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At Least 45 Christian Churches Set on Fire In Canada as Attacks Escalate

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An apparent ongoing anti-Christian campaign in Canada has resulted in a total of 45 churches being attacked with some of the buildings being burned to the ground. 

As CBN News has reported, terrorists are responsible for the attacks against mainly Roman Catholic churches serving indigenous congregations. 

The crimes stem from far-left terrorists with a Marxist ideology whose sole purpose is to strike fear in Canadians for practicing their faith. 

CTV News reports indigenous leaders are calling for the church arsons to stop. 

“Burning down churches is not in solidarity with us indigenous people. As I said we do not destroy people’s places of worship,” said Jenn Allan-Riley, an assistant Pentecostal minister at Living Waters Church during a press conference last week.

“We’re concerned about the burning and defacing of churches bringing more strife, depression, and anxiety to those already in pain and mourning,” she said. 

Seventeen of the 45 church buildings attacked have suffered fire damage or completely burned to the ground. 

Counter Signal.com reports the fires and the vandalism span six provinces and the Northwest Territories. Some of the attacks have been in the heartland of First Nation’s territory.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said they are investigating the church fires to see if they are connected.

As CBN News reported, terrorists have also targeted other churches not affiliated with the Roman Catholic church.  Last week, the building housing the House of Prayer Alliance Church in Calgary was set on fire.  

Battalion Chief Keith Stahl told CBC News the fire was mostly confined to the outside of the building, but the interior did have heavy smoke damage. Police believe the fire was intentionally set, but have no suspects. 

The congregation of 230 people has been unable to meet in the building due to the fire damage. 

Keean Bexte tweeted CounterSignal.com’s interview with the church’s pastor.

“We are refugees. We escaped from Vietnam to come here to get more freedom, to live, and we think it was a good country – and now it happened to our church,” Pastor Nguyen said. “Maybe it is not safe to be here in Canada compared to Vietnam.”

The church fires were reported across Canada following the recent discoveries of unmarked graves on the sites of former boarding schools for Indigenous children, many of which were run by churches. The remains of nearly 1,000 bodies have been found so far, most of them Indigenous children.

The schools weren’t just in Canada. The American Magazine, a Jesuit journal, reports by 1926 there were 357 schools in 30 states with more than 60,000 children. Catholic religious orders in the United States administered 84 of the schools. Jesuits managed four of them.

Since Catholic orders carried out similar missions in the U.S., and U.S. funding was even given to them, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland has now ordered an investigation into the history of these schools and a search for graves of children who may have perished at them.

On Tuesday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his “heart breaks” after the discovery of more unmarked graves on the grounds of an Indigenous residential school in the southern Gulf Islands off the British Columbia coast.

The Penelakut Tribe says more than 160 undocumented and unmarked graves have been found on the site of the former Kuper Island Indian Industrial School.

“I recognize these findings only deepen the pain that families, survivors, and all Indigenous peoples and communities are already feeling as they reaffirm the truth that they have long known,” Trudeau said during a news conference Tuesday in Ottawa.

“To members of the Penelakut Tribe, we are here for you. We cannot bring back those who are lost but we can and will continue to tell the truth,” Trudeau said.

In an email to CBN News, Fraser Logan, media relations manager with the “K” Division of the RCMP in Alberta, responded to our inquiry about his district’s ongoing church fire investigations.

The Bonnyville RCMP arrested and charged a teenager with arson on July 9 for setting fire to an old abandoned church building (Our Lady of Mercy) located on the Kehewin Cree Nation. 

The Peace Regional RCMP, located in Peace River, is investigating the fire at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church on July 3. The church received minor damages as a result of the fire and a broken window.  No one was injured. Fire investigators have ruled the fire to be arson. 

The Morinville RCMP is still investigating the structure fire which burned the St. Jean Baptiste Church building to the ground on June 30 and caused the evacuation of nearby homes and businesses. 

The Gleichen RCMP is still investigating two church fires in its region. A fire was set at the Siksika First Nation Catholic Church on June 28, which has been ruled as arson. Fortunately, the fire was extinguished before any significant structural damage occurred.  No one was in the church at the time of the incident and no one was injured.

There was also a break-in and the attempt to start a fire at the Siksika Anglican Church the very next day on June 29.

In an email to CBN News, the RCMP also provided information about recent reports of church arson in Manitoba. 

