WhatFinger

Such open hypocrisy can stand when influential Christian groups--they who are most responsible for speaking up for savagely persecuted Christian minorities--engage in it themselves

U.S. Christian Groups Support Muslim Refugees, Ignore Persecuted Christians


By Raymond Ibrahim ——--January 6, 2016

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--Raymond Ibrahim According to recently released figures from the State Dept., the United States has let in a miniscule number of Christian refugees from Syria -- only 34 -- during the four years since the Islamic State began its campaign of mass slaughter. Put differently, although Christians amount for 10 percent of Syria's population--and so should at least be 10 percent of the refugees accepted into the States--only two percent of those accepted are Christians. This disparity is being ignored by influential U.S. Christian groups. The Church World Service (CWS) and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops have both called for the resettlement of 100,000 Syrian refugees in the United States next year. Yet advocacy for especially persecuted Christians is lacking among these U.S. Christian organizations. The CWS, for example, does not even mentionthe special plight of Christians on its website's call to help Syrian refugees; it primarily features pictures of Muslims. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops -- which touts itself as the world's largest refugee resettlement organization and even received$80 millionfrom the federal government in 2014 for its Migration Fund -- also oftenfailsto mention Christians in its public advocacy for the resettlement of Syrian refugees.
Refugee Resettlement Watch charges that "The Bishops [of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops] surely are not telling local priests and parishioners that they areraking in millions of dollars of cold hard cash from federal taxpayersfor refugee resettlement activities.And, they aren't telling them that they are NOT advocating to save the persecuted Christians of Syria through this program" (emphasis in original). When the Catholic hierarchy does mention persecuted Christians, they are often lumped in with every other group, including Muslim majorities. This approach begins with Pope Francis. Last September, when he stood before the world at theUnited Nations, his energy was,once again, spent on defending the environment. In his entire speech, which lasted nearly 50 minutes, only once did Francis make reference to persecuted Christians--and he merged their sufferings in the same sentence with the supposedly equal sufferings of "members of the majority religion," that is, Sunni Muslims (the only group not to be attacked by the Islamic State, a Sunni organization). Said Francis:
I must renew my repeated appeals regarding to the painful situation of the entire Middle East, North Africa and other African countries, where Christians, together with other cultural or ethnic groups, and even members of the majority religion who have no desire to be caught up in hatred and folly, have been forced to witness the destruction of their places of worship, their cultural and religious heritage, their houses and property, and have faced the alternative either of fleeing or of paying for their adhesion to good and to peace by their own lives, or by enslavement.
In the real world, however, "members of the majority religion"--Sunnis--are not being slaughtered, beheaded, and raped for refusing to renounce their faith; are not having their mosques bombed and burned; are not being jailed or killed for apostasy, blasphemy, or proselytization. Quite the contrary, "members of the majority religion" are responsible for committing dozens of atrocities against Christian minorities every single month all throughout the Islamic world.

From a strictly humanitarian point of view, then--and humanitarianism is the chief reason being cited in accepting refugees--far from being lumped in with "members of the majority religion," Christians should receive top priority simply becausethey are the most persecuted group, as repeated studies have shown. At the hands of the Islamic State and in Syria alone, Christians have been repeatedlyforced to renounce Christ or die; they have been enslaved and sold on sex slave markets; they have had more than 400 of their churches desecrated and destroyed. If Christian minorities are true refugees, most Muslims are to a large extent economic migrants not fleeing real persecution but arriving from safe locales such as Turkey. Moreover, roughly 97-98 percent of those being accepted as refugees into the U.S. are Sunni Muslims--the same sect that ISIS, which supposedly precipitated the refugee crisis, belongs to. And many of them, unsurprisingly, share the same vision of relentless jihad on the infidel--such as the "refugees" who murdered some 120 people in France, or the "refugees" whopersecute Christian minorities in European camps and slaughter them in their beds, or the "refugees" who drown Christian migrants in the sea, or the ISIS-affiliated Sunni jihads who massacred over a dozen Americans at a Christmas party in San Bernardino. In short, the refugee resettlement system egregiously discriminates against those who are most deserving of sanctuary and refugee status. Yet little is said or done by pro-resettlement U.S. Christian groups to address, much less correct, this problem. If influential Christian organizations are ignoring the discrimination against or at least indifference to Christian refugees, the Obama administration's policies should not be surprising. Aside from the fact that 98 percent of refugees being accepted into the U.S. are Sunni Muslims and only two percent are Christian--a skewed ratio based on Syria's demographics--consider: Days before the disparity against Christian refugees was revealed, President Obama lashed out against the idea of giving preference to Christian refugees, describing it as "shameful": "That's not American. That's not who we are. We don't have religious tests to our compassion," loftily admonished the president--even as the exact opposite was occurring: Muslims were getting every preference over Christians. Such open hypocrisy can stand when influential Christian groups--they who are most responsible for speaking up for savagely persecuted Christian minorities--engage in it themselves.

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Raymond Ibrahim——

RAYMOND IBRAHIM (RaymondIbrahim.com) is a widely published author, public speaker, and Middle East and Islam expert.  His books include Crucified Again: Exposing Islam’s New War on Christians (2013) and The Al Qaeda Reader (2007). His writings, translations, and observations have appeared in a variety of publications, including Fox News, Financial Times, Jerusalem Post, Los Angeles Times, New York Times Syndicate, United Press International, USA Today, Washington Post, Washington Times, and Weekly Standard; scholarly journals, including the Almanac of Islamism, Chronicle of Higher Education, Jane’s Islamic Affairs Analyst, Middle East Quarterly, and Middle East Review of International Affairs; and popular websites, such as American Thinker, the Blaze, Bloomberg, Christian Post, FrontPage Magazine, Gatestone Institute, the Inquisitr, Jihad Watch, NewsMax, National Review Online, PJ Media, VDH’s Private Papers, and World Magazine. He has contributed chapters to several anthologies and been translated into various languages.


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