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Riv katedralene! Riv Jesus! og om
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De brenner våre kirker, av Hans Rustad
Our field has shared difficult news from Egypt. On New
Year’s Eve, four Christian families in the Egyptian village of Faw Bahry not
only lost their homes to Muslim extremists, but four of the believers were
arrested when police arrived on the scene.
The reason for these violent actions? Christians had planned
a New Year’s Eve prayer service that night in a church still waiting for
official registration. The extremists also attacked the church building and the
Christians in it.
Indonesia: Angry Muslim crowd attacks Java churches
- 8 February 2011
Image caption Two churches were set on fire and a third was
damaged in Temanggung, central Java
More than 1,000 Muslim protesters have stormed a courthouse
and burned two churches in central Java, Indonesia.
The attacks in Temanggung happened after a Christian man was
sentenced to five years in jail for distributing leaflets deemed insulting to
Islam.
Churches attacked and one man killed in clashes in Aceh,
Indonesia
Muslims Burn 69 Churches; Christians Forgive
04-15-2015 George Thomas
Muslim Brotherhood sued internationally over burning 42
churches
BY
Egypt Today staff, Thu,
16 Aug 2018 - 08:18 GMT
'Horrible': Christian churches across Egypt stormed,
torched
By Sarah Sirgany and Laura Smith-Spark, CNN
Updated 0908 GMT (1708 HKT) August 16, 2013
Persecution of christians, wikipedia:
Uptick in church burnings raises alarm in Ethiopia
September 16, 2019 · 12:00 PM EDT
Nigeria Is A Killing Field Of Defenseless Christians
April 13, 2020
|
Jihadists have forced 4 to 5 million Christians to flee
and have destroyed 2000 churches since June 2015.
Ceaseless killing of Christians in Nigeria since June 2015
and burning or destruction of their churches and other worship centers have
followed incessant attacks against them by Boko Haram/Islamic State in West
Africa (ISWAP), Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen and a branch of Boko Haram, called
“Bandits/Highway Kidnappers” engage in roadway abductions and armed robberies
and house to house lootings, all for the purpose of radical propagation of
Islam and raising of ‘blood funds’ for themselves and advancement of their
terror activities.
The number of Nigerian Northern Christians forced to flee
their ancestral homes, farmlands and sacred places of worship in order to
escape being murdered or raped has sharply risen from “over 1.3 million in
2014” (Open Doors Report 2015) to between 4 million and 5 million. The affected
population has fled the countryside or relocated to less risky capital cities
in Northern Nigeria or cities and communities in the Southeast, South, and
Southwest parts of the country. They have become “urban refugees”.
The number of people fleeing Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen and
Boko Haram are presently estimated at 3 million, rising from 2.6 million in
2017. They have become internally displaced persons and refugees in
Northern Nigeria. Most are Christians. Among the refugees are some
90,000 Christian Nigerian refugees from Borno’s Gwoza alone, presently in
Cameroon. Also fleeing the Islamic jihad in the North are sizeable numbers of
the Igbo Christian population resident in the North. They have now resettled
in the Southeast and the South of the country.
The number of churches and other Christian worship centers
destroyed or burnt since June 2015 in the North has also risen to over 2000.
Jihadist Fulani Herdsmen account for over 1500 of the church burnings. Boko
Haram accounts for 500 others. Churches destroyed or burnt by Jihadist Fulani
Herdsmen have been concentrated in Benue, Plateau and Southern Kaduna states.
In eight years, between 2011 and 2019, Benue State has lost
over 600 churches and other Christian worship centers to Jihadist Fulani
Herdsmen. By the account of Open Doors International, “over 13,000 churches and
1,500 Christian schools were destroyed or burnt; with 11,500-12,500 Christians
killed and over 1.3 million forced to flee their homes to escape being murdered
by Boko Haram Jihadists between 2009 and 2014”.
-
The attacks by an Islamic State-affiliated group against
Christians on Easter morning in Sri Lanka last month fall into a
long-established pattern. Back when the Islamic State was expanding in northern
Iraq in 2014 and 2015, the region’s 1 million Christians were some of its main
targets, as well as Yazidis, Shiite Muslims, and other religious minorities.
Churches were razed and Christians issued with an ultimatum: exile, conversion,
or death.
The end result has been a brutal and depressingly thorough
religious and ethnic cleansing. For the Islamic State, destroying churches and
killing Christians came second only to its top priority of killing other
so-called apostate Muslims—Shiite and Sufi Muslims in particular. But although
the Islamic State claimed to be acting in the name of Islam, its actions were
not only horrific but also clearly and universally recognized as blasphemy.
-
Indonesia: Angry Muslim crowd attacks Java churches,m8
February 2011
Image caption Two churches were set on fire and a third was
damaged in Temanggung, central Java
More than 1,000 Muslim protesters have stormed a courthouse
and burned two churches in central Java, Indonesia.
Christianity crackdown: Crosses forcibly removed – church
burned
CHRISTIANS in Pakistan were forced to remove a cross from
their church after threats from local Muslims.
