Monday March 24 2014
By Ryan Jones
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Some 150 Israeli Arabic-speaking Christians on Sunday
demonstrated outside the European Union mission in Tel Aviv, demanding that the
international community stop nitpicking against Israel and start combatting the
severe persecution of Christians everywhere else in the Middle East.
“Nations, organizations and international missions
are quick to raise an accusing finger against Israel at every opportunity,”
said Father Gabriel Nadaf, spiritual father of the Israeli Christian Recruitment
Forum, which organized the rally.
Those same nations and organizations “don’t life a
finger against the ethnic cleansing of Christians in the Middle East,” the
priest continued.
Father Nadaf went on to explain that from Syria to
Egypt to Iraq to the Palestinian Authority, Christians on a daily basis suffer
intimidation, harassment, desecration, coercion, torture, rape, physical abuse
and murder. “According to the statistics, a Christian is murdered every five
minutes [in the Middle East], and the Western world is silent about this,” he
lamented.
In messages posted to its Facebook page during the
Tel Aviv rally, the Israeli Christian Recruitment Forum insisted that “there is
no place but Israel that is safe for Christians in the Middle East!”
While the rally was largely ignored by the mainstream
Western media, the Israeli press took great interest, and forum spokesman Shadi
Khalloul, a veteran of the IDF, was interviewed by various television and print
media outlets.
Khalloul has spoken numerous
times with Israel Today regarding the Christian awakening within
Israel, and the bonds of brotherhood than bind local Christians to the Jewish
people and the Jewish state.
Last month, Israel’s Knesset took
the first important step toward recognizing local Christians as an independent minority separate
from the Arab Muslims. Both Nadaf and Khalloul say this is
necessary, since local Christians were here before the Arab Muslim conquest
around 600 AD.
A growing number of Israelis, including lawmakers and
opinion shapers, are likewise waking up to the strong Christian minority in
their midst, a minority that has been long neglected, but which is now
beginning to boldly take its place alongside the Jews.
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