The latest incident in that region was on July 5 in South Indian Lake in which the building of the United Church was destroyed by fire. No one was injured. 

On July 3, 2021, Swan River RCMP received a report of arson at the Catholic Church in Pelican Rapids, Manitoba. The Pelican Rapids Fire Department was on the scene very quickly, and there was minor damage to the exterior and some smoke damage to the interior. There were no injuries. 

The South Indian Lake RCMP also received a report on July 1 that someone had tried to burn the Catholic Church. A bystander was able to put out the fire before it spread but there was some damage to the back of the building. 

The investigations into all of these cases are still ongoing and there have been no arrests. 

SOURCE: CBN NEWS

‘God Is Our Refuge’: Miami Churches Offer Relief, Prayers for Miracles following Condo Collapse

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Several Miami-based churches have issued relief and spiritual care after a 12-story condominium building collapsed last week, with over 150 people missing in the rubble.

Pastor J. P. Funk, who leads Calvary Chapel Miami Beach, woke up to the news last Thursday concerning the building’s collapse, which was only about a mile away from his church.

“You can see the smoke from smoldering ruins reminiscent of 9/11,” he told Christianity Today.

Champlain Towers South in Surfside was home to an international plethora of foreign refugees, South American immigrants, and Orthodox Jews. At least two people from Calvary Chapel Miami Beach lived in the building, including the mother of one of its members.

Despite being unable to help in the early days of search and research because the disaster site was clouded by smoke and inaccessible due to law enforcement, the church was later able to secure permission to minister at a pop-up tent beside the collapsed condo.

“On Friday, along with [praying for miracles], our focus has been the compassion and presence of God in the midst of crisis at a human level,” Funk said. “We pray for the families to quickly recover their loved ones’ remains as this causes great anguish once it is most probable that they have perished.”

Casa, a Spanish-speaking congregation located right across the street from Chaplain Towers, offered up its building to law enforcement and called on its members to provide food and drinks to those in need.

On Sunday, Church by the Sea, in nearby Bay Harbor Islands, dedicated its service to praying for the disaster and collected relief funds.

“Strengthen us that we may help carry the burden of those who suffer, those filled with worry, concern and grief; and those who still wait to hear of loved ones,” ministers Rob and Barbara Asinger wrote on Facebook. “Make us bearers of hope and agents of healing. Let your love be known through all those who work to bring order to the chaos—the firefighters, emergency workers and police.”

Members from Christian organizations such as the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and Youth With A Mission (YWAM) also came down to Florida to provide further spiritual care.

“Pray for the family members of those who lived in the building waiting to hear if their loved ones are safe or not,” Franklin Graham wrote on Facebook. “The Bible tells us, ‘God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble’ (Psalm 46:1).”

As Christian Headlines previously reported, the 12-story condominium building in Miami, Florida, suddenly collapsed last Thursday, killing at least ten and leaving more than 150 people missing. At this time, the cause of the collapse is still unknown.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Pastor Turns Former Strip Club into a Church: Everything ‘Is Possible with God’

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A building that once housed a strip club is now home to the newest Baptist church in Anchorage, Alaska, thanks to a pastor who sensed a calling to the “Last Frontier” and a realtor who had a goal of seeing the structure transformed.

Open Door Baptist Church opened its doors last October in the same building that formerly was home to Fantasies, a strip club that came under legal troubles due to unpaid wages and controversy over its liquor license, according to the Anchorage Daily News. The building’s owner wanted to sell, and realtor Mike Gailey had a unique idea: turn the property into a church.

“It was kind of a redemption story,” Gailey told the Anchorage Daily News. “And I knew churches, Christians, they love that story.”

At first, Gailey had trouble finding a buyer. But then he began working with a property developer, Linda Dunegan, who shared his goal. She agreed to purchase the building.

For Dunegan, the idea was personal: Her mother once worked as a stripper in Anchorage. Dunegan, a Christian, wanted to see the strip club – with its poles and catwalk – transformed into a congregation. She had grown up with shame, knowing how her mother earned money.

“This church came about because I prayed for five years,” Dunegan told the Associated Press.

Open Door Baptist, a church plant, launched last year under the guidance of pastor Kenny Menendez, who had lived in Oregon and worked in the aerospace industry but sensed a calling into the ministry.

