It is claimed
by Christian experts that Christians are the most persecuted people in the
world. Now those who study Christian persecution may be experts in Christian persecution, but are they also
experts in persecution in general? Do they know as much about persecution of
Muslims?
My universe of discourse here is persecution because of their faith,
not because of political circumstances.
How many of the Muslims streaming into the West these days are Muslims persecuted
for their faith rather than victims of politics or immigrants seeking better
economic circumstances?
In the case of
African Muslims crossing the Mediterranean, it is fairly safe to regard most of
them as economic immigrants. In the case of Syrians Muslims, I expect that many
are victims of their civil war in the same way as are many Christians—in other
words economic and political victims, not victims of religious persecution. But
many Christians among them have also been persecuted for their faith by the
same Muslims who now are their fellow refugees. Remember the story in Sweden a
few posts ago? So, many of them are these three
types all rolled into one.
Syrian affairs are complicated these days. These
refugees are not all victims of the Syrian civil war. Many of them, both
Christian and Muslim, are also victims of ISIS violence. That is above all a religious war with serious economic and
political consequences. Those who are dislodged because of ISIS can be
considered persecuted Christians and Muslims.
The same thing is true with Boko
Haram
in northern Nigeria. They persecute fellow Muslims as much as
Christians. In fact, more, for Muslims outnumber Christians in that far
north east of the country. I do not know whether these persecution “experts”
study that aspect of persecution. Neither do I know whether there are Muslims
who are experts in persecution of Muslims. I guess I could go online and check
it out. Perhaps you would find them mostly among human rights advocates.
But one thing
is sure, namely that in most Muslim countries in general, Christians are the most
numerous among those persecuted, for there is hardly a Muslim-majority country
where Christians are not persecuted, whether by government or by the people,
whether officially or unofficially, whether by pure violence or various forms
of discrimination.
And yet, in a
country like Nigeria, Muslims have for decades complained about persecution. Not
the violent kind that kills or maims, though that also occurs during times of demonstrations, but in terms of discrimination in
cultural, political, legal and educational forms, persecution by colonialists
and by Christians. When the British established the Protectorate of Northern
Nigeria, the colonial Governor, Lord Lugard, a secular man, promised that the
British would not touch their Muslim religion. This is known as the "Lugard
promise." There would be freedom of religion for the Muslims. In fact, for many
decades Christian missionaries had less freedom to spread the Gospel than
Muslims had for theirs. So, why did northern Muslims complain so bitterly about
persecution, while Christians suffered at their hands?
The reason is
to be found in the Lugard promise. He
made his promise from his secular perspective on religion, which is a reduced
version of religion that is restricted to church/mosque and private life, but
not to affect public life, for that is supposedly secular and neutral. His
promise was that Muslims were free to attend mosque and practice their religion
privately.
But to Muslims, religion is a wholistic affair that touches on and
influences all of life, not just private or mosque life. Without either party
being aware of it, they misunderstood each other. Muslims thought they would be
free to practice their religion wholistically in all spheres of culture.
The British
proceded to secularize the Muslim community. Though they left sharia (Muslim
law) in tact at the level of mosque, the private and family levels, in other
spheres secularism became the dominant worldview on basis of which public life was
organized. A major tool was education. Another was switching the Hausa language
from Arabic script to Western so as to reduce the influence of Arabic
ideas. Ever so slowly the secular spirit
took hold among Muslims—until the revolution of Khomeini woke them up. Suddenly
they realized they “had been had.”
Suddenly they began to realize what had happened to them and they burst
out in anger. They had been fooled, slipped a poison pill and put to sleep,
while an antithesis had developed between the two systems. Everything public
had gone secular, something that most Muslims reject with a passion, especially
in northern Nigeria. Before long, the demand for the revival of sharia came to
the surface with a vengeance. They felt discriminated against and, yes,
persecuted--and justifiably so.
If you wish to
pursue the topic of Muslim persecution, I urge you to read both volumes 4 and 6
in my series Studies in Christian-Muslim
Relations. That series opens the Islamica page of my website < www.SocialTheology.com/Islamica.htm. > You
will find a strong sense on the part of Muslims of being persecuted by colonial
secular forces, the antithesis to Islam. Boko
Haram is an extremist reaction to that secular force. Its central tenet is buried in
its Hausa name, which means “Western education (secularism) is forbidden.”
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