Synod on the Middle East

In describing the living conditions of Christians in Muslim countries in the Middle East, the bishops used understandably prudent words. With a few exceptions. One of the most unvarnished was the representative in Jordan for the patriarchate of the Iraqi Chaldeans. He said that there is “a deliberate campaign to drive out the Christians. There are Satanic plans by extremist fundamentalist groups against Christians not only in Iraq, but in all the Middle East.” The Iranian Thomas Meram, archbishop of Urmya of the Chaldeans, did not hesitate to quote the psalm of David: “For you we are massacred every day.” And he continued: “Every day Christians hear it said, from the loudspeakers, from the television, from the newspapers, that they are infidels, and for this reason they are treated as second-class citizens.”

The Arab countries of the Gulf “have a great need for manual labor,” [surely not because Arabs consider it beneath their dignity to labour? ] explained the Syro-Malabar Indian bishop Bosco Puthur, from whose region 430,000 people have departed. But what awaits these emigrants is very bitter, if measured according to religious and civil liberties. The archbishop of Addis Ababa, Berhaneyesus Demerew Souraphiel, said that the thousands of women who leave Ethiopia for the Middle East each year, to work as maids, in order to obtain entry visas “change their Christian names to Muslim names, and dress as Muslims, being indirectly forced to renounce their roots,” and in any case go to meet a life of “exploitation and abuse.”

A third block of proposals concerned “the need to recover the missionary aspect of the Church.” A new and courageous proposal in predominantly Muslim countries, on the part of Churches that for historical reasons and motives of survival have largely closed in on themselves. Coptic Egyptian bishop Youhannes Zakaria of Luxor said that in spite of the difficulties and the dangers, “our Church must not be afraid or ashamed, it must not hesitate to obey the mandate of Lord, who asks it to continue preaching the Gospel.” And the Chaldean Iranian archbishop of Tehran, Ramzi Garmou, delved even deeper into this need. After saying that “a new missionary impulse” is vital “to knock over the ethnic and nationalist barriers that threaten to asphyxiate and make sterile the Churches of the East,” he recalled “the fundamental importance of monastic life for the renewal and reawakening of our Churches.” And he continued: “This form of life that was born in the East, was at the origin of an extraordinary missionary expansion and an admirable witness of our churches during the first centuries. History teaches us that the bishops were chosen among the monks, that is to say men of prayer and with a deep spiritual life, having vast experience in the ‘things of God.’

Sandro Magister on the special Synod on the Middle East