Menendez moved his wife and their three children to Anchorage.

“It is a fast change of life, but you know, the things that are impossible for man are possible with God,” he told the Daily News. “And the Bible also says that without faith, it’s impossible to please Him. So we took that leap of faith, so to speak.”

The congregation, Menendez told the Associated Press, is a beacon for Christ.

“I would say God is pleased to have a change, a transformation in the building, a place that really ultimately points more people towards Him instead of away,” he said.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Fulani Herdsmen Kill Pastor in North-Central Nigeria

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Fulani herdsmen in north-central Nigeria on Saturday (July 24) killed a Christian pastor they had kidnapped two weeks before, a church source said.

The Rev. Danlami Yakwoi of the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) was kidnapped on July 12 along with two of his sons and a nephew in Tawari, Kogi state, and died after being tortured, church secretary Musa Shekwolo said.

“One of his children who was kidnapped along with him was released on Sunday, July 25, and he informed us that his father died a day before his release by the herdsmen,” Shekwolo told Morning Star News by text message. “The pastor’s captors are yet to release his corpse to his family, and two of his family members are still being held captive.”

Pastor Yakwoi’s family paid a ransom for the release of his son, Shekwolo said.

“Please be in prayer with his family and the church at this trying moment,” he said.

In Ugwolawo, Kogi state, Dr. Solomon Nidiamaka, a Christian medical doctor, was kidnapped on July 19 from General Hospital in Ofu County, an area resident said.

“He was kidnapped by Muslim Fulani herdsmen at 8:30 a.m. in the premises of the hospital,” Esther Audu told Morning Star News by text message.

The chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Dr. Omakoji Oyiguh, confirmed the abduction in a press statement.

“Please be in prayers with us,” Oyiguh said.

In Koton Karfe, Kogi state on July 14, Fulani herdsmen kidnapped an unidentified pastor and his wife, an area resident said, but it was not possible to independently verify the report.

In Kaduna state, 28 of the more than 120 students abducted from Bethel Baptist High School earlier this month have been released. The AP reported that a total of 34 of the students had been released or had escaped.

More than 80 children remain in captivity by the gunmen, the Rev. Israel Akanji, president of the Baptist Convention, reportedly said. Church officials returned the released students, who had been kidnapped in the wee hours of July 5 by suspected Fulani herdsmen, to their parents at the school on Sunday (July 25).

Akanji reportedly said the church paid no ransom for the students but could not stop the families from taking action to win their release. The kidnappers have reportedly demanded 500,000 naira (US$1,214) for each student.

Nigerian Police spokesman Mohammed Jalige said security forces and civilian defense forces found three of the kidnapped students in the wilds on July 12, and that two other children escaped on July 20 while they were gathering firewood.

Nigeria led the world in number of kidnapped Christians last year with 990. In Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, Nigeria broke into the top 10 for the first time, jumping to No. 9 from No. 12 the previous year.

Nigeria was the country with the most Christians killed for their faith last year (November 2019-October 2020), at 3,530, up from 1,350 in 2019, according to the World Watch List report. In overall violence, Nigeria was second only to Pakistan, and it trailed only China in the number of churches attacked or closed, 270, according to the list.

Numbering in the millions across Nigeria and the Sahel, predominantly Muslim Fulani comprise hundreds of clans of many different lineages who do not hold extremist views, but some Fulani do adhere to radical Islamist ideology, the United Kingdom’s All-Party Parliamentary Group for International Freedom or Belief (APPG) noted in a recent report.

“They adopt a comparable strategy to Boko Haram and ISWAP [Islamic State West Africa Province] and demonstrate a clear intent to target Christians and potent symbols of Christian identity,” the APPG report states.

Christian leaders in Nigeria have said they believe herdsmen attacks on Christian communities in Nigeria’s Middle Belt are inspired by their desire to forcefully take over Christians’ lands and impose Islam as desertification has made it difficult for them to sustain their herds.

The APPG report noted that tribal loyalties cannot be overlooked.

“In 2015, Muhammadu Buhari, a Fulani, was elected president of Nigeria,” the group reported. “He has done virtually nothing to address the behavior of his fellow tribesmen in the Middle Belt and in the south of the country.”

The U.S. State Department on Dec. 7 added Nigeria to its list of Countries of Particular Concern for engaging in or tolerating “systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.” Nigeria joined Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan on the list.

