Christians Executed
For Refusing To Convert To Islam
According to reports,
a group of the President Obama funded Syrian Rebels over ran one city in Syria.
At least three Christians were executed for refusing to convert to Islam.
Todd Daniels, a
spokesman for the American human rights group International Christian Concern,
confirmed the deaths of three Catholic men at the hands of the rebels that are
fighting supposedly to depose President Bashar al-Assad.
WND and Todd Daniels
reports the situation is dire for Christians.
Based on the
statement from the Melkite patriarch, these men were martyred because they
refused to recant their faith,” Daniels said.~WND
Also 12 nuns have
been captured and moved all over Syria. They are potential sexual abuse victims
according to the human rights group. They have also been moved from village to
village. The Mother Superior Pelagia
Sayyaf had 11 nuns with her when she was kidnapped. All 12 are thought to be victims
of the Syrian rebels.
“There are serious
concerns for the safety of these women based on the treatment of women
throughout this conflict,” Daniels said.
He said a number of
church leaders have been kidnapped and abused.
“We’ve seen repeated
instances of the direct targeting of Christians by the rebel groups,” he said.
The violence comes
amid U.S. support for the Islamic rebels in Syria. Many are tied to al-Qaida
and have declared their intent to establish Islamic law the country.
International
Christian Union President Joseph Hakim said the rebels forced their way into a
monastery to take the nuns hostage.
He blames the Muslim
Brotherhood.
“The Free Syrian Army
is powerless,” he said, noting the Muslim Brotherhood is starting to take a
leading role.
“They’ve used the
honest Syrian people who really want democratic rule and used them to open the
door,” Hakim said.
“The entire terrorist
movement is financed by the Saudi government and the Turkish government,” Hakim
said. “Let’s be honest, how can the rebels have that much money?”
He called the name
Free Syrian Army “cosmetic,” explaining that it amounts to the Muslim
Brotherhood taking control.
Neither the Saudi nor
Turkish governments responded to WND’s request for comment.
Dutch human rights
activist Martin Janssen said that when fighting broke out in Maaloula, the nuns
remained behind to care for the children in the monastery.
“A number of
religious sisters from Maaloula remained in the monastery of St. Thecla, because
a large group of orphans were there and they didn’t want to disappoint the
children,” Janssen said.
“The jihadists forced
their way into the monastery and demanded that the 12 nuns had to go if they
wanted to save the lives of the children with them,” he said. “So the sisters
were abducted and media reports say they are in Yabrud.”
Daniels noted the
latest executions and kidnappings are only two acts of violence in a broader
conflict.
“The situation in
Syria more broadly is scary for Christians. You have both sides in the conflict
guilty of what could be clearly classified as war crimes. The reality in many
cases is that the desire to create an extremist Islamist state increasingly
appears to be a place where Syrian Christians would be unable to live,” Daniels
said.
“If this is the case,
we may be witnessing the final days for Christians in a land they have lived in
for nearly 2,000 years,” Daniels said.
Hakim echoed Daniels’
assessment that the Syrian civil war is only one part of a much broader power
play by the Muslim Brotherhood.
“There’s a Christian
cleansing going on over the entire Middle East. Unless we really connect the
entire picture together, the full cleansing situation cannot be understood,”
Hakim said.
“It started in
Lebanon, now it’s in Egypt and then Syria. It seems there’s an entire cleansing
of the Christian community,” he said.
Hakim said that the
U.S. government is wrong to say the Christian victims of the Middle East
conflicts are simply “casualties.”
“We should never
allow the Christians to be casualties of war. Why is the U. S. allowing the
Christian communities to suffer and become casualties of war?” Hakim said.
“They would never say people killed in violence in Arizona or in New York are
casualties of war, so why do they say Christians are simply casualties of
war?”~WND
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