PUBLISHED: 07:13, Fri, Jul 17, 2020 | UPDATED: 07:57, Fri,
Jul 17, 2020
Muslims in Europe are ill-advised to convert churches
into mosques
The trend of buying churches and turning them into mosques
is giving the extreme right in Europe one more card to consolidate its dominance
over Europe by inciting hostility against Muslims.
Sunday 16/06/2019
Irresponsible acts, with no thought given to their
consequences, by members of Europe’s Muslim communities are fuelling hatred and
violence. The trend of buying churches and turning them into mosques is giving
the extreme right in Europe one more card to consolidate its dominance over
Europe by inciting hostility against Muslims.
The controversy sparked in Germany about Muslim communities
buying churches to convert them into mosques revealed the communities’ lack of
understanding of the turbulent situation of European society and the rise of
Islamophobia.
A Christian association called Friends of the Protestant
Church in Berlin published a report on the conversion of ten churches this year
in Germany into mosques. It said the phenomenon was not new but it was repeated
and deliberate.
At the end of 2018, the Nur Mosque was inaugurated in
Hamburg after a Muslim investor bought a church and donated it to the Islamic
centre of the city. Similar actions were carried out in the Netherlands,
Britain and France. The most prominent examples of the actions were the
openings of Al Fateh Mosque in Amsterdam, the Sultan Ayoub Mosque and the Osman
Ghazi Mosque in the Netherlands. In France, the Dominican Church in Lille and
the Saint Joseph Church in Paris have been turned into mosques.
The association said: “What the Muslims are doing is not
wise behaviour.”
This controversy serves to highlight the great crisis
experienced by Muslim communities in Europe as they were joined by recent waves
of immigrants. More and more, the communities are coming under the fire of
angry populist right-wing politicians in Europe.
The controversy raised by the behaviour of some members of
the Muslim communities, which some see as a provocative gift that stimulates
the birth of more extreme right-wing, anti-Muslim discourse, comes at a time
when anti-Muslim rhetoric based on the concept of Islamophobia is on the rise
in Europe in conjunction with an increase of anti-immigration discourse by
populist political parties.
Vakre Kirker og synagoger i muslimske land:
Last Updated: Thursday, 18 March, 2004, 22:10 GMT
|
Kosovo rioters burn Serb churches
|
||||||||
Mobs of angry Albanians in Kosovo have burned Serbian
Orthodox churches and homes on a second day of violence which is showing no
sign of a let-up.
The attacks came as Nato announced it was sending another
1,000 troops to reinforce the 18,500 already there.
At least 31 people have died in the worst violence since
the 1999 Kosovo war and about 500 have been injured.
The UN Security Council meeting in a special session is
expected to condemn the violence and urge calm.
Trouble erupted in the divided city of Mitrovica after the
deaths of two Albanian children, blamed on members of the province's small
ethnic Serbian community.
As attacks multiplied, angry demonstrators over the border
in Serbia itself responded by burning several mosques.
International staff have been relocated from Mitrovica as
a result of the violence, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan told the Security
Council meeting.
Calls not heeded
A Serb Orthodox church in the heart of Pristina was the
target of the latest attack on Thursday evening.
Earlier, Albanians managed to get past Nato peacekeepers
to set fire to churches in Mitrovica and the town of Obilic, west Pristina, where
about 100 local Serbs had to be evacuated.
Crowds of Albanians were also reported to be trying to
storm a church being protected by Finnish peacekeepers in the central town of
Lipljan.
Nato troops had to use teargas against Albanian protesters
seeking to march on the village of Caglavica, south of Pristina, for the
second day on Thursday.
Flights in and out of Kosovo have been suspended and
internal boundaries with Serbia have been closed.
Nato officials insist that the alliance and the United
Nations, which administers the province, are committed to quelling tensions.
But the top commander of the Nato-led force in Kosovo,
known as K-For, has authorised the troops to use force if necessary.
The European Union has called on local leaders to rein in
the violence - and the main Kosovo Albanian political parties have issued a
statement urging their supporters to call off the protests.
Mr Annan urged co-operation with the international
presence in Kosovo, but his message was aimed primarily at the Kosovo
Albanian leaders, who - as the largest ethnic group - had a responsibility
"to protect and promote the rights of all people within Kosovo,
particularly its minorities".
Serbia has condemned both Nato and the UN for failing to
protect the Serb minority in the province.
Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has described the
attacks as "planned in advance and co-ordinated... this was an attempted
pogrom and ethnic cleansing" against Kosovo's Serbs.
He has called for a state of emergency to be imposed in
Kosovo.
Protesters in Serbia have taken to the streets again to
demonstrate their support for the Kosovo Serbs - after having stoned and
burned http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3525168.stm
mosques and other Islamic buildings on Wednesday.
|
-
List of religious buildings demaged or destroyed in 1999
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding
it.