In a more recent category of non-state actors, the State Department also designated ISWAP, Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab, Al-Qaeda, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the Houthis, ISIS, ISIS-Greater Sahara, Jamaat Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin, and the Taliban as “Entities of Particular Concern.”
On Dec. 10 the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou Bensouda, issued a statement calling for investigation into crimes against humanity in Nigeria.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Priest attacked with glass bottle at St Mary’s Cathedral in Edinburgh

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A priest has been attacked while praying alone in a pew at St Mary’s Cathedral in Edinburgh.

The clergyman, who hasn’t been named, was approached by a man who asked him if he was a priest.

When he said yes, the man attempted to hit him on the head with a glass bottle before chasing him to the back of the cathedral.

In a statement, the Archdiocese of St Andrew’s and Edinburgh, labelled the attack “violent and unprovoked”.

A spokesperson said: “The priest managed to fend him off with a chair before the attacker ran out of the Cathedral. The priest escaped without injury.

“Anyone with information is urged to call Police Scotland on 101, quoting incident number 0823 of Monday 26 July.”

No further details have been released by police in connection with the incident at the city-centre cathedral

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

Evangelist taken to hospital following knife attack at Hyde Park’s Speakers’ Corner

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Police are appealing for information after a 39-year-old woman was slashed in a knife attack at Speakers’ Corner in London’s Hyde Park.

The woman was named on social media as Hatun Tash, a former Muslim, who is now a Christian speaker. 

The Met police said they were called by the London Ambulance Service (LAS) at around 3:30 p.m. on Sunday to reports of an assault and found a woman who’d sustained a minor slash injury to her head. 

She was treated at the scene by the LAS before being taken to a central London hospital. Her injuries are not life-threatening.

Following a search of the area, a knife was recovered nearby.

People of different faiths often gather at the Speakers’ Corner landmark for public debate.

Detective Superintendent Alex Bingley, from the Central West Command Unit, which covers policing in Westminster, said in a statement: “This was clearly a very distressing incident for the woman involved and officers have spent time with her, whilst she was being treated for her injury, to get an account of what happened.

“We know that this assault was witnessed by a number of people, many of whom captured it on their phones. I would ask them, if they have not already done so, to contact police.

“We remain in the early stages of our investigation and are working hard to trace the person responsible. I would ask people not to speculate on the motive for the attack until we have established the full facts.”

The Met police told Premier they aren’t releasing the name of the woman attacked.

SOURCE: PREMIER CHRISTIAN NEWS

3,462 Christians Murdered in Nigeria in 2021: It’s the ‘Biggest Killing Ground of Christians’ in the World

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More than 3,000 Christians have been killed in Nigeria this year by Muslim militants amidst a massive wave of persecution that also has resulted in 300 churches being threatened, attacked or destroyed, according to a new report.

The report by the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law says 3,462 Christians have been killed by Muslim militants in the first half of 2021 – a shocking number that is nearly as many as the 3,530 killed in all of 2020.

International Christian Concern cited the report this week and urged the world to take notice.

“Nigeria is the biggest killing ground of Christians today, but few are aware of it,” ICC said in a July 19 news release.

The Fulani Herdsmen – described as the fourth deadliest terror group in the world by ICC – is responsible for the majority (1,909) of murders, the report says. Boko Haram, ISWAP and Muslim Fulani Bandits killed a total of 1,063 Christians, the report added.

“Christian farming villages are repeatedly attacked in Nigeria’s Middle Belt region, and tens of thousands have died over the last 20 years. In addition, hundreds of thousands of Christians have lost everything and are living as refugees,” ICC said.

The surviving victims often are not assisted or protected by the government from further harm, the report says.

“It is deeply saddening that till date those responsible for the anti-Christian butcheries in the country have continued to evade justice and remained unchecked, untracked, uninvestigated and untried; leading to impunity and repeat-atrocities,” the report says. “The surviving victims and families of the dead victims are also totally abandoned by the Government of Nigeria.”

An estimated 300 churches have been threatened, attacked, closed or destroyed this year, with at least 10 priests or pastors abducted or killed, the report said.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says the situation “warrants serious action.”

