World is silent as attacks on Churches, their personnel and institutions have become routine, African Bishop
“The world is silent as attacks on Churches, their personnel and institutions have become routine. … No one seems to pay attention to the genocide.”
“How many corpses are required to get the world’s attention? states Bishop Jude Arogundade of Ondo, whose diocese in Nigeria was targeted by gunmen who killed more than 40 people at a packed Sunday service in June.
Bishop Jude Arogundade of Ondo was the keynote speaker at the UK launch of the report “Persecuted and Forgotten?” Report on Christians oppressed for their Faith in 2020–22 by the Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), which took place in the Houses of Parliament on November 16.
Bishop Arogundade wants all to raise alarm about the increasing violence in parts of the country.
The Report on Christians oppressed for their Faith 2020-22 includes information from ACN’s global contacts and other local sources, as well as providing first-hand testimony and compiling incidents for countries of key concern.
Amid growing alarm about the increasing violence in parts of the country, Bishop Arogundade said ahead of the event that “no one seems to pay attention to the genocide” taking place in swathes of the north and the Middle Belt: “The world is silent as attacks on Churches, their personnel and institutions have become routine. How many corpses are required to get the world’s attention?”
“Persecuted and Forgotten?” found that in 75 per cent of the 24 countries surveyed, oppression or persecution of Christians has increased.
In Africa and Asia
Jihadists and nationalists are driving increased persecution of Christians around the world – according to a report unveiled today.
Africa saw a sharp rise in terrorist violence from non-state militants – with more than 7,600 Nigerian Christians reportedly murdered between January 2021 and June 2022.
In May 2022 a video was released showing 20 Nigerian Christians being executed by Islamist terror group Boko Haram/ISWAP.
In Asia, state authoritarianism led to worsening oppression, which Persecuted and Forgotten? found was at its peak in North Korea, where religious belief and practice are routinely and systematically repressed.
Religious nationalism has triggered increasing violence against Christians in the region, with Hindutva and Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist groups active in India and Sri Lanka respectively. Authorities have arrested believers and stopped church services, even when violence was done to them by nationalists.
India saw 710 incidents of anti-Christian violence between January 2021 and the start of June 2022, driven in part by political extremism.
During a mass rally in Chhattisgarh in October 2021, members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) applauded as right-wing Hindu religious leader Swami Parmatmanand called for Christians to be killed.
In the Middle East
The report found that in the Middle East a migration crisis is threatening the survival of some of the world’s oldest Christian communities.
In Syria, Christians plummeted from 10 per cent of the population to less than 2 per cent – falling from 1.5 million just before the war began to around 300,000 today.
Despite a slower rate of exodus in Iraq, the Christian community – numbering around 300,000 before the 2014 invasion by Daesh (ISIS) – had halved to 150,000 by Spring 2022.
Persecuted and Forgotten? also found that in countries as diverse as Egypt and Pakistan, Christian girls are routinely subject to systematic kidnapping and rape and/or forced marriage and conversion.
Report author John Pontifex said: “Persecuted and Forgotten? provides first-hand testimony and case studies proving that in many countries Christians are experiencing persecution – let us do all that we can do to show that they are not forgotten.”
The Pontifical Foundation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) is holding its annual international Red Week campaign to draw attention to religious freedom and persecuted Christians across the world.
The campaign is traditionally held in November with buildings and landmarks in several different countries lit up in red. This year Red Wednesday is observed on November 23.
A series of special initiatives, prayer actions and testimonies mark the occasion.
The annual campaign was launched on November 16 with the official release in London of the “Persecuted and Forgotten?” Report on Christians oppressed for their Faith in 2020–22. The study supplements the annual Religious Freedom Report of the international charity and is prepared by ACN national office in the UK.
- from ACN UK News, November 16
Radio Veritas Asia (RVA), a media platform of the Catholic Church, aims to share Christ. RVA started in 1969 as a continental Catholic radio station to serve Asian countries in their respective local language, thus earning the tag “the Voice of Asian Christianity.” Responding to the emerging context, RVA embraced media platforms to connect with the global Asian audience via its 21 language websites and various social media platforms.