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No Demonstrations in Pakistan When Christian Girls Raped

The wave of anti-Christian violence has not stopped in Pakistan. Abuses continue to be perpetrated in the name of the blasphemy law

Just about the time that the demonstrations over the infamous video clip about the prophet Muhammad seem to be dying down, I am reminded of the degradation that Christians suffer in Muslim countries and the hypocrisy of it all.

Pakistani Woman

Pakistani Woman

KNOXVILLE, TN (Catholic Online) - Just about the time that the demonstrations over the infamous video clip about the prophet Muhammad seem to be dying down, I am reminded of the degradation that Christians suffer in Muslim countries and the hypocrisy of it all.

Ever since the attack on our embassy in Benghazi, Libya and the murder of four Americans on September 11, the news has been flooded with pictures of mobs burning American flags and effigies of President Obama throughout the Muslim world in protest of a video, which we are told hurts the feelings of the Muslim people.

Days after the "Love the Prophet Day" demonstrations in Pakistan, where the largest, most violent, week-long demonstrations occurred, I read a headline article in Asia News that says, "The wave of anti-Christian violence has not stopped in Pakistan. Abuses continue to be perpetrated in the name of the blasphemy law and acts of sexual violence are carried out against underage girls from religious minorities. . . ."

Allah Rakhi is 10 years old. She is from a poor Christian family in Yousafabad, Madina Town, Faisalabad in Pakistan. In late August she went to a store to sell some things. It was there she met Muhammad Nazir. He lured the trusting 10 year old to his house under the pretense that he was interested in buying her things, but the money was at his house. When Allah's father found her, she was unconscious on the floor, naked and bleeding. A porno movie was playing on the television.

The vicar general of the Diocese of Faisalabad, Father Khalid Rashid Asi, said, "The lack of justice in Pakistan means that the rich and powerful think that they can commit such acts and get away with it." If a Muslim girl had been raped, he went on to say, "It is likely that all the Christian homes in the area would have been torched."

According to another Asia News article, about 11:00 A.M. on September 20, 16-year-old Shumaila Masih was walking through the streets of Faisalabad when the Christian girl encountered three young Muslim men: Iftikhar Hussain, Shahid Munir and Muhammad Imran. They tried to get her to go with them but she refused, so they forced her. She cried for help as they dragged her through the streets, but no one helped her. Once they got her to Hussain's house, they took turns raping her until her father and cousins found her hours later and rescued her.

Father Bonnie Mendes, the former Executive Secretary of the National Commission for Justice and Peace for the Church in Pakistan, said she has not gotten justice because of her poverty. Echoing similar sentiments, Father Khalid Rashid noted that "religious minorities and marginalized groups are easy targets for wealthy landowners in rural areas." But Shumaila is not just another statistic to him: "I personally know the victim because I was pastor in that area. They are a very poor family, but rich in the Catholic faith. They deserve justice."

These are not isolated instances. The Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child has documented numerous attacks against children in Faisalabad, Pakistan for the first five months of 2012. The breakdown for some of their statistics is as follows: at least 40 sexual assaults, 14 murders, 22 kidnappings, and six forced marriages.

In addition, when a woman is raped in Pakistan, she can be put in jail for "unlawful sex." Furthermore, her release from jail is contingent upon her agreeing to marry her rapist. To further complicate matters, according to sharia law, it is not lawful for a Muslim to marry a Christian. Therefore, if the victimized woman is a Christian, she must not only be willing to marry her rapist, she must also renounce her faith and convert to Islam.

Christian women and children do not live in peace in Pakistan; they live in fear. Their world is truly a "culture of death." When I read about the rapes of 10-year-old Allah Rakhi and 16-year-old Shumaila Masih at a time when Muslims are demonstrating and attacking American embassies because they claim their feelings have been hurt by a video, I see the height of hypocrisy, and it is evil!

As a Catholic, I believe that God created all people. I also believe that God loves us so much that He sent His only Son, Jesus, to die for our sake. Because of this belief, I see all human beings (born and unborn, rich and poor, Muslim and Christian, as well as disabled, dying and comatose) as having incomparable dignity and worth. All persons have a capacity to receive the gift of eternal life and love.

Thus, I do not hold ill will for the Muslim people. But I can not and will not ignore the ...

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1 - 4 of 4 Comments

  1. robert matzinger
    7 months ago

    Pakistan is an Islamic country. As such, those that are not muslim will not be treated as those who are. Degrading Christains is a sport for them as their religion allows it, and there is no outrage from anywhere else in the world, and they know it. As fellow Chrtistains, our best hope for our brothers and sisters there is to pray fervently to God that they will be able leave that country and start life anew in anotherr country that values all human life.

  2. Celia
    7 months ago

    The people of Pakistan are poor & ignorant. They've been well indoctrinated in their islamic faith that they don't know any better & those who do just turn a blind eye because they don't want to get involved & be the next target. Unfortunately there are too many lukewarm Catholics today who just can't be bothered. Another Hotel Rwanda. God Bless & Help these poor Christians & that their cries do not fall on deaf ears.

  3. Dawn in Kansas
    7 months ago

    The government of Pakistan needs to take control of the situation thru educating the public and by taking to trial those who are persecuting Christians. Unfortunately, even Pakistan's leaders are threatened. Is this not a country with nuclear weapons? If Pakistan could make such a lethal decision in using nuclear weapons then should they not also be able to have strong moral order and a judiciary that protects it's citizens. How can anyone benefit from the violence put upon poor innocent children? I pray for you Pakistan. You are a jewel that God loves.

  4. Mathew Thankachen O.Praem
    7 months ago

    The “double standard” of Pakistan and for that case any Islamic countries are very clear. Whenever, Koran or Prophet Muhammad is defamed, their sentiments and impulsive behavior reaches to the sky. On the other, if any minority member or their Religion is harassed or raped, they are least bothered to react. Of course, we cannot blame the political leaders fully as everyone loves his life. They too like any other political leaders think of their safety and “majority vote banks”. If a political leader stand for truth, he will be annihilated from the face of the earth is the lesson we learn from the history of Pakistan. Yet I appreciate the present Prime Minister for his courage who ordered to arrest an “ ustad” from a mosque for his alleged involvement in trapping a ‘mentally retarded Christian girl’ in burning Koran pages and arresting a group of Muslim youth recently for destroying a Hindu Temple in the context of protest against the ‘ Innocence of Muslims”. It is high time that the system of “theocratic state" and " law of Blasphemy" be abolished from the Islamic Nations of the world. The Law of Blasphemy has equal footing in the other Semitic Religions of Jews and Christians who share with Islam the common patrimony. The Jews and Christians have gone another extreme of misuse of liberty in relation to God and Religion is a truth of fact today. Yet, there is an evolution of movement towards “discovery of God" in the depth of man that in turn is affecting the relation to Religion and culture in a constructive way. Even if such law be maintained, it should be applicable only to Islam as other Religious minority is not bound to live the tenet of Islam. If they expect the same from the minority, it should be equally applicable to the Muslims who live in other countries too. It is unfair that while the minority is persecuted by the most Islamic countries, they demand full liberty even to build mosque in the ‘Ground Zero’ of the World Trade Centre. Let the Law be the same for the Christians and the Muslims- either we live as Democratic or Theocratic.
    Mathew Thankachen O.Praem.


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