The transfer of power of Bethlehem from Israel to the Palestinian
Authority just before Christmas 1995 inspired a spate of articles[1]
on Bethlehem's diminishing Christian presence. They noted that a place
not long ago 80 percent Christian is now but one-third Christian. For
the first time in nearly two millennia, the most identifiably Christian
town on earth has lost its Christian majority. The same changes have
taken place in two other famously Christian towns, Nazareth and
Jerusalem. In Nazareth, Christians went from 60 percent of the
population in 1946 to 40 percent in 1983. Jerusalem Christians in 1922
slightly outnumbered Muslims (15,000 versus 13,000);[2] today, they number under 2 percent of the city's population.
The same applies in other parts of Israel. A report from the Galilee
village of Turan quotes a Christian store owner: "Most Christians will
leave as soon as we can sell our houses and shops. We can't live among
these people [Muslims] anymore."[3] One journalist concludes that "The Christian community in the West Bank is close to extinction."[4]
Nor are Israeli-held territories unusual in this regard; Christians
are fleeing from all over the Middle East. Emigration began in the
aftermath of World War I and has greatly picked up in the last decade.
In Turkey, Christians constituted a population of 2 million in 1920 but
now only some thousands remain. So severe is the problem that the
Orthodox Patriarchate in Istanbul is in danger of collapsing for lack of
large enough pool of candidates. Christians earlier in this century
represented about one-third of the Syrian population; now they account
for less than 10 percent. In 1932, they composed 55 percent of the
Lebanese population, now less than 30 percent. More than half the
Christians of Iraq have left. Copts began leaving Egypt in significant
numbers after the 1952 revolution.
The Christian population decline has two main causes: emigration and declining birth rates.
Emigration represents the end of a long process of exclusion
and persecution. On the West Bank, a nearly-permanent Muslim boycott of
Christian businesses is the problem. In Egypt, fundamentalist Muslims
constantly target Christians. The Lebanese civil war of 1975-90, when
reduced to its essentials, represented a successful effort by Muslims to
reduce Christian power in the country. But by far the worst situation
is in the Sudan, where the civil war that has been raging most of the
time since 1956 has led to wholesale atrocities.
Declining birth rates can also be seen throughout the region.
In Israel, for example, live births per thousand among Muslims comes to
37; among Christians, a mere 22 per thousand.[5]
In addition, the small number of Christians leads some to marry
Muslims, which effectively means they are lost to their community.
At the present rate, the Middle East's 12 million Christians will
likely drop to 6 million in the year 2020. With time, Christians will
effectively disappear from the region as a cultural and political force.
Read more: Disappearing Christians in the Middle East :: Daniel Pipes
No comments:
Post a Comment