The protection of religious freedom worldwide is so essential to
democracy and prosperity that it should be considered an issue of
“national security” to the U.S. government, says a former diplomat.
“Religious freedom is buried in the bureaucracy and so people
understand this is not a priority for us,” Dr. Tom Farr, senior fellow
at Georgetown’s Berkley Center for Religion Peace and World Affairs,
said Nov. 14.
Farr, who spoke as part of the Family Research Council’s “Cry of the
Martyrs” webcast and served as State Department’s first Director of the
Office of International Religious Freedom, said that the U.S. needs to
implement policies and provide resources to support religious freedom
throughout the world.
Created 14 years ago, the Office of International Religious Freedom
works to promote religious freedom as a “core objective of U.S. foreign
policy,” but Farr said the current administration, as well as its
predecessors, has largely fallen short in promoting this issue as
foreign policy.
“That needs to change if we’re going to have an impact on persecuted
Christians and others around the world,” he said. Protecting religious
freedom abroad is “in our interest” since doing so can help emerging
democracies to grow beyond just one generation.
“The point is religious freedom can lead to economic development,
religious freedom can lead to political development,” Farr said,
“There’s plenty of history and plenty of data today that suggests this.”
Even still, Farr said he’s concerned that “our government doesn’t pay much attention to this.”
During his remarks, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) said the persecution of
Christians is “on the rise, not on the decline” with 160,000 Christians
“seriously persecuted” for their beliefs last year.
One of the biggest threats to religious freedom is “Islamic extremism”
which he said has not been challenged enough to the extent that it
should be by the Obama administration.
In Iran, for example, Vitter said the current administration has “not
been aggressive at all in pushing back against” the growing trend of
Christian persecution.
Vitter recommended that Americans raise awareness about persecution,
such as in the case of Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani, an Iranian Christian
who was sentenced to death for his faith, but released in September due
to international outcry calling for his freedom.
Todd Nettleson, director of media development for Voice of the Martyrs,
called on Americans to sign a petition calling for the release of Asia
Bibi, a Pakistani mother sentenced to death for insulting the Prophet Muhammad by defending her Christian faith at work in 2010.
In Nigeria, Emmanuel Ogebe of The Jubilee Campaign, said that despite
the “persecution on steroids” Christians in his country are experiencing
at the hands of Boko Haram – a radical Islamist organization – the U.S.
government will not label the group as a terrorists and has failed to
list proper data regarding the attacks in State Department reports.
“There’s a systematic desire not to label it as what it is,” Ogebe, who
is also a Christian and lawyer, said. “They will not concede that
Christians are being attacked.”
He raised the point that although Boko Haram attacked three cities
throughout Nigeria on Christmas Day in 2011, only one was recorded in
the Annual Report on International Religious Freedom.
Ogebe said he knows that data is incorrect because a family member
attends one of the churches that was bombed and “anyone who Googles the
Christmas Day attacks will see three cities were attacked.”
Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, encouraged
support for persecuted Christians through prayer and by petitioning the
government to take more action in supporting religious freedom
worldwide.
“...we as individual believers in this country can take a stand in
standing with our brothers and sisters that are being persecuted around
the world, and then we can get our government to do the same,” he said.