Iranian Christians forced to worship in secret
Anuj Chopra, Chronicle Foreign Service
Friday, June 27, 2008 (06-27) 04:00 PDT Tehran --
Illyas, 20, precariously straddles two worlds. At home, he's a devout Christian who wears a silver cross around his neck, reads the Bible and sings hymns praising Jesus Christ. In public, he is a pious Muslim who attends regular mosque prayers.
Illyas and his parents - they asked a reporter not to mention the family name to ensure their safety - had been practicing Muslims until they watched a religious television program beamed by satellite from Reseda (Los Angeles County). At that time last year, Illyas's mother called a hot line number of Iran for Christ Ministries, prayed with a counselor and soon accepted Jesus Christ as her savior. Illyas and his stepfather quickly followed.
Islam is the state religion of Iran - 98 percent of the nation's 66 million inhabitants are Muslims - and Islam has governed most aspects of life since the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the Shah of Iran. Frustrated with the lack of social liberties since clerics assumed power, Illyas says his family felt compelled to look for other spiritual answers.
"We were looking for a faith that offered the reassurance of freedom," he said.
Although there are no statistics on how many Iranians have converted to Christianity in recent years, officials at such Christian television stations as SAT-7-PARS say that in the past two years they have received a flood of e-mails and thousands of telephone calls from Iranians. With the advent of satellite television, they say, Christianity is on the rise, with some Iranians even undergoing clandestine conversions at Assyrian churches, said David Harder, communications manager at SAT-7-PARS' Cyprus headquarters.
"Certainly across the entire region many people are spiritually thirsty. Iranian Christians themselves often have very little access to teaching materials that can help them in their spiritual growth," said Harder. "Satellite television provides a means through which Iranians, who have often never had the opportunity to enter a church or even to know a Christian, to learn more about this faith."
Even though satellite dishes have been officially banned in Iran since 1995, they crowd city rooftops and the government seems unable to control what Iranians watch at home, many observers say.
An editor of an independent newspaper in Tehran, who asked not to be named, blames satellite television channels for manipulating viewers into converting to Christianity.
"Iranians are looking for relief and proselytizers are taking advantage of that," he said. "I stand by the right to take up a new religion, but there's a vicious Western plot to foment a wider cultural East-West war and demonize Islam in the process."
Even though the nation's penal code does not mandate the death penalty for apostasy, the law could change if President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has his way. In February, he introduced legislation that would mandate execution for apostates.
"Life for so-called apostates in Iran has never been easy, but it could become literally impossible if Iran passes this new draft penal code," said Joseph Grieboski, the president of the Institute on Religion and Public Policy in Washington. "For anyone who dares question the regime's religious ideology, there could soon be no room to argue - only death."
Some clerics believe the migration of Iranians to Christianity is symptomatic of frustration with Islam more than interest in another faith.
"If you force religion down people's throats, it makes them less religious, not more," said Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a reformist cleric and Iran's former vice president.
The curbing of social freedoms in the name of Islam, such as mandatory head scarves for women and a crackdown on fashion and Western music, has persisted since 1979, and has driven many young Iranians - 70 percent of the population is under 30 - away from Islam, Abtahi says.
Many Iranians are also frustrated by a stagnant economy despite the country having the world's fourth-largest oil reserves. Inflation is nearly 19 percent; unemployment is at a record 20 percent. Many blame the economic situation on faulty policies and the involvement of religion in governance.
Moreover, Ahmadinejad has authorized a whopping 700 percent increase in government spending for "Islamic religious activities" in 2009, according to Rooz, a Persian news Web site. Ahmadinejad has also proposed increasing the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance budget from $2.2 million to $16.6 million for 2009.
Last year, the state financed a $5 million film called "Jesus, the Spirit of God," an Islamic version of the life of Jesus. The movie depicts Jesus as a tormented prophet who was not crucified or resurrected. Instead his disciple Judas Iscariot, was crucified in his place. This premise is based on the teachings of the Quran and the putative Gospel of Barnabas, a disciple of Jesus. It will now be recycled in a 20-episode serial aired on state-run television.
Even though director Nader Talebzadeh says he wanted to promote a dialogue between Muslims and Christians, some Western critics called it a parochial attempt to promote Islam by spreading misinformation about Christianity.
Meanwhile, Illyas says he will continue to practice his new religion.
"I'll have to keep it a secret as long as I live in Iran," he said. "There's no other way."
Apostasy and Islam
Leaving Islam for another religion, or apostasy, is considered one of the most serious crimes a Muslim can commit, with a recommended punishment of beheading. There is no penalty for a Muslim who kills an apostate, according to Islamic Shariah law.
Most Muslim nations, however, do not mandate the death penalty for those who convert to another religion, and many accept the U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights that guarantees all individuals the right to practice the religion of their choice.
But that has not stopped individual judges from doling out the death sentence and vigilantes from threatening, beating and killing converts in Pakistan, the Palestinian territories, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Nigeria, Indonesia, Somalia and Kenya, according to Human Rights Watch.
Just this week, two Algerians who converted from Islam to Christianity went on trial on charges that they illegally promoted the Christian faith, according to The Associated Press. Algeria's constitution allows freedom of worship. But a 2006 law strictly regulates how religions other than Islam can be practiced.
In 2006, Abdul Rahman, a convert to Christianity, was sentenced to death by an Afghan court. After ardent worldwide protests, he was released and allowed to flee to Italy.
In Iran, Mehdi Dibaj was imprisoned for his Christian beliefs for 10 years between 1983 and 1993. After Dibaj received the death penalty from an Iranian court, he won his freedom after an international outcry that included Pope John Paul II. Soon after his release, Dibaj was abducted and slain.
Think on This
The Spirit of God led me to this passage below, for comfort because I have read so many of these types of stories and I am always disheartened when I see them. but I also rejoice in my heart for the hope that we have in Christ Jesus for we are More Than Conquerors Amen.
Romans 8:31-39,31What, then, shall we say in response to this? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? 33Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. 34Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. 35Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? 36As it is written:
"For your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered."[] 37No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,[m] neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.Praise God our God never fails those that put their trust in Him.
"Praise God our God never fails those that put their trust in Him." Amen
ReplyDeleteThanks once again for this info,I believed GOD is moving in IRAN. I pray for this people, let HIS words be revealed to their hearts.
YAdah,Our God will save His own.
ReplyDeleteGodbless
The religion just reminds me of how much Satan tries to immitate God, but leads people astray and to eternal damnation through deception.
ReplyDeleteWhat kind of God would reward someone for destroying innocent people, the people he created whom are made in His image?
Not mine.
Its all deception and lies.
I pray for the spreading of the true gospel to spread throughout those nations where there is no freedom of belief.
In Jesus mighty name,
Amen
Tkwi there are so many religions but only one Truth and one Way to God and that's Jesus Christ the Son of the Living God and, anyone one who tries to deny that is already condenmed to eternal damnation my sis
ReplyDeleteGodbless
COH this is very interesting, I never knew that things like that were happening. Thanks for sharing, and I am glad that many choose to follow Jesus, to me always a SYMBLOG OF LOVE. Thanks again, Anna :)
ReplyDeleteIt is happening all over the world , my sis Godbless you Anna
ReplyDelete