Syrian rebels force Christians to pay ‘protection’ tax
Crosses on churches and pealing church bells are a thing of
the past in Raqqa, Syria, as long as extreme Islamists remain in power there.
After seizing it last March, militants with the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant, known as ISIL or ISIS, control the province of
Raqqa, a region that was until recently at least 10 percent Christian. The
militants have torched churches, and destroyed their crosses, replacing them
with the group's black Islamic banner.
ISIL recently issued a list of rules it planned to impose
and gave Christians three choices: convert to Islam, remain Christian and pay a
“jizya tax” for protection, or "refuse and be considered warriors who will
be confronted with the sword of the Islamic State."
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According to Todd Daniels of International Christian
Concern, ISIL is so extreme, al-Qaeda has distanced itself from the group,
declaring Jabhat al-Nusra its official representative in Syria.
ISIL claims Christian leaders agreed to pay the protection
tax. The group released a document called “Aqed al-Thima,” Arabic for
“protection pact,” which it claimed it finalized during a meeting with 20
Christian leaders in Raqqa. The militants intend to impose Sharia law there,
including a strict dress code, a ban on public alcohol consumption, and
prohibitions on the display of Christian symbols, according to Al Shorfa, a
Middle East news website maintained by the U.S. Defense Department.
The authenticity of the two-page document circulating online
could not be independently verified, but such issues have stoked fears in
Syria’s Christian minority community that they are being targeted by extremists
among the fighters seeking to oust President Bashar al-Assad.
The document bore a stamp ISIL uses in other statements
posted on militant websites. The signatures of the 20 Christian leaders who
allegedly signed it were blotted out at their request, according to the
document, which was signed by a representative of ISIL’s leader.
This is the most formal call for dhimmitude, a system of
classification for non-Muslims, in years, according to Daniels. “This is unique
is recent history, but there is historical precedent of a system of dhimmitude
that stipulates Christian’s second-class status under an Islamic government as
early as the seventh century,” Daniels said.
Al Shorfa reported that both Christians and Muslims in Raqqa
were upset by ISIL’s demands, and that Islamic scholars condemned the attempt
to collect “jizya” taxes.
“I never imagined that I would one day be subjected to what
they call the provisions of Islamic sharia in this manner, which is more like
imprisonment, suppression of personal freedoms, and prohibition of the
expression of religious beliefs,” Semaan al-Mallouhi, a retired Christian
resident of Raqqa, told Al Shorfa.
The almost three-year old civil war in Syria has not only
killed more than 100,000 people, it has displaced 400,000 Syrian Christians.
The initial protests against Assad’s regime quickly devolved into a mix of
groups fighting for power, from the secularists to extreme jihadists like ISIL.
The BBC reported in February that infighting between rival anti-Assad groups
claimed more than 3,000 lives in just two months. Syrian peace talks failed in
January.
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