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A
crusade after all?
Plans of some Christians to evangelize as they offer aid pose dilemma
for Iraqi reconstruction.
from the April 17, 2003 edition
By Jane Lampman | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
When President Bush called his war on terrorism a "crusade," he backtracked
quickly in the face of intense reaction at home and abroad. Now many people
are worried that, in the case of Iraq, that inopportune choice of words
may turn out to hold more than a modicum of truth.
As Christian relief agencies prepare to enter Iraq, some have announced
their intent to combine aid with evangelization. They include groups whose
leaders have proclaimed harshly negative views of Islam. They are also
friends of the president. The White House has shrugged its shoulders,
saying it can't tell private groups what to do, though legal experts disagree.
Yet to many Muslims and Christians alike, proselytizing at this highly
volatile moment in the newly liberated country, with Muslims worldwide
questioning US motives, could only spur outrage and undermine US policy
in the region as well as in Iraq.
"Coming in the wake of a military conquest of an Arab country, and of
openly hostile statements by [the Rev. Franklin] Graham and others, it's
going to backfire in the worst way for US plans to be seen as a liberator,"
says Seyyed Hossein Nasr, professor of Islamic studies at George Washington
University.
The distress over these plans reflects the increasing contention that
surrounds proselytizing around the globe, as the world shrinks and faiths
rub elbows and jockey for adherents. Islam and Christianity both make
universal claims, and believers have the obligation to spread the message.
Converts represent some 30 percent of US Muslims, for example. And within
Islam, sects such as the Wahhabis have pressed their particular strain
by sponsoring imams, schools, and teaching materials in many nations.
Evangelical Christians mounted a global missionary effort in 2000 to reach
Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists in targeted regions, including the Middle
East.
While religious rights have been set out in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, issues of proper and improper proselytism have not been
resolved. And neither Islamic states nor evangelical Christians fully
accept the international role.
Iraq is particularly volatile, because it has just emerged from a dictatorship
and is under military occupation. And those planning to proselytize are
known in the region: the former leader of the Southern Baptist Convention
has called the prophet Muhammad a "demon-possessed pedophile," and Mr.
Graham, head of Samaritan's Purse, has termed Islam "an evil religion."
Their remarks flew across the Muslim world with such effect that a group
of Baptist missionaries working in 10 predominantly Muslim countries sent
a letter home calling for restraint and saying such comments "heighten
animosity toward Christians," affecting their work and personal safety.
Graham's close ties to the administration - he gave the prayer at Mr.
Bush's inauguration and is invited to give the Good Friday prayer at the
Pentagon - give Muslims the impression, some say, that evangelization
efforts are part of US plans to shape Iraqi society in a Western image.
History's long reach
Such efforts reawaken colonialist images of missionaries following British
and French troops into the Middle East in the 19th and 20th centuries.
And that, critics add, plays directly into the hands of Osama bin Laden,
whose missives have predicted a Christian crusade.
Aggressive proselytizing has created a tension between rights - the religious-freedom
right to proselytize on the one hand, and a liberty-of-conscience right
to be free from intrusion on the other, says John Witte, head of the law
and religion program at Emory University Law School in Atlanta. This tension
is heightened when a territory is newly open and vulnerable because of
past oppression. With the collapse of communism, for example, Western
religious groups rushed into Russia to provide aid and to proselytize,
and eventually met with a backlash from indigenous spiritual and political
leaders.
In recent years, evangelicals have targeted as their priority a swath
of the world dubbed "the 10/40 window" (North Africa, the Middle East,
and Asia between 10 degrees and 40 degrees north latitude). Restrictions
in Muslim countries on proselytizing vary from Pakistan, where visas are
given to missionaries, to Saudi Arabia, where no activity is allowed,
says J. Dudley Woodberry, professor of Islam at Fuller Theological Seminary
in Pasadena, Calif., who has spent years in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Mr. Woodberry has experienced two very different responses in the region.
