National American Coptic Assembly
NACA
Washington DC
Mr. Morris Sadek-ESQ President
morrissadek@yahoo.com
The Message of Egyptian Coptic Christians in 2007
Over the past fourteen Hundred years Coptic Christian in Egypt endured all forms
of discrimination exerted by Muslim extremists. Since the Arab envision to Egypt
in 650 AD, Copts have been always terrorized by Islamists fundamentals. Copts
have compelled by Muslim leaders to relinquish their native Coptic language and
adopt the Arabic one. They have been called by Al Azhar (the most prominent
Islamic institution In Egypt) as infidels and rouges elements because of
religion. They also have been subjected to all kind of hate crimes including,
the abduction of young Coptic girls, the killing of Coptic Women and children
and the destruction of their places of worship.
Over the past forty years, the government of Egypt has endorsed and fostered an
environment of Islamic radicalism to recruit more Muslim fundamentals. This
phenomenon played a key role to force Islam on Coptic girls and enhance the
isolation of the Coptic community in Egypt. As a result of citing in the
constitution that Islam is the main source of legislation in Egypt, Coptic
Christians has lost the freedom of religion including the right to build
churches and the right to worship free respect.
During the 80s and under the Mubark administration, Islamic militants instigated
several violent episodes against the Copts and western tourists, attacked,
sacked and burned churches and Coptic businesses.
During the recent package of constitutional reform that took place in 2006,
Mubark did not insert any constitutional provisions that enhance the rights of
Christians in Egypt. On the contrary, he kept the provision that emphasizing the
role of Islam as the main source of legislation.
Enclosed are some of the incidents that demonstrate the violence endured by
Copts over the past 25 years:
July 1980: St. Mary church in Cairo has been burned by Islamic Militant
June, 1981: 80 Coptic Christian were slaughtered in there houses, in the
vicinity of El zauia El hamra, Cairo, Egypt
July, 1981 St. Mary Church was bombed by Muslim radicals, in the vicinity of
Shoubra, Cairo, Egypt. Seven people were killed in the attack.
March 1990: Rumors that Copts are using Muslim girls in a white slave trade
prompts two weeks of violence in Abu Quraqa (250 kms s. of Cairo). Churches,
shops, houses and cars are firebombed and two Christians are kidnapped but there
are no deaths or injuries. (Note: There are constant complaints of harassment by
Islamic militants during this period. This harassment includes, as noted
earlier, the spreading of false rumors, extortion and violence up to and
including murder, often with the tacit approval or even participation of local
officials. Such incidents, short of murder, will not be noted here unless they
deserve special attention.)
May 1990: Father Bishoy Hanna was killed by Muslim extremists along with his
wife and five more people at his church in the province of Alexandria, Egypt.
June 1990: A Christian liquor store owner is attacked by Islamic militants with
swords and chains.
1990: In Minshiat at Nassar (310 km s. of Cairo) workers repairing a Church are
attacked by Islamic Militants.
September 20-22 1991: Militant Muslims commit a wave of violence against
Christian churches and shops in Imbabah, a suburb of Cairo. Police refuse to
take reports of many incidents and discourage future reports. Some Copts who
attempt to make reports are arrested. Also, after being harassed by a Muslim
customer, a Christian butcher shoots and wounds him.
March 11 1992: 3 people are killed and more injured in a gun battle between
Christians and Muslims in the village of Sanbau (350 kms. of Cairo).
April 29 1992: A church is stoned in Imbabah.
May 4 1992: 11 Copts and two Muslims attempting to defend them are killed by
gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, in Sanabu. The authorities dismiss
this as being part of a local "blood feud."
October 27 1992: Four gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, kill a Christian
jeweler and his assistant.
November 1 1992: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, wound 10 Copts in an
attack on a bus returning to Dayrut (310 kms of Cairo) from Cairo.
December 20 1992: A Coptic weekly, Al-Watan, urges the government to stop what
is called a new invasion of the schools by Islamic extremists. Headmasters are
discriminating against Copts and forcing female students to wear veils. "Fanatic
teachers" are also discriminating against their Coptic students. The Article
notes that the government is opposed to this but is not doing enough to stop it.
January 4 1993: In two separate assaults, gunmen, believed to be Islamic
militants, kill one Copt and wound another.
A Coptic church in Dayrut is firebombed.
February 23 1993: In a Reuters article, Copts complain of discrimination
including: job discrimination; discrimination by government both in the awarding
of scholarships and upper government jobs; an informal Muslim boycott of Copt
stores; discrimination and segregation by teachers and school officials; and the
removal of all reference to Copts and Christianity from many school curriculums.