“Armed radical Islamic groups arrive in a village during the night, kill the men, rape and murder the women, and kidnap the children,” Pompeo, who now serves as senior counsel for global affairs for the American Center for Law and Justice, wrote in an online analysis. “The Nigerian government thus far has sought to downplay the attacks, characterizing them as conflicts between herders and farmers rather than as religiously motivated acts of terror.  These terrorists must be held accountable for such preposterous characterizations.  And given that Nigeria has the largest Christian population of any African country – over 80 million, nearly half of its people – it is essential that this persecution is snuffed out before it becomes even worse.”

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Pastor in India Driven from Home after Police Torture, Threats

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A pastor in northern India was forced to leave his village and flee with his family more than 600 miles away after police last month tortured and threatened him, he said.

Officers in Uttarakhand state on June 13 arrested pastor Sanjay Kumar Bharati, his wife, children and several members of his church in Shyampur, Haridwar District on a complaint of violating COVID-19 restrictions, but as police were beating him their questions and accusations concerned only conversion to Christianity, he said.

Pastor Bharti said officers began beating him as soon as he entered the Shyampur police station. Reviling him and Christianity, they interrogated him as they continued to hit him, he said.

“As soon as I was taken inside the police station, a policeman slapped me three or four times on my face and punched me in my stomach,” Pastor Bharati told Morning Star News. “He hurled curses and accused me of alluring people and converting them.”

They then took him to an inner room, where they made him lie on a bed. One of the officers removed his leather belt and began to strike him on his legs and feet, he said.

“Hell broke open on me as they mercilessly tortured me for 30 to 40 minutes,” he said. “I begged them to spare me; repeatedly I asked them, ‘What was my fault?’”

The officer assumed he paid people to change their religion, the pastor said, asking him such questions as, “How much money do you give to allure people to change their religion? Tell us, from where do you receive funds? Who funds you?”

Denying all allegations, Pastor Bharati answered that he lived in a humble rental and would not be in such dire economic condition if he received outside funds, he said.

“I have not changed anybody’s religion,” he told the officer. “People invite me to their homes to pray for them, and I do. These are all false allegations and rumors about me.”

Police treated him as if he were a dangerous criminal, he said.

“For a few days I was in much pain, with swelling on my legs and face,” Pastor Bharati told Morning Star News. “Blood oozed out of my ear after the repeated slaps, and I was unable to hear from that ear for a week.”

Calling him an outsider, officers asked how he could come and live in the village and lure people to convert. The pastor moved to the village 12 years ago.

“Haridwar is an important Hindu pilgrimage site, how could you dare to live here and propagate Christianity?” a policeman said, according to the pastor, who answered that he does not need permission from anyone to settle anywhere in India.

Before releasing him, the officer ordered him to leave the village, warning that if they received just one more complaint of conversion, they would arrest him and send him to jail, he said. 

POLICE DENIAL

Police arrested Pastor Bharati and the others on the verbal complaint of 10 residents of Shyampur, alleging he was conducting a church service in violation of COVID-19 restrictions, sources said.

Making the arrests at 11 a.m. on Sunday, June 13 as guests prayed at the house of a church member who had invited about 20 Christians, three officers stormed into the home accompanied by a news reporter who took photos of them, Pastor Bharati said. Police confiscated Bibles and other books.

The pastor apologized to police for accepting the invitation to visit the church member’s home during meeting restrictions, expecting to receive a verbal warning at most. He was stunned that officers took him to the police station and beat him without showing him any written complaints against him.

“Though the complaint against me was apparently meeting during COVID restrictions, the policeman inside the police station questioned me only regarding ‘alluring villagers to convert,’” he said.

The Rev. Babu Samuel, Pastor Bharati’s mentor, said he was deeply disappointed in the officers’ brutality.

“The police detained Sanjay’s wife and children as well,” Pastor Samuel said. “It was only after Sanjay begged them to let her go with the children, pointing out that the youngest was only 2 years old, that the police let her leave with the children.”

Morning Star News ascertained that calling local police for comment could cause further harassment for Pastor Bharati, but Shyampur officers denied assaulting him when the Christian leaders’ attorney called the police station, Pastor Samuel said.

“Even if we take the matter to the higher authorities, how can we prove the assault?” Pastor Samuel said.

A friend of Pastor Bharati, pastor S.B. Sahi, came 37 miles from Dehradun the day after the assault and went to the Shyampur police station to question the officers.