"Opposition has intensified as the Israel-Palestine situation has not
been resolved and the Iraq war has been building," he says. "But there's
also greater receptivity to the gospel as a result of people's disillusionment
with various attempts to institute Islamic law."
Christians have been present in the Middle East since the first century,
living harmoniously with Muslims for long periods. Some claim the problems
are with a more assertive Western Christianity that uses its wealth in
manipulative ways.
"There are very sincere missionaries whom Muslims like," says Dr. Nasr.
"But what makes them angry is that US proselytizing is combined with worldly
advantages: Poor people are wooed with medicine for their children, syringes
for their cows, and then are expected to attend services."
There are also charges of deception. Last June, Mother Jones magazine
detailed missionary training at a school in South Carolina that prepared
workers to go into countries where evangelism is illegal, win people's
trust and then evangelize. A teacher tells, for example, of setting up
a quiltmaking business to employ and then proselytize Muslims.
Yet missionary agencies provide schools, hospitals, and disaster relief
that would otherwise not be available. The challenge, critics say, lies
in the ethics of proselytization - deciding how it is done and when.
What might be the implications of Western evangelization in Iraq? Russia's
"soul wars" provide some clues, says Dr. Witte, who headed a three-year
study of clashes between indigenous and foreign missionizing faiths in
several regions of the world. "Iraq is another episode in an ongoing problem
of Western religious groups seeing a new field for a marketplace of religious
ideas, and the local groups not being ready to receive them," he adds.
'Spiritual bribery'
In Russia, 10 years of ambitious Western evangelizing brought many benefits
in charitable facilities and conversions from atheism, he says. But it
also introduced "forms of spiritual bribery" and a Western-style notion
of religion as easily changeable. This conflicts with Russian Orthodox
and Russian Muslim traditions, "where one is born and grows in a religion
as part of one's experience in blood, soil, people, and connection," he
says. It has bred great resentment among Russians, who feel the West,
"having won the cold war, is now engaging in a form of religious pillaging."
"That view prevails amply in Russia, and I can see it perhaps prevailing
in Iraq if [evangelism] develops," Witte says. Russia has reacted with
new legislation that curtails many religious rights in favor of state-sanctioned
groups.
The situation could be compounded in Iraq, he suggests, because the country
is under military law, and internal religious and political differences
between Sunni and Shiite Muslims need to be worked out. "Time has to be
given for that kind of exercise independent of a phalanx of Christian
groups providing additional points of conflict," he says. "This is the
last place where Christians should be rushing in."
Woodberry, too, is cautious. "Although Christians are called to witness
in both word and deed, timing is very important," he says. "Now there
is great mistrust of Americans and Christians." Whatever is done, he adds,
should be in cooperation with both Iraqi Christians and Arab Christian
organizations.
Some say the White House should simply restrain the president's friends
to demonstrate that US forces are not in Iraq to open the door for evangelism.
Witte says there's a legal basis for doing so: "The notion that these
groups have an unencumbered right to march in and evangelize is simply
not so in law - in a military law context, severe restrictions are permissible."
Yet it could likely be done by persuasion. During the first Gulf war,
Franklin Graham sent thousands of Arabic-language New Testaments to US
troops in Saudi Arabia to pass along to local people. This violated Saudi
law and an agreement between the two governments that there would be no
proselytizing. When Gen. Norman Swarzkopf had a chaplain call Graham to
complain, Graham said he was under higher orders. He later told Newsday,
however, that had he been explicitly asked, he would have desisted.
A greater concern of some people is that the administration may in fact
support the effort, given the president's beliefs and the import of conservative
Christians as a political constituency.
Bush has after all moved ahead with his domestic faith-based initiative,
although Congress has not passed the authorizing legislation. Meanwhile,
the former deputy director of the White House office for faith-based programs
has a new job: building nongovernmental institutions in Iraq.
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