This has resulted in the emigration of as much as a half million in the past ten
years. Although the government protects the Copts from physical threats, the
Copts complain that most government action is due to the threats to the state
and foreign tourists rather than any concern for the Copts.
March 1993: A report issued by the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights
accuses the government of abdicating its responsibility to protect Christians
from Islamic extremists. It notes that attacks occur in the sight and sometimes
with the help of security and local government authorities. It further accuses
the government of doing little about such incidents until it became clear that
they were also a threat to "the political system and the lives of those in
power."
March 1 1993: Egypt bans from mosques "scholars preach militant thoughts" due to
attacks upon tourists and Christians. (Note: the government has been engaging in
increasing levels of repression against Islamic militants throughout this
period. This ranges from arrests to gun battles involving hundreds of police,
government troops and Islamic militants. For the most part, the details of these
actions are not documented here. Also, as noted earlier, many believe that this
government action is due to the threat the militants pose to the state and
foreign tourists rather than any wish to protect the Copts.)
April 20 1993: A Copt school teacher is shot and wounded in Dayrut by gunmen,
believed to be Islamic militants. Five Islamic militants are arrested in Aswan
for planning to violently disrupt a non-Muslim festival which coincides with the
Coptic Easter.
April 24 1993: Assailants, believed to be Islamic militants, attack with knives
and wound two Coptic high school students.
May 19 1993: In a roundup of Islamic militants, the government seizes numerous
books, cassettes and videotapes calling for violence and discrimination against
the Copts.
July 22 1993: A Copt physician is shot by gunmen, believed to be Islamic
militants, in Manfalout (350 km south of Cairo).
August 8 1993: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, in Dayrut wound a Copt
in his brother's pharmacy.
August 24 1993: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, kill a Christian
student in Anboub (300 kms of Cairo).
September 21 1993: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, kill a Copt
schoolteacher in Dayrut.
October 20 1993: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, open fire in a
Christian owned pharmacy killing one and injuring two.
January 27 1994: A senior Copt police official is wounded in an attack by gunmen
believed to be Islamic militants. His driver and bodyguard are killed.
April 25 1994: Egyptians are upset at an upcoming convention on minorities in
the Middle East. They say that the Copts are not a minority and are an integral
part of Egyptian society. They attribute the conference to foreign interference.
March 4 1994: An Islamic militant, believed to be guilty of two shooting attacks
on Coptic churches in Mir (300 kms of Cairo) in the previous week, is arrested.
March 11 1994: Gunmen, believed to be Islamic militants, kill 5 including two
monks outside a church in Qussiyah (300 kms of Cairo).
June 26 1994: A Coptic weekly accuses the government of working to increase the
wave of bigotry, antipathy and hatred against Copts.
July 17 1994: Pope Shenouda III of the Egyptian Coptic Church in an outspoken
interview complains of discrimination against Copts in Egypt. He says that Copts
play little part in public life and face problems building and repairing
churches. He complains that Copts have trouble obtaining voting cards from
police, thus preventing many of them from voting. He also refers to Copts being
killed by Islamic militants in southern Egypt and Copt houses being destroyed
without compensation from the state.
September 1 1994: Islamic militants shoot dead 2 policemen guarding a Coptic
church in southern Egypt. Note: In general the government actively opposes
attacks by Islamic militants on Copts and prosecutes the perpetrators of these
attacks to the full extent of the law. This is probably more a result the fact
that the Islamic militants oppose the government than a desire to protect the
Copts.
November 11 1994: Islamic militants kill 2 men in southern Egypt including a
Christian government official.
November 22 1994: Suspected Islamic militants kill a Christian security guard in
the southern Egyptian province of Minya.
February 25 1995: Suspected Islamic militants shoot dead a Christian civilian
and wound another in a southern Egyptian village.
March 11 1995: Suspected Islamic militants shoot dead a Copt village elder in
southern Egypt.
June 4 1995: Islamic militants seeking to avenge a dead relative kill 9 people,
including 3 Copts, in 4 separate attacks in southern Egypt.
June 8 1995: Suspected Islamic militants shoot dead a wealthy Copt pharmacist
for making a donation of property to his local parish.
August 13 1995: 6 are killed after a fight breaks out over a Copt girl who
converted to Islam in a northern Egyptian province.
August 29-30 1995: In 2 separate incidents, suspected Islamic militants shoot
dead 4 Copts in southern Egypt.
September 2 1995: Suspected Islamic militants shoot dead a Copt who works for a
local council in southern Egypt.
Update 26 March 1997
7 November 1995: According to the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, within
the past 10 months, Islamic extremists have assassinated 74 police and 24 Copts
in southern Egypt.
