Feel the love in Egypt from the rampant democracy of the "Arab Spring" as it flows from Muslims to Christians.
From AINA Feb 25 by Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson
In Egypt, Christian-Muslim Tension Is On The Rise
From AINA Feb 25 by Soraya Sarhaddi Nelson
In Egypt, Christian-Muslim Tension Is On The Rise
Blackened rubble is all that is left of Abskharon Suleiman's appliance store in the northern Egyptian village of Sharbat.
Suleiman is a Coptic Christian, and his upstairs apartment, as well as his children's homes and shops, were gutted and looted in an attack last month by young Muslim men.
In Egypt, growing tensions between Muslims and Christians have led to sporadic violence. Many Egyptians blame the interreligious strife on hooligans taking advantage of absent or weak security forces. Others believe it's because of a deep-seated mistrust between Muslims and the minority Christian community.
The incident in the rural community of Sharbat started as most interreligious clashes in Egypt do -- with a rumor of an illicit liaison between members of different religious sects.
In this case, it was about a Coptic Christian man and Muslim woman, each of them married to someone else, explains Muslim merchant Magdy Abu Sheashaa.
He claims the man had suggestive photos of the woman on his phone, though neither he nor anyone else interviewed actually saw the pictures.
The rumor was enough to send a frenzied mob to the alleged offender's house on Jan. 27. That building was near Suleiman's property.
Abu Sheashaa says Suleiman's grown sons fired handguns into the air to try to disperse the crowd. The mob then shouted insults at the Coptic family and demanded they leave the village where they had lived for two decades.
"They threw rocks through the windows and set our building on fire. I was sure we were going to die," says Um Suleiman, the elderly wife of the merchant.
Police Didn't Act
Witnesses say police officers who came did nothing. Instead, Muslim neighbors and friends of Suleiman intervened. They formed a protective cordon around the Christians and brought them to Magdy Abu Sheashaa's home.
Abu Sheashaa says a group of Muslim elders later came to express their sympathy to his Coptic friend. But they also urged him to move out like the mob was demanding.
The elders said they felt it was no longer safe for Suleiman and his family to stay in Sharbat.
They stayed with Muslim friends for a while, then moved into a cramped apartment an hour's drive away.
Suleiman's eldest son says they want to go back home.
But they are afraid of being attacked again, he says, even though a committee sent by the Egyptian parliament decreed last week that the family has the right to live in Sharbat.
Ihab Ramzy, a Coptic Christian lawmaker who was a member of the committee, says he understands the family's fears.
Islamists Will Hold Power
Islamists won Egypt's recent parliamentary elections, and this has created a feeling of helplessness in the Coptic Christian community.
The Muslim Brotherhood, which is the strongest Islamist faction, has vowed to protect Christians and other minorities. And Egyptian experts and human rights activists say there is no evidence of any official or organized effort to terrorize Christians.
"Is there an extremist wave that is identifying Christians and trying to drive them out of Egypt? Personally, I doubt it, but you know, maybe I'm naive," says Mahmoud Sabit, an Egyptian historian who lives in Cairo.
Sabit says Copts get nervous when Islamist candidates talk about incorporating more Islamic law, or Shariah, into Egyptian society.
"So this I think is one of their great fears, is a reversal and suddenly finding themselves ... as second-class citizens," he says.
Most Copts, like the Suleiman family, refuse to discuss those fears publicly.
But last December on a talk show on Egyptian TV, a Christian caller who gave her name as Mervat accused the guest -- an ultra-conservative Salafist -- of trying to drive Christians out of Egypt.
The Coptic Christian caller accuses Hazem Salah Abu Ismail -- who is a presidential candidate -- of inciting hatred and violence by demanding women wear veils and Egyptians not drink alcohol. She argues that if Christians don't comply, they will be attacked.
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