This is another book which I've just started reading.
Rupert Shortt, the book's author, is religion editor of the Times Literary Supplement and author of
Rowan's Rule: The Biography of the Archbishop, about Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury between 2002 and 2012.
In
Christianophobia: A Faith Under Attack Rupert Shortt travels around the world to show how Christians are persecuted in many countries. The places he visits include Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Indonesia, Egypt, Nigeria and the Holy Land.
Rupert Shortt
Christianity is the most under attacked religion in the world, with over 200 million Christians - more than any other religion - being persecuted and attacked every year just for practising their faith.
Here are some examples: On October 29, 2005, three Indonesian schoolgirls were beheaded as they walked to school - targeted because they were Christians. And while we are free to deepen our spiritual lives, Christians in Nigeria are murdered while attending Mass; Christians throughout the Middle East are hunted down, killed, persecuted and discriminated against.
Like them, many other church members around the world face violence or discrimination for their faith. Why is this religious persecution of Christians so widely ignored?
Rupert Shortt reveals that Christians are oppressed in significantly greater numbers than members of any other faith. The extent of official collusion is also exposed. Even governments that have promised to protect religious minorities routinely break their pledges, with life-shattering consequences.
Unlike many Muslims, young Christians don't easily become radicalized but tend to resist non-violently or keep a low profile. This has enabled politicians and the media to play down a problem of huge dimensions.
Shortt identifies several reasons for the upsurge of hatred and violence against Christians - from Islamic fundamentalism to the over- identification of Christianity with Western political or economic interests. These are complex questions worthy of a big book which Shortt has given us. His painstakingly researched account should act as a much needed wake-up call.