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Muslim
Misery in the Middle East
The
Middle East is the world's most volatile region. Its inhabitants
experience some of the worst oppression in the world today.
In the last 45 years, the Middle East has spent well over
half a trillion US dollars in purchasing armaments. At least
12 million people have been killed or maimed in over a dozen
Mideast wars. One out of every three barrels of oil sold
by the Mideast has gone to pay for weapons.
In 1939 a Syrian Scholar Shakib Arslan wrote a book entitled:
Why did the Muslims become backwards while others
progressed? It is a valid question that could still
be asked today. The Middle East was once the cradle of Civilisation.
It is centrally located for trading purposes and has year-round
sunny skies for the fascinating tourist destinations. Its
economic prosperity should be skyrocketing. Instead, most
of the Mideast languishes in pre-industrialised backwardness.
The
Mideast includes 200 million Arabs and the non Arab Turkey
and Iran. Over 92 percent of the total population of the
Mideast are Muslims. Over a quarter of work age Arabs are
jobless and a far higher percentage cannot read or write.
Every year millions of villagers migrate to the shanty towns,
slums and even graveyards of Casablanca, Algiers, Cairo,
Tehran and other sprawling urban conglomerations.
Tuberculosis,
typhoid and dysentery are common causes of adult deaths.
The infant mortality rate is appalling. Violent bread riots
have erupted in Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, Jordan and Iran
most were dispersed with live ammunition, killing
thousands.
In Algeria, Muslim extremists murder an average of a thousand
people a week. Schools are bombed, villages napalmed and
forests destroyed. Not surprisingly, millions have emigrated
to Western Europe.

Since
1964 all missionary work in Southern Sudan and the Nuba
Mountains has been illegal. Here the Director of Frontline
Fellowship delivers 4 tonnes of Bibles, agricultural
tools, seed and educational materials to beleaguered
Christians in the Nuba Mountains. |
The
ancient Mideast supplied much of the world's food. Today
it has become a net food importer. In Algeria less than
half of college graduates find work and when they do,
it's usually with the government. One in four Iranians
are illiterate and jobless. With an almost complete
absence of social mobility, middle classes in the Middle
East are so small that there is a huge gap between the
thin upper crust of wealthy rulers and the vast impoverished
masses under them.
Three
major world religions trace their origins to the Middle
East: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The emotional
involvement of each of these three religions in the
region has contributed to the instability of the Mideast.
The 50 year confrontation between Israel and surrounding
Arab nations has received most of the media coverage.
However, it is the ongoing conflict between the two
main branches of Islam, the Sunni and the Shia,
which actually is the source of most of the conflicts.
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The contest between these rival forms of Islam, each vying
for power and predominance has stimulated violent factions
and intense intolerance of dissent.
Since
1948 the Arab world has suffered 62 successful revolutions
and at least 73 unsuccessful revolutions. Only one of the
21 Arab states Lebanon could, at one stage,
be considered a true democracy. Virtually all the others
had one party systems or dictatorships. In the Arab world,
revolutions have been the most common means of attaining
power and assassinations have been the most prevalent means
of political expression. Since 1948, 36 Heads of State were
murdered. In addition, more than 100 other major political
assassinations have been recorded.
As
far as diplomatic relations between Arab states go
there have been over 30 inter-Arab wars and civil wars since
1948. In the Yemen Civil war, Egypt used poison gas against
Yemeni tribesmen and Iraq has used chemical warfare against
Kurdish civilians.
The
disunity of the Arab world and these political upheavals
have unsettled Muslims and the harsh extremism of Islamic
fundamentalism has eroded their confidence in Islam.
The impact of modern technology has also highlighted
the inadequacies of Islam to provide relevant answers
for everyday life.
Rather
than build their wealth through hard work and ingenuity,
mideastern oil princes tend to have had the good fortune
to have had it discovered under their feet. Even their
(foreign) engineers and technicians have had to be brought
in to extract, refine and market the oil. In Saudi Arabia,
over 60 percent of its skilled labourers are foreigners.
The
financial return on every third oil barrel has been
spent on weapons of war. The Gulf War alone cost Arab
states an estimated $620 Billion. Iran spends 14 percent
of its total budget on military weapons, yet only 4
percent on education. In Libya, while vast stockpiles
of military hardware are rotting in the desert heat,
Muammar Gaddafi decided to spend $35 billion on an artificial
river which would evaporate and dry up before
it could bring much benefit to anyone.
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Peter
offers a Gospel booklet to a Muslim in a market place
in central Sudan. On some occasions our missionaries
have been caught up in riots while evangelising |
These
examples provide some insights as to the nature of Islam.
It is an aggressive religion, based upon hatred and it results
in continuous conflict and death. Military power is preferred
over educational foundations. Its costs are crippling, its
promises are extravagant, yet it fails to satisfy the deep
spiritual hunger and thirst of the human soul.
The
birthplace of the early Church is now the most desperately
needy mission field in the world!
Yet,
in the midst of this inhospitable environment, some tenacious
Christian communities survive. Millions of Christians in
Egypt, Sudan and Lebanon have endured centuries of persecution.
Smaller groups of Christians (less than a thousand in each
country) have maintained a muted but steadfast witness in
Algeria, Bahrain, Morocco, Oman, Tunisia, Turkey and Yemen.
Those
Arab lands which are effectively closed to the Gospel and
are without a single known indigenous evangelical church
includes: Mauritania, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait
and UAE. In each of these lands, however, there are groups
of expatriate believers and secret converts.
The
Christian communities in the Mideast are all under increasing
pressure. There are financial and tax inducements to convert
to Islam, job discrimination and often violent persecution.
They desperately lack Christian literature (particularly
Bibles) and leadership training. Yet they are succeeding
in bringing Muslims to Christ especially in Sudan!
Christians
worldwide need to rally behind our beleaguered brethren
in the Middle East and help provide them with the resources,
encouragement and prayer needed to win back these lands
for Christ.
The
desert tribes will bow before Him . . . All Kings will bow
down to Him and all nations will serve Him . . . All nations
will be blessed through Him . . . May the whole earth be
filled with His glory. Psalm 72:9-19
Dr.
Peter Hammond
Related Resources:-
Terrorism
and Persecution (video)
Sudan,
the Hidden Holocaust (video)
Faith under
Fire in Sudan (book)
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