Canada over the last three decades.
...
There are 250,000 Copts registered with the North American Archdiocese of the Coptic
Orthodox Church.
... the Copts have become a smaller minority. In 1975, according to church statistics,
the Copts represented close to 20 percent of the total population.
Today they are between 6 and 9 percent of Egypt's 60 million population. Discrimination
against Copts is rarely as dramatic as the incident at Al Kosheh. What they claim to face
in their daily lives is far more subtle.
Copts feel the discrimination in schools, especially in the poorer neighborhoods of
Cairo and small villages of upper Egypt, where Islamist teachers sometimes distort and
insult the Christian faith. Only the Muslim faith, not Christianity, is taught in
mandatory religion classes in public schools.
As their presence dwindles, Copts are being marginalized politically and economically.
Of the 26 governors appointed by President Hosni Mubarak, none is a Copt.
None of the presidents or deans at Egypt's universities is a Copt. And with the powerful
professional syndicates increasingly under the control of the fundamentalist Muslim
Brotherhood, Copts complain that they are disenfranchised.
Copts are fiercely proud of their Egyptian identity and generally reluctant to
criticize the Egyptian government. This makes the recent voices of protest all the more
resonant.
Yet they have suffered petty discrimination for centuries. One lingering example is the
19th-century Ottoman empire restriction against the construction and even repair of
Christian churches without approval from the highest levels of the government.
Today, this law infuriates the church hierarchy that oversees once-grand cathedrals and
small parish churches that are crumbling.
Bishop Thomas, who oversees a diocese of 21 churches and monasteries, says many of the
properties have cracked foundations, broken steeples, and lack plumbing.
"I don't know what kind of danger to the state repairing a toilet poses, but
apparently there are security reasons for this," said Thomas.
...in 1980 ...president Anwar Sadat courted Islamic fundamentalists to consolidate
power against socialist rivals. This further embittered the Coptic hierarchy, especially
the church leader, Pope Shenouda III, who charged that Sadat had replaced nationalism with
religion.
In 1981, Sadat outraged Copts by putting Shenouda under house arrest...for four years.
The Islamic militant group Gama Islamiya began targeting Copts in 1991, when it
launched a terrorist campaign to overthrow the secular government of Hosni Mubarak, which
responded with a relentless crackdown that imprisoned 20,000 militants.
Throughout the Muslim extremists' 8-year battle against the government, militants have
chosen Copts as easy and repeated targets. Militants firebombed churches and gunned down
Copts working in the wheat and sugar cane fields along the Nile.
Perhaps the most dramatic case occurred on Feb. 12, 1997, in Abu Qurqas, a small town
on a wide bend in the Nile River in upper Egypt near Minya.
While a Coptic student prayer group was gathering in St. George's Church, gunmen whom
police believe to have been Gama Islamiya militants opened fire, killing nine people.
The church now has armed guards stationed at a steel gate that leads to its courtyard.
On a recent visit, a reporter was permitted to enter the town only with an armored troop
carrier flanked by six soldiers carrying automatic rifles.
Inside, Emad, 28, an accountant and youth leader of the church, suspiciously eyes the
security officials who appeared in the church.
When asked about the relationship between Muslims and Christians in Egypt, Emad
retreated into an uncomfortable silence.
... A recent spate of roberies of Coptic jewelry stores is beleived to have been
a key source of financing for the Gama Islamiya. And Copts complain they must pay
"gezia," a kind of protection tax, which Islamists say is grounded in Koranic
law. Copts who have resisted have been threatened with death. Some have been killed.
... in Al Kosheh, the problem was the government, not the militants. This is why the
case there resonates so powerfully among Copts. Based on dozens of interviews with
victims, police ran roughshod over the Christian part of town from the morning the bodies
were found last Aug. 15 through to the end of September.
Victims claim that police threatened to rape several women. They described in chilling
detail being subjected to electric prods, of being hung from window grates and in some
cases a ceiling fan for hours during questioning.
Evidence of rope burns, bruises, and small red scars from the prods were visible on the
bodies of more than a dozen victims interviewed by the Globe.
Boctur Abu Yameen, 60, was the first arrested as a suspect. He said the police also
detained members of his family, including his 11- year-old son and 12-year-old daughter,
who were threatened and beaten while police tried to force them to confess that their
father was the killer. Yameen was held for 34 days without any formal charges before he
was eventually released.
"They began shocking my ears first, and then I was stripped and the prods were
placed on my genitals," he said. "They said things I cannot repeat about the
Lord Jesus."
A Copt, William Artori, has been convicted of the murder and is sentenced to death. The
church and human rights activists say Artori was wrongly accused and that the only two
witnesses against him were tortured into making statements that they have since recanted.
The five Muslim men whom the Christians suspect of carrying out the murder - one of
whom is reportedly a relative of a high-ranking officer in Egypt's intelligence agency -
were briefly questioned and remain free.
The Egyptian government has found no wrongdoing by police, according to press reports.
Officials say claims of torture were exaggerated and that they have convicted the right
man.
Osama El Baz, a senior adviser to president Mubarak, adamantly denies that Christians
face discrimination. In an interview ...El Baz cited Egypt's "proud history of
religious tolerance."
El Baz believes the case has attracted interest because of an orchestrated effort by
conservative American Christian groups and Washington lobbyists for the Israeli government
to draw attention to the "persecution" of Christians in many Muslim countries
and China.
.... a report by the respected Egyptian Organization for Human Rights found that the Al
Kosheh case "constituted grave violations of the rights, freedoms, and human dignity
of the people."
In an October interview, the group's secretary general, Hafez Abu Seda, qualified his
findings" Police brutality is widespread against Muslims and Christians, even if this
is an exceptionally dramatic case. Systematic police brutality...has been an issue for all
of Egypt."
Still Seda, who is Muslim, sharply criticized the government for doing too little to
respond to the events in Al Kosheh. His criticisms of the government landed him in one of
Egypt's worst prisons in the weeks after the Globe interviewed him. The government charged
that his report was an "act harmful to Egypt."
The International Commission of Jurists has come to his defense, calling his detention
"an attempt to silence the voice of a major and internationally recognized human
rights group."
If the Egyptian government is in fact trying to silence those who speak out against
police brutality, it is not working in Al Kosheh. On a Sunday afternoon last fall at the
Church of the Angel, the Christian families of Al Kosheh gathered in the courtyard behind
a huge steel gate.
Some 400 angry parishioners clamored to tell a reporter their stories of torture,
arbitrary arrest, and vicious attacks on their faith by police.
[Editing by Dr. Joseph Lerner, IMRA]