Kids coming back from shopping at a southern California mall with a
grim look on their faces .. “Daddy, they handed us these booklets and said that we
worship the moon god”. During the initial
launch of MuslimBridges one and half years ago, we were bombarded with this
kind of “trash”. Sadly, some of our
friends in Africa just reported to us the very same story by American
missionaries who target the young and uneducated, the sick, and the poor, using
tricks and financial aid to convert them to Christianity, largely in Kenya
– Obama’s African heritage, Tanzania, and many of the devastated areas in Sudan,
Indonesia - during the time of Tsunami aid relief, and recently in Afghanistan and Iraq while under occupation.
We reported on this before and released this video nearly 6 months ago, but here is a story that brings occupation with evangelism to
a new low …
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FALLUJAH, Iraq - At the western entrance to the Iraqi city of Fallujah
Tuesday, Muamar Anad handed his residence badge to the U.S. Marines guarding
the city. They checked to be sure that he was a city resident, and when they
were done, Anad said, a Marine slipped a coin out of his pocket and put it in
his hand.
Out of fear, he accepted it, Anad said. When he was inside the city, the
college student said, he looked at one side of the coin. "Where will you
spend eternity?" it asked.
He flipped it over, and on the other side it read, "For God so loved
the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him
shall not perish, but have eternal life. John 3:16."
"They are trying
to convert us to Christianity," said Anad, a Sunni Muslim like most
residents of this city in Anbar province. At home, he told his story, and his
relatives echoed their disapproval: They'd been given the coins, too, he said.
Fallujah, the scene of a bloody U.S.
offensive against Sunni insurgents in 2004, has calmed and grown less hostile
to American troops since residents turned against al Qaida in Iraq, which had
tried to force its brand of Islamist extremism on the population.
Now residents of the city are abuzz that some Americans whom they consider
occupiers are also acting as Christian missionaries. Residents said some
Marines at the western entrance to their city have been passing out the coins
for two days in what they call a "humiliating" attempt to convert them
to Christianity.
In the markets, people crowded around men with the coins, passing them to
each other and asking in surprise, "Have you seen this?"
The head of the Sunni endowment in Fallujah, the organization that oversees
Sunni places of worship and other religious establishments, demanded that the
Marines stop.
"We say to the occupiers to stop this," said Sheikh Mohammed Amin
Abdel Hadi. "This can cause strife between the Iraqis and especially
between Muslim and Christians . ... Please stop these things and leave our
homes because we are Muslims and we live in our homes in peace with other
religions."
A spokesman said the U.S.
military is investigating.
"Multi-National Force-Iraq is investigating a report that U.S. military
personnel in Fallujah handed-out material that is religious and evangelical in
nature," the spokesman, Rear Adm. Patrick Driscoll, said in a statement
e-mailed to McClatchy. "Local commanders are investigating since the
military prohibits proselytizing any religion, faith or practices."
Multi-National Force-Iraq is the formal name for coalition forces in Iraq.
In interviews, residents of Fallujah repeated two words -
"humiliation" and "weakness".
"Because we are weak this is happening," said a shop owner who
gave his name as Abu Abdullah. "Passing Christianity this way is
disrespectful."
"The occupier is repeatedly trespassing on God and his religion,"
said Omar Delli, 23. "Now the occupier is planting seeds of strife between
the Muslims and Christians. We demand the government in Fallujah have a new
demonstration to let the occupier know that these things are humiliating Islam
and the Quran."
The controversy over the coins that Iraqis said some Marines are passing out
comes on the heels of a tempest triggered by a U.S. sniper who used the Quran,
Islam's holy book, for target practice. The sniper was pulled out of Iraq after
Iraqi police on May 11 found a Quran with 14 bullet holes and graffiti on the
pages.
In Islam, the holy book is never to touch the floor, let alone be defaced.
Iraqi leaders condemned the actions, U.S. generals apologized and
President Bush offered a personal apology to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al
Maliki.
In Fallujah, Mohammed Jaber saw one of the coins and said he thought of the
bullets lodged in the Quran, the torture of Iraqi men at the Abu Ghraib prison
in 2004 and the rape of a 14-year-old girl and her murder and that of her
family in Mahmoudiya.
"Now we have this missionary way by these coins," he said.
"We feel the Muslims are weak and we hope that we will reach a point when
we are strong to let them know what is wrong and what is right. "
By Br. Jamal Naji and Sr. Leila Fadel
This article is posted in the Features - Weekly Bridge Publication: Features, Reflections, Stories should not be told, Film in a spoon, Book in a Spoon, Letters to Editor, YouTube Basket
Stories should not be told
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