“I met the police and questioned them about assaulting Pastor Sanjay,” Pastor Sahi said. “The police staff completely denied assaulting Sanjay.”

Christian leaders urged the pastor and his family to leave the village to safeguard their lives and helped him move to an undisclosed location. Pastor Bharati’s three children are ages 11, 7 and 2.

The village head, Anil Singh, asserted that he never should have allowed Pastor Bharati move to his village.

“It is my fault entirely for allowing him to live in my village,” Singh told Morning Star News. “I consider it 100 percent wrong that he came to our village and visited a house and told them that if they prayed, they would find peace. I don’t support this at all.”

Singh said that several times he has proposed to police that they carry out “verification drives” to monitor people from outside the village.

SHUNNED

Pastor Bharati said he got medical tests at a government hospital as evidence of the assault.

The hospital authorities initially declined to do the medical tests without instructions from the local police station, but after Pastor Sahi spoke to the District Superintendent of Police by phone, the DSP instructed hospital staff to carry out the tests, sources said.

Pastor Bharati, his wife and four church elders visited the the DSP in Haridwar on June 15 to submit a written complaint stating how officers tortured him at the police station. Soon his landlord asked him to vacate the house he had been living in for the past five years, he said.

No one else in the village would rent to him, Pastor Bharati said.

“Everybody is scared of the police and the people who have been opposing my faith and propagation,” he said.

His church had 150 members at one point, but continuous opposition from villagers had driven the number down to 50, he said.

“The villagers called for a meeting and threatened all those who were attending the fellowship to desist, or else they would be ostracized,” Pastor Bharati told Morning Star News.

Sub-Inspector Ravindra, who goes by a single name, said Pastor Bharati had submitted a written complaint with the DSP alleging brutality by Shyampur police but later requested that the enquiry go no further.

“I met Bharati yesterday [June 30], and he gave it in writing that he does not want any enquiry against the local police station,” Ravindra said.

Pastor Bharati told Morning Star News that he does not want to undergo further suffering for himself and his family by pursuing the complaint. The arrest and opposition have already left him destitute, said attorney Rohit Singh, who visited the pastor on June 15.

“I and my wife were shocked to see Sanjay’s financial condition,” Singh told Morning Star News.

“There was not a grain of rice in his house to feed the children.”

Ravindra returned the confiscated Bibles and books when Pastor Bharati withdrew his complaint in writing on June 30.

Without any source of income, Pastor Bharati moved his family from Shyampur on July 6, relocating nearly 650 miles away.

Deeply concerned for the Christians he left behind, Pastor Bharati said that he gets calls from them every day detailing the pressure from villagers to abandon their faith.

“I do not know for how long they will be able to hold on,” Pastor Bharati said “Not everybody is strong to face opposition – only the ones who have had the experience know what it is to face the brutality of the police or to be ostracized.”

The hostile tone of the National Democratic Alliance government, led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, against non-Hindus, has emboldened Hindu extremists in several parts of the country to attack Christians since Prime Minister Narendra Modi took power in May 2014, religious rights advocates say.

India ranked 10th on Christian support organization Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List of the countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian, as it was in 2020. The country was 31st in 2013, but its position worsened after Modi came to power.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

Christians in Pakistan Suffer Court Setback in Child Marriages/Conversions

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Efforts to end the abduction and forced conversion/marriage of minor Christian girls suffered a setback when the Supreme Court of Pakistan last week declined to intervene in the issue, sources said.

Supreme Court Justice Mushir Alam on Wednesday (July 14) rejected an appeal by a senior church leader for a constitutional petition to protect Christian girls from forcible conversion to Islam and marriage to Muslims.

“We had pinned our hopes on the Supreme Court for addressing this longstanding genuine grievance of the Pakistani Christians, but we are deeply disappointed and saddened by this decision,” Bishop Azad Marshall, moderator bishop of the Church of Pakistan and president of the National Council of Churches in Pakistan (NCCP), told Morning Star News. “The court has, however, stated in the order that it will take this issue up if we bring a specific case before it.”

Filed by renowned human rights lawyer Saif Ul Malook on behalf of Marshall, the petition stated that Pakistan accords a degree of permanence to the abduction and forcible conversion of Christian girls by allowing them to marry Muslims without ascertaining the pressures coming to bear on girls when they make declarations of consent before trial and high courts, nor taking into account their intellectual, emotional and social maturity. The petition asserted that courts fail to consider whether declarations of consent are voluntary or result from threats, psychological abuse and conditioning and fear of social stigma and rebuke.

