A cry for help | Torture of Christians must be dealt with \ JOSH MOENNING is a political science and advertising major and a Daily Nebraskan colum nist. Adam Yauch and the Beastie Boys won’t be holding benefit con certs for this any time soon. Rage Against the Machine probably won’t be raging against it in the near future. Yauch and the other Beastie Boys have done a good deal in helping to expose the persecution of Buddhists by the Chinese government through Free Tibet concerts and the like. But there is another kind of religious per secution that is occurring in larger numbers and often in a more horrify ing context throughout many parts of the world. In spite of the lack of publicity and outcry on the part of celebrities and rock stars, the issue of Christian persecution around the world is one that must be addressed and dealt with. TL . 1__ n ntav y p^id^tuuuii ui Christians in some countries is not often heard of in the United States. Nonetheless, the evidence of persis tent persecution is quite strong. A resolution in Congress that passed in September 1996 stated that more Christians have become martyrs in the 20th century than in the past 19 combined. Indeed, there have been numer ous reports of widespread torture, killing and imprisonment of Christians in dozens of countries. The countries that have produced the worst and most disturbing acts of persecution are China, Sudan, Pakistan, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Vietnam, Cuba and Nigeria. Just a few examples of this perse cution are enough to make one won der why this issue has not been addressed more frequently in our country. One example: Amnesty International reports cases in China of Christian women hung by their thumbs from wires and beaten with heavy rods, denied food and water and shocked with electric probes. Jeff Jacoby, a syndicated colum nist with the Boston Globe, has offered other examples in past columns. He has written: “... for mil lions of Christians in other lands, fear is ever present. Never before - never before - have so many believ ers in Jesus been persecuted for their faith.” jauuuy irns given uie example oi Christians inhabiting the Nuba Mountains in Sudan. He reports Nuba women are systematically raped by Arab soldiers in order to produce non-Nuba offspring. Jacoby goes on to write that there have been reports, including those by Catholic bishops, of crucifixions of Christians I carried out by the Sudanese army. Sudan’s Islamic government also has engaged in a policy of forcible conversion. Some Christians in Sudan have resisted conversion and, consequently, have been denied food and medicine. Christian children are reported to be stolen from their homes and sold into slavery by the thousands. In Pakistan, the government recently has passed a blasphemy law that forbids any speaking or acting out against the prophet Mohammed. The punishment for violators is death. A 12-year-old Christian child was sentenced to death under this law and was freed only after increas ft ing international pressure. The child ■ is now in hiding because of the boun H ty Muslim terrorists have placed on his head. But perhaps the most frequent and bloody cases of Christian perse cution exist in China. In the nation that serves as home to the second largest number of Christians in the world, there are continual reports of beatings and murders of those who worship in the underground house church movement. Nina Shea, director of the Puebla Program on Religious Freedom, has stated in various speeches that “thou sands of Christians are in gulags there, imprisoned because they dared to read the Bible, preach or sing hymns in public.” She has said Chinese leaders see Christians as their biggest threat to political stability. Indeed, the draft of the 1996 House resolution noted Chinese leaders have called under ground evangelical and Catholic con gregations “a principal threat to political stability.” Nevertheless, the U.S. govern ment, well aware of the countless human rights abuses in China, has done nothing. In fact, its response has been to renew Most Favored Nation trade status to China, where the United States buys eight times more from the Chinese than the Chinese buy from the United States. This policy, despite arguments of constructive engagement, only seems to condone the actions of the intoler ant Chinese government. In the past, the United States held sane- | tions against the communist 1 states of the former Soviet M Union and eastern Ay European countries, Cuba and South Africa, so why do /Wm we now insist upon free trade with commu nist China? Isn’t the oppression of freedom displayed by the Chinese gov ernment and the heavy persecution of Christians, as well as Buddhists, enough to bring some kind of offi cial condemnation from the United States? Apparently not. President Clinton, who promised in his 1992 campaign to end MFN sta tus with China, has gone back on his word since then (surprise) and enthusiasti cally renewed it. The government isn’t the only institution show ing indifference to world wide Christian persecu tion. American church- *■ es, the institutions be upset the abus es fellow _ _ XWk believers, has remained, for the most part, deafly silent. The issue was first brought to ! national attention not by church lead ers, but by Michael Horowitz, a member of the Hudson Institute, and A.M. Rosenthal, a columnist for the New York Times. Both men are L Jewish, and both question the silence of most Christians on the subject. Rosenthal writes in a New York Times column: “If I were a Christian I would complain that Christian lead ers, political, religious and business, around the world have failed in then obligations to fight oppression of their co-religionists.” ni. .'a*_ .1_. • 11 c^imauon ciiuiciica, especially Protestant ones, frequently are silent regarding issues they consider to be too “political.” Their general tacitur nity on issues ranging from abortion to racism has lead to common disre gard of one of the main responsibili ties of the church: protection of the weak and vulnerable. It is written in the fourth chapter of Ecclesiastes, verse 1: “Again I looked and saw all the oppression that was taking place under the sun. I saw the tears of the oppressed, and they have no comforter. Power was on the side of their oppressors.” This power of the oppressors written about so long ago remains to be very much alive today. And it will simply continue to l as so men >do 7 pm Centennial Room, City Union NO CHARGED Before you sail away on your spring break... stop by our port for your ^ Dental Check-Up! University Health Center Dental Office JHflP 472-7495 15th and *U" Streets A Blue Cross, Blue Shield PPO provider for UNL students, faculty and staff. Cci^iA&htLal Cjay Mtfi\ Ditcuui&H CfrOuft We talk about coming out, family, relationships, intimacy, religious concerns, heterosexism, self-acceptance, safer sex ... we talk about what's Important to you! Group Discussion and Social Activities on Wednesdays, 6:00-7:30 p.m. ‘Confidential ‘Supportive ‘Informal For more information, call Dr. Diaz-Ferdomo at 472-7450 (ldaz-perdoino@ccmaii.unl.edu), or Rev. Phi Owen at 4760355 (ophiipOunomoha.edu) UNL & Non-UNL students welcome! RJomens .Services P.C. Abortion Services Provided During All Legal Stages Awake or Asleep . Outpatient Care — Full-Time OB/GYN Physicans Birth Control Saturday Appointments Available Total OB/GYN Health Care IN OMAHA: 554-0110 • TOLL-FREE: 1-800-922-8331 201 S. 46th St, Omaha, NE 68132 • http://gynpages.com/omaha Grand Opening Special! 27th & Superior, Behind Carlos O’ Kellys 'foie Men’s and Pants, Slacks, ' Shirts Women’s * Sports Coats ■ Laundered Hot itrycleaned . Biygleaned . and Press $2.90 $1.45 $1.25 Expires 3/31/98 I Expires 3/31/98 I Expires 3/31/98 ^^resen^ougon^rhe^lropgi^oftNotvalikytfitl^injMJther^offei^^^ P iq M i ii i | Py SPjSs-;' M Sp i is si li gg.g.. : . , _ M -iL ’ v