Coptic Christians must turn to their centuries-long history of
overcoming obstacles as they seek to maintain their identity while
fleeing violence amid Egyptian upheaval, scholars said at a recent
event.
“Yes it's a story of decline, but also of survival; yes it’s a story of
decay, but it’s one of endurance as well,” said Samuel Tadros, author of
the recent book, “Motherland Lost: The Egyptian and Coptic Quest for
Modernity.”
Tadros, a native of Egypt, is a research fellow at the Hudson
Institute's Center for Religious Freedom. He spoke on the history of
Copts in Egypt at an Aug. 22 event in Washington, D.C.
Nina Shea, director of the Center for Religious Freedom, also spoke,
explaining that contemporary political events bring this subject into
even sharper focus.
“Last weekend there were attacks in Egypt – persecution the likes of
which we have not seen since at least the 14th century against the
Coptic Christian minority” in the area, she said.
“Scores of Churches were burned, looted, otherwise damaged; other
institutions, Bible institutions, a monastery that dates back to the
fourth or fifth century was destroyed,” she said. “Franciscan nuns were
paraded as prisoners of war in the streets and jeered by supporters of
President Morsi.”
The Muslim Brotherhood website, Shea charged, “has incited such attacks,
blaming the Copts” for events around the country, including military
action and the ousting of former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi.
Tadros noted that modern liberalizing movements within the country have
come to use the state to grant liberties and freedoms in Egypt and
elsewhere in the region. This has enabled powerful groups to
disenfranchise those who do not have power, such as the Copts in Egypt.
This dependence upon power and catering to the powerful results in “a
separation from the country you live in,” he explained, adding that this
distancing and animosity creates “a tendency to despise the people you
live amongst.”
This political situation has led to an exodus of Coptic Christians from
Egypt, which has in turn created questions of Coptic identity and where
the future of the Coptic Church lies.
“The Arab Spring might lead in the end to something better in Egypt,” Tadros said, “but some things are hard to change.”
Once people leave Egypt and choose to build new lives” elsewhere in the world, he observed, “there’s no going back there.”
Less than a century ago, Tadros pointed out, there were only a handful
of Coptic churches outside of Egypt. Now, however, “one-fifth of the
Coptic churches are outside of the country where it has built its
identity.”
“What does it mean to be a Copt when Egypt is the place you no longer
call home?” he asked, suggesting that it is unclear what effects the
migration of the Coptic people away from Egypt may have in terms of
politics and identity.
Although acknowledging that “we are seeing a humongous demographic
change in the Middle East,” he expressed doubt that current trends will
reverse themselves. He warned of increasing polarization between
minorities who feel they can only be protected with military force and
majorities who use force to ensure a status quo.
Although Copts and Muslims “can and have lived in harmony in the past,”
he said, “there are very few voices, if any that reject this binary
choice between Islamism and the military.”
However, despite the various struggles facing the Copts, Tadros emphasized their ability to help shape their own future.
“Yes, Copts have been persecuted in Egypt, but they’ve not been hopeless victims,” he said.