The petition also asked the court to recognize the difference between Pakistani penal laws and sharia (Islamic law), as the latter is one of the major causes behind the exploitation of Christian girls.

Marshall said the petition was filed under the Pakistani constitution’s Article 184(3), under which the Supreme Court has “original jurisdiction in matters of public importance with reference to the enforcement of any of the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution of Pakistan.”

The court’s objection that the petition improperly invoked Article 184(3) by failing to address an individual grievance, Marshall said, “in our opinion, is not sustainable because the matter is not restricted to an individual case; rather, it relates to the entire Christian population in Pakistan and violation of their fundamental rights.”

Child marriages are criminal under Pakistan’s Child Marriage Restraint laws. While Pakistani law recognizes intercourse with a girl below 16 years of age with or without her consent as rape punishable by death, courts have repeatedly held that marriage of an underage Muslim girl cannot be termed invalid because Islamic law holds that a consenting girl who has reached puberty can marry.

“This principle has been repeatedly invoked by judges in the trial courts and high courts while handing over custody of Christian girls to their Muslim abductors,” Marshall said. “Ironically, this Islamic principle is often ignored while deciding cases of minor Muslim girls, and they are returned to their families instead of their abductors/husbands!”

The senior church leader said that he and others have repeatedly reached out to Islamic scholars and government ministers to set parameters for religious conversion, but that there has been no sincere effort from the government to resolve the issue.

“The government officials are not willing to accept the fact that forced conversion and marriage of minor Christian girls is in reality a bid to cover abduction and rape of the girl child,” he told Morning Star News. “The police and lower judiciary are facilitating child marriages and conversions. Police officials deliberately avoid adding sections related to seduction of a child, abduction and rape in FIRs [First Information Reports] while the trial courts, and even high courts, rely solely on the victim child’s statement that they are adults and have converted to Islam willingly.”

Kidnapped Christian girls commonly face threats that they or their family members will be killed if they do not testify in court that they converted and married of their own free will, rights activists and church leaders say.

Marshall said he would approach the court again with a specific case as stated in the court’s order.

“We are now filing an appeal in the Supreme Court against the Lahore High Court’s decision to send a Christian teen with her abductor,” he said. “The child, Nayab Gill, is barely 14 years old but both the trial court and the high court have rejected her official birth documents and accepted her verbal claim in court that she’s over 18 years old.”

The child’s parents earlier ignored an offer from the bishop and other Christians for legal assistance in the high court, but they have since sought their help, he said. Malook will represent the parents in court, Marshall said.

GOVERNMENT OPPOSITION

A parliamentary panel on minorities earlier this year forwarded key legislation to the government on curbing forced conversions of minority girls, recommending that only adults should be allowed to change religion and only after appearing before a senior district judge.

The government of Prime Minister Imran Khan, however, has strongly opposed the legislation.

The Stymie Forced Religious Conversion Bill includes recommendations for validating conversion, stating, “Any person who is not a child and able and willing to convert to another religion will apply for a conversion certificate from the additional sessions judge of the area where the person ordinarily resides.”

The bill calls for an application form that would include conversion candidates’ current religion, age, gender, national identity number, reason for conversion and details of parents, siblings, children and spouse if any. The parliamentary committee suggested that the additional sessions judge shall set a date for an interview within seven days of receipt of the application for conversion.

“On the date provided, the person shall present himself/herself before the additional sessions judge who shall ensure that the conversion is not under any duress and not due to any deceit or fraudulent misrepresentation,” the bill states.

The additional sessions judge may, upon the conversion candidates’ request, arrange his/her meeting with religious scholars of the religion the person wishes to convert to, according to the draft. A clause also empowers the additional sessions judge to grant 90 days to the person to undertake a comparative study of the religions and return to the office of the judge.

“Only after satisfaction, the additional sessions judge may issue the certificate of change of religion,” the draft legislation states.

Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Pir Noorul Haq Qadri, however, has categorically stated that the government is opposed to a restriction on religious conversion before the age of 18 years.

“If someone aged 14 years wishes to convert to some other religion, they could not be stopped,” the minister commented during a meeting of the Senate parliamentary committee on minorities’ rights on Wednesday (July 14), the same day the Supreme Court rejected Marshall’s appeal.