- Holy Trinity Monastery "Rusinica" in Mušutište (14th century), dynamited and burned down in July 1999, only the bell tower remains[38][39]
- Church of the Virgin Hodegetria, Mušutište (14th century), burned down and dynamited in July 1999[40][39]
- Monastery of St. Mark of Koriša in Koriša (15th century), burned down and razed to ground in July 1999[41][39]
- Church of the Holy Archangels in Gornje Nerodimlje (14th century, renewed in 1700), set on fire and looted, and seriously damaged by explosive, the old cemetery desecrated[39]
- Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, Suva Reka (built in 1938), demolished by explosive in July 1999[39]
- Holy Trinity Cathedral in Gjakova (originally built in 1940, renovated in 1998/99), completely destroyed by explosive on 24 July 1999[39]
- Church of Holy Trinity, Petrič (built in 1993), completely destroyed in 1999[42][39]
- Church of St. Nicholas, Slovinje (16th century), completely demolished by explosive in July 1999[39]
- Presentation of the Virgin church in Dolac (built in 1620), completely demolished in August 1999[39]
- Devič Monastery in Srbica (15th century), pillaged and torched, the tomb of St. Joanikije of Devič was desecrated in June 1999.[43][44] The KFOR troops said KLA rebels vandalized centuries-old murals and paintings in the chapel.[45][46]
- Church of St. Nicholas, Prizren (14th century, reconstructed in 1857), mined on 3 September and severely damaged[39], later renovated
- St. Archangel Gabriel's Monastery in Binač (14th century), completely destroyed by explosive on 13 December[39]
- St. Uroš Monastery in Gornje Nerodimlje (14th century), completely destroyed in summer 1999[39]
- Church of the Holy Virgin in Koriša (16th -17th century), church and the cemetery were destroyed in summer 1999[39]
- Holy Trinity Church in Ratiš (built in 1922, destroyed in 1941 and reconstructed in 1992). In summer 1997 the church was set on fire and was reconstructed again. In June 1999 the church was finally mined and completely destroyed.[39]
- Church of St Mark in Klina , heavily damaged in summer 1999[39]
- Church of St. Nicholas, Donje Nerodimlje (built in 1983), vandalized and set on fire in July 1999 [39]
- Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Belo Polje (16th century), looted and set on fire in June 1999[39]
- Church of St. John the Baptist, Samodreža (14th century, reconstructed in 1932), vandalized and burnt in June 1999[47]
- Church of Saint Elijah, Vučitrn (built in 1834), vandalized and looted in June 1999[39]
- St. Eliah's Church in Bistražin (reconstructed in 1994), vandalized and damaged by an explosion in June 1999[39]
- Church of Holy Trinity, Velika Reka (built in 1998), vandalized and set on fire in June 1999[39]
- Church of the Holy Emperor Uroš in Uroševac (built in 1933), burnt in June 1999[48]
- Parish church St. Eliah in Žegra (built in 1931), vandalized and set on fire, local graveyard is also desecrated[39]
- St. Elias Church in Smać (built in 1996), damaged by explosive and vandalized in July 1999[39]
- Church of St. Paraskeva, Drsnik (built 1560/1570), interior torched in June 1999, later renovated[49],
- Parish church in Grmovo, near Vitina, first it was set on fire and then completely destroyed by explosive.[39]
- Church of St Nicholas in Gatnje near Uroševac (built in 1985), looted, vandalized and seriously damaged by explosive[39]
- Church of St. Nicolas in Kijevo, near Klina (14th century), completely destroyed by explosive[39]
- Church of St. Elijah, Podujevo (built in 1929), vandalized in July 1999[39]
- The parish church in Novake near Prizren, vandalized and damaged[39]
- Church of the Holy Prophet Elijah in Pomazatin (erected in 1937), roof and the interiors were burnt. Parts of it destroyed by mines.[39]
- Church of St George, in Rudnik near Srbica (14th century), seriously damaged by explosive[39]
- Church of St Archangel in Mušutište, set on fire and partially destroyed in summer 1999[39]
- The Church of St Parasceva, in the village of Zaskok near Urosevac, mined and completely destroyed in summer 1999[39]
- Church of St. Jeremiah in Grebnik (built in 1920), razed to ground and terrain leveled with bulldozers
- Church of St. George, Rečanе (14th century), destroyed by explosive in June 1999[50]
- Monastery of the Holy Archangels in Prizren (14th century), looted and devastated in June-July 1999[51], the 14th century Pine of Tsar Dušan was cut down and burned[52]
- Church of the Virgin, Naklo (built in 1985), burnt and destroyed in June 1999[53]
- Church of St. John the Baptist, Pećka Banja (built in 1998), demolished and the interiors burnt in June 1999
- Church of St. Nicholas, Đurakovac (built in 14th century, renovated in 1592), dynamited in July 1999, large centuries old oak tree was cut into peaces and burned[50]
- Church of the Holy Mother of God, Podgorce (consecrated in 1996), vandalized and burnt
- Church of the Holy Trinity in Babljak near Uroševac (re-built in 1966), demolished and interior burned in 1999[41]
Albanian Muslims destroying and burn Serbian Church in
Kosovo
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