Protesters flooded the streets of Cairo on Feb. 4, aiming to make the
tenth day of Egypt's popular uprising into the “day of departure” for
President Hosni Mubarak.
As the U.S. urges Mubarak to step down,
Egyptian Christians worry that radical Islamic ideology may fill a void
left by his absence.
Issam Bishara, Vice President for Pontifical Mission activities in
Egypt, detailed the concerns of Coptic Orthodox and Catholic Christians
in a Feb. 3 report provided to CNA by the Catholic Near East Welfare
Association.
“Though some of the primary opposition leaders in this revolt appear
to be modern secular reformers, church leaders believe the main engine
fueling and organizing the demonstrators is the Muslim Brotherhood,”
Bishara wrote.
“They fear that the brotherhood intends to seize power
through future elections, compromising all patriotic and ideological
parties participating in the protests.”
The head of the Coptic Orthodox Church, Pope Shenouda III, has
maintained his support for the Mubarak regime, and urged Coptic Orthodox
Christians not to join the street protests.
The Coptic Orthodox
patriarch, whose church claims 95 percent of Egypt's Christians, has
instead advocated a program of internal reforms.
So far, most of the demonstrators opposing President Mubarak have
kept religion out of the picture.
However, the prominent role of the
Muslim Brotherhood – considered to be the best-organized opposition to
Mubarak's National Democratic Party – is causing concern among Egyptian
Christians.
The group's stated aim is to make Islam the “sole reference point” for Egypt's government and society.
“Coptic Christians — as well as Egypt’s Armenian, Greek Orthodox,
Latin, Maronite and Melkite Greek Catholics — all fear a fate similar to
that of Iraq’s Christians,” Bishara stated, recalling how a power
vacuum in that country “left its minorities, especially the Christians,
marginalized and exposed to the terror of Islamic extremists and
criminals.”
Anxiety was already running high among Egyptian Christians, after a
Jan. 1 church bombing that killed or injured more than a hundred
worshipers.
On Jan. 24 – one day before protests broke out against
President Mubarak – a report by Human Rights Watch detailed “widespread
discrimination” against Christians, who comprise about 10 percent of the
90-percent Muslim nation.
The Muslim Brotherhood officially describes itself as a non-violent
movement, and has stated its commitment to democracy.
But the
brotherhood's connections within the Arab world have caused many to
question its professions of peace. Its historical role as the source or
inspiration for virtually every radical Islamic political movement now
in existence is well-established.
Nina Shea, an international human rights lawyer who directs the
Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom in Washington, D.C.,
urged Westerners to regard the Muslim Brotherhood with extreme caution –
both on account of the group's history, and because of the recent trend
toward radicalization in Egyptian religious culture at large.
“The Muslim Brotherhood started off in Egypt, during the 1920s, with
violent tendencies and violent tactics,” Shea recounted.
“It shifted
those tactics, as it was repressed, to moderate ones. In other places
where it flourished – like in Gaza, or Sudan – it's been anything but
moderate.”
“They're very tactically-minded,” she acknowledged. “In the short
term, for tactical reasons, I would expect them to be moderate. But in
the medium-term, they would revert to their roots” – including their
core principle of imposing Islamic law throughout Egypt. Westerners who choose to support the protesters unreservedly are
playing “high-stakes poker,” Shea said – and should take into account
that no popular uprising in the Middle East has ever resulted in a more
democratic or pluralistic system of government.
“There are no precedents for it,” Shea said. “On the other hand,
there is the precedent of Iran” – where the 1979 populist revolt,
against a U.S.-backed authoritarian leader, ended with his replacement
by the Ayatollah Khomeini and the nationwide institution of Islamic law.
In the event of a takeover by the Muslim Brotherhood, she said,
Christians could expect to live as “dhimmis,” a traditional Islamic
designation that strips non-Muslims of many legal protections.
In this arrangement, Shea explained, the government does not need to
terrorize Christians at any official level. Rather, officials can simply
ignore, or even tacitly permit, religiously-motivated violence and
repression by other segments of society.
About two-thirds of Christians in the Middle East now live in Egypt.
For this reason alone, Shea said, a takeover by the Muslim Brotherhood
could have drastic consequences for Christians throughout the region.
“We could see the virtual end of Christianity's native presence in
the Middle East, faster than anyone thought, if they come to power.”