“There are several incidents where someone expresses the wish to convert their religion out of their own choice before the age of 18. There are several examples in Islam of religious conversion before 18,” Qadri was quoted as saying during the meeting. He added that if someone wished to change their religion before reaching age 18, it was their choice, and that “a Nikah [Islamic marriage] or marriage before 18 was another discussion.”

The minister said that a proposal for setting the minimum age limit for marriage had been sent to the Council of Islamic Ideology, according to media reports.

‘CHRISTIAN WORLD UNITING’

Regarding the minister’s statement, Marshall said it showed that the government was not interested in stopping abductions and rape of Christian girls.

“Whenever an attempt has been made to bring legislation for protection of the minorities, certain vested interests oppose it tooth and nail,” Marshall told Morning Star News. “We are not opposed to religious conversions by adults, but why is it so that only underage girls from minority communities change their religion and not boys?”

Marshall said that he had reached out to church leaders across the world seeking support for the Pakistani church’s fight against forced conversions.

“I’ve received positive response from various church leaders, including Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Cantuar. The archbishop has assured his full support and will be writing letters to Pakistani officials, including Prime Minister Imran Khan, in this regard,” he said, adding that the Pakistani church will continue its struggle until the government ensures protection of its Christian citizens.

Pakistan leads the world in forced marriages, with about 1,000 Christians married against their will to Muslims from November 2019 to October 2020, according to Christian support organization Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List report. In terms of abductions, the report listed Pakistan as fourth with an estimated 100 kidnappings.

The U.S. State Department in December re-designated Pakistan among nine other “Countries of Particular Concern” for severe violations of religious freedom. Previously Pakistan had been added to the list on Nov. 28, 2018.

Pakistan ranked fifth on Christian support organization Open Doors 2021 World Watch list of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES

African Pastor Receives Death Threats after Helping Christians Flee from Fulani Militants

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A pastor and humanitarian who helps assist displaced communities from assaults by armed Fulani assailants has recently received death threats against him and his family.

Last Monday, Pastor Gideon Agwom Mutum, the founder and director of Nehemiah Camp in Kafanchan, Jema’a Local Government Area (LGA), found a two-page letter near his car around noon. In the letter, an anonymous writer accuses Mutum of insulting the Fulani tribe in the media.

According to U.K.-based persecution watchdog Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), the writer threatened the pastor with the following message, “We will kill you like goats and your family. We know your house, your church and even your family.”

In the letter, the writer further threatened to destroy a school constructed by Mutum in Pasakori village in Kaura LGA in Kaduna State. A journalist and activist from southern Kaduna, Steven Kefas, was also threatened. He was previously detained for 150 days back in 2019.

“Tell Ste[ve]n Kefas we will also hunt him,” the letter tells Mutum.

“Your movement is known by us. Tell your people to get ready for us. Inshallah we will come except you go back to tell the world you are sorry for all you […] said concerning the Fulanis. We are coming. Nigeria is our land. Southern Kaduna is our land,” the letter concluded.

On the same day the letter was sent, Fulani herdsmen targeted communities in Zangon Kataf LGA for the sixth day in a row. 

According to a statement by the Southern Kaduna Peoples Union, the aftermath of the daily assaults left 33 people dead, 215 homes destroyed and four churches flattened.

In response to the death threats, CSW Founder Mervyn Thomas called on the Nigerian government to address the militant threat “swiftly and decisively, prioritising the protection of vulnerable individuals and communities, and bringing attackers to justice.”

“It is unacceptable and inexcusable that attacks on Zangon Kataf LGA continued for six consecutive days without interception, indicating a comprehensive failure of both security and governance,” he argued.

“The security crisis in Nigeria, and particularly in southern Kaduna, has gone on for so long that stemming it now seems beyond the capabilities of the state and federal authorities,” Thomas said. “It urgently requires concerted efforts by the international community to assist Nigeria in combatting it wherever possible, whilst also holding the government to account for its failure to assist targeted communities.”

According to persecution watchdog group International Christian Concern, The Fulani Militia is the fourth deadliest terror group worldwide and has surpassed Boko Haram, another terrorist group, as the greatest threat to Nigerian Christians.

SOURCE: CHRISTIAN HEADLINES