Ending Religious Persecution

Ending Religious Persecution

Description image by David Kilgour Co-chair of the Canadian Friends of a Democratic Iran.
  • First Posted: Nov 03 2009 14:41 PM
  • Updated: over 1 year ago

Around the world, people continue to be punished for practising their faith. Religious groups must work together to end this violence.

One dismaying estimate of the number of people who died violently because of their religion in the 20th century includes 70 million Muslims; 35 million Christians; 11 million Hindus; nine million Jews; four million Buddhists; two million Sikhs; and one million Bahá'is.

What can be done to reduce the persecution of religions globally? A first step is universal recognition that human dignity is indivisible in today’s shrunken world and all groups must thus stand together. As Pastor Martin Niemöller poignantly said of the Nazis, “they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out – because I was not a Jew; then they came for me – and there was no one left to speak out for me.”

Religious intolerance by governments breeds violence. Journalist Geoffrey Johnston notes that "countries that do not actively protect religious minorities or prosecute the perpetrators of religiously-motivated violence are ultimately undermining their own security. A climate of impunity tends to embolden militants, who eventually turn against the state, using violence to advance their agenda. Pakistan and Nigeria are prime examples of governments that have allowed extremist groups to attack religious minority communities before they themselves became the targets of terror strikes."

Most nations, including Canada, have signed agreements committing them to respect individual freedom of thought, conscience, and belief. Yet, in too many countries, people continue to suffer for practising their faiths. It is of no little consequence that most of the persecution during the early 1900s was committed by regimes which detested all religions.

In China, those who practise targeted faiths face inhuman brutality. In 2005, Gao Zhisheng, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and one of China's top human rights lawyers, began lobbying the government to end persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual community. Shortly thereafter, his own torment began, starting with the revocation of his permit to practise law and the closing down of his law firm, and continuing with attacks on his wife and daughter. After repeated legal and illegal brutalities, he was again incarcerated and is "being held incommunicado at an unknown location” according to Amnesty International.

In Iran, freedom of religion is permitted only to Shiite Muslims, with practitioners of most other faiths facing brutal persecution at the hands of the clerical regime. Bahá'i practitioners, for example, have no protection since their faith has been declared un-Islamic and therefore illegal. Any attempt to convert from Islam is punishable by death.

In Sudan, the consequences of religious intolerance are clear, although the main cause of death today is racial persecution. It is estimated that more than 400,000 African Darfuris have been slaughtered, with six times as many expelled from bombed-out and raided villages. The figures are even higher in the predominantly Christian and animist south, where it is believed that two million have been killed and even more displaced.

In India, the commitment of most people to religious pluralism, the rule of law, and democratic norms have made it difficult to sustain persecution against faith communities. The most dangerous friction in India remains that between Hindus and Muslims, but other faiths also face persecution. Just over a year ago, the city of Orissa was seized for weeks by anti-Christian violence after a Hindu leader was killed. An estimated 70 Christians were murdered, with hundreds more displaced. The events motivated the Religious Liberty Commission of the World Evangelical Alliance to issue a report just prior to India's national elections, prompting several Canadian MPs to write to the national government of India. Its Supreme Court ruled that the national government was responsible for maintaining peace in Orissa and could not allow the state and local governments to ignore the illegal persecution of minorities.

Numerous suggestions on what we can all do to reduce religious persecution can be found in Daniel Goldhagen’s book, Worse than War. These include developing an anti-eliminationist discourse (as mass murder and eliminationist politics are humanity's scourge, they should receive more news coverage than, say, house fires) and properly identifying mass murderers (i.e. “Sudanese mass murderer al-Bashir,” instead of “President al-Bashir of Sudan”).

If faith communities stand shoulder-to-shoulder in the face of religious persecution, lives can be saved. Mutual respect can build a better, more peaceful, world.

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