4 December 1995: Gunmen in a car shot dead three Coptic Christian men and
wounded two others in a hit and run attack near the town of Abu Qurqas, In a
separate attack in the same area and at the same time, gunmen shot and killed
policeman Mustafa Khalil Mohamed.
9 December 1995: Forty people were killed and between 400 -700 injured during
Egypt=s general elections. Thousands of Christians could not find their names on
the lists and constituencies where Copts ran as candidates, their rivals
distributed leaflets saying Moslems should not vote for non-Moslems.
12 December 1995: President Mubarak appointed 10 MPs and the Speaker using his
constitutional privilege to enlarge the assembly with women and members of the
Coptic community.
12 January 1996: A Christian farmer was killed by unidentified gunmen in the
village of Abu Obeid in Minya Province.
26 February 1996: Eight Copts and three others were killed in Assuit Province in
Southern Egypt. At least 47 people have died in the past two moths in Assuit and
Menia Provinces. Most of these were policemen and suspected police informers
(non-Copts).
In a separate incident mobs set fire to 41 houses in a predominantly-Christian
village in the governorate of Sharqiya after a row over a reported Church
expansion. Four were injured and 50 arrested in the incident.
7 August 1996: The body of a Coptic student was found in the vicinity of Abu
Qurqas.
26 August 1996: Four, including three Copts, were killed in the southern village
of Nazlet Roman near the town of Abu Qurqas in Minya province. One Copt was also
wounded in the attack. The five were members of the newly-formed patrols
encouraged by the government to help police hunt militants using nearby fields
and mountains as hideouts. A total of 23 people, not all of them Copts, have
been killed in attacks during August.
4 September 1996: The American Coptic Union urged the U.S. Congress to
investigate the killings of Christians in Egypt and to postpone aid to Egypt
until basic rights and security were secured for all citizens.
24 January 1997: A new political party, al Wasat, was launched. Its members are
Copts and former members of the Muslim Brotherhood and its goal is to heal the
breaches between the two religions. It is not viewed as strong or very likely to
have much influence over Egyptian politics.
February 1997: The State Department=s Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
for 1996 reported that during 1996 at least 22 Copts were killed in upper Egypt
where 30-40% of the population are Christians. There were also reports of acts
of violence against Coptic Churches and Copt-owned businesses.
Government discriminatory practices against the Coptic community included:
suspected statistical under representation of the size of the Christian
population; anti-Christian discrimination in education; production of some
Islamic television programs with anti-Christian themes; job discrimination in
the police, armed forces and other agencies.
12 February 1997: Ten Coptic youth were killed in an attack on a Church in
southern Egypt. The youth were attending a prayer service at the Church. Police
believed the killings were orchestrated by the group Gama'a al-Islamiya, the
largest of the militant Islamic organizations in the country. The Gama'a has
attacked the Coptic community only sporadically, concentrating attacks on police
and police informers regardless of religion, and they denied involvement in this
attack.
Moslem and Christian community leaders have unanimously condemned the attacks.
It was the worst attack on the Coptic community in almost a year.
Police also suspect the same gunmen in an attack which killed three Coptic
Christians. They were found dead near Abu Qurqas in Minya Province.
15 March 1997: Gunmen killed 13, including nine Copts, in a predominantly
Christian hamlet 300 miles south of Cairo. Though attacks on the Coptic
community have increased in recent months, the overall level of violence has
sharply decreased from a peak of 415 deaths in 1995 to 187 during 1996, and
Islamic militants are clearly on the defensive.
Update June 1999
March 22 1997 A total of 21 Copts were killed by Islamic extremists in February
and there was a growing fear that there could be a migration of Copts from
Southern Egypt because of the growing fear of attack. (AP)
April 10 1997 Copts were killed in two attacks. A total of 13 Copts were killed
by Islamic militants who released a statement clarifying that the Copts had not
been targeted specifically. (Facts on File)
May 3 1997 The Interior Minister said that one of the faults of the Moslem
brotherhood was that they want to segregate the Copts. (BBC)
October 14 1997 Two Copts and nine police were killed by militants in the South.
(New York Times).
November 1998, four Policemen tortured seventy Copts because of their religious
affiliation, El Kosheh, Shouag Egypt.
December 2000, 20 Copts burned to death by Muslims in El Kosheh, Shouag Egypt
January 2006, Muslim Youth Attack Copts in a Village near Luxor, Egypt
April 2006, Muslims stormed four churches in Alexandria and kill one person.
We, as Coptic Christian urge all the governmental and nongovernmental
institution worldwide to pay more attention to the daily suffering of Christians
in Egypt.
03/01/07