From 'Orthodoxy and the World' www.pravmir.com
     
     Christians and the Egyptian Revolution: a positive contribution and future inquiries
     By Minas Monir
     Feb 17, 2011, 12:03
     
     

Minas Monir is a UK - based journalist, researcher and writer. 
The author of several published studies on Theology, he is also an 
expert on Egyptian affairs and political theology. He is currently a 
Desk Editor at The Majalla, a magazine specializing in Middle East 
affairs and is also an MA candidate at Cambridge Theological Federation.
For "Orthodoxy and the World".
“In that day there will be an altar to the LORD in the heart of 
Egypt, and a monument to the LORD at its border.” Isaiah 19:19. 
It seems
 this prophecy that Isaiah wrote around 500 years BC while Jews were 
captured in Babylon, had a resonance in Egypt on february 6th when 
Christians celebrated services in the heart of Tahrir square.  In a 
fabulous scene not often witnessed in Egypt, Muslims formed a barrier 
around them to protect Christians as they prayed.  This mirrored the 
gesture of Christians protecting Muslims at prayer in the same square 
during the 18 days of demonstrations. This clearly showed that freedom 
of speech, honorable life, and bread are justifiable demands for every 
Egyptian who lived under such a regime for more than 3 decades 
regardless of their religious or ideological background.

Yet there was some tension between these demands and the people’s 
religious leaders. On the ground, the former Egyptian regime employed 
media and religious institutions to abort this revolution a few weeks 
before it took place. The Patriarch of the Copts, Shenouda III, and 
Ahmed al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of Azhar, appeared on TV frequently to 
show their solidarity with the former regime and its head, Mubarak. 
Instructions for Copts in services not to go out and stay home were made
 by the Holy Synod spokesmen three days before the revolution broke, on 
January 25th.
Consequently, Egyptian Christians had to consider some fundamental 
questions. To some degree they were forced to choose between the need 
for bread and dignity on the one hand, and religious fulfillment in 
obeying the patriarch on the other hand. It was a precious opportunity 
to push people to question everything around them and, eventually, stand
 for their liberty. Thousands of Christian youth appeared one day before
 the revolution on Facebook declaring that they are part of the Egyptian
 fabric and acting positively doesn’t violate their faith at all, as 
some of the videos recorded on the internet stated. Because of this 
decision, there in Tahrir square Egyptians left behind them sectarianism
 and divisions. A culture of coexistence and harmony was growing in the 
middle of the crisis.

However, before getting more optimistic regarding the current 
situation after overthrowing Mubarak’s regime, there are geostrategic 
and ideological challenges that will face Egyptians, and particularly 
Christians. Egypt lies in the heart of the Middle East where radical 
Islamists are waging their perpetual battle with Israel and the West. 
Strategically speaking, a great challenge will face Egyptians in 
blocking the waves of jihadists who started to use the Rafah border 
crossing between Gaza and Egypt and illegal tunnels dug by Hamas.
There is also the heritage of Salafists who have invaded Egyptian media 
since the 1980’s when the Wahhabi ideology came back to Egypt via 
Egyptians who had worked in Saudi Arabia. News sources reported that 
five radical Wahhabi channels that were previously blocked by Nilesat 
Egyptian satellite, are now back on air and their broadcasts started by 
praising the “Islamic State” Egypt.   There is also the extent of the 
influence of Egypt’s most established Islamist group, the Muslim 
Brotherhood, to consider.

Despite the deeply rooted Islamist movements in the Egyptian social 
culture, particularly after 1970, Egyptians have the potential to build a
 civil state that can protect the full citizenship rights of the 
different elements of its fabric, including Christians. This can be 
achieved through a vital role played by pro-civil state streams, and 
Christians should be one of them.
What prevents Christians from their full practice of political rights
 is the heavy heritage of negativity towards political life in Egypt. 
This comes directly from the consecutive regimes that governed Egypt and
 ignored strong and efficient Christian figures to contribute to 
political life since the early 1950’s. The Wafd party which always 
preserved the equal contribution of Christians and Jews along with 
Muslims in the governments of pre-1952 revolution Egypt was dissolved 
and brought back in the 70’s with a completely new identity that cannot 
function in holding different Egyptians of various religious backgrounds
 together.
Observers note the sociological and cultural shift in Egypt after former
 president Sadat, who succeeded Gamal Abdul Nasser in 1970, began to 
employ religion intensively to erase the challenging legacy of Nasserism
 and present an alternative type of heroism for the new president. As 
Nasser was the hero of 1952 revolution and founder of socialist Egypt, 
Sadat became the hero of 1973 Yom Kippur war who launched what was 
called the “state of science and faith” whereby he called himself the 
“faithful president.” 

Sadat released Islamists who were arrested in the time of his 
predecessor and gave freedom to the Muslim Brotherhood to revive their 
activities. He also made constitutional amendments that designated 
Islamic Law as the main “source of legislation” in Egypt. This played 
the biggest role in deviating Copts from political life. Sadat used the 
Church with its high impact on Christian millions in Egypt and 
relationships with the West for political interests. Sources close to 
Sadat suggest that he chose his preferred candidate for the next 
patriarch to be installed as head of the Coptic Church. This was 
Shenouda III.
Shenouda’s post after the assassination of Sadat was to represent Copts 
before president. This limited Copts to the Patriarch’s own political 
view instead of encouraging them to personally engage with politics and 
seek their rights. In 2005 the first direct-poll presidential election 
witnessed the climax of the intertwined relationship between the Church 
and state. Patriarch Shenouda III and the Holy Synod published an 
advertisement in the official Patriarchal bulletin declaring that the 
Church supports Mubarak for president. 
A few years later, there were controversies regarding the possible 
inheritance of the presidential office by Gamal, Mubarak’s son. 
Strikingly, Bishop Bishoy and Patriarch Shenouda III on TV and in 
newspapers backed Gamal to run for president in the next presidential 
election. In the current revolution, Shenouda III spoke to Egyptian TV 
live in February 7th to declare his full solidarity with Mubarak and 
explained his rejection of the youth revolution. 
This demonstrated the disconnect between the patriarch and the Copts 
who found their aspiration better represented by this popular 
revolution. The absence of Copts from the social and political life and 
their retreat into the church led to the failure to change the 
situation. However, the amazing awareness of the justifiable demands for
 change led them to break through the classic fences built by church and
 state in the last 40 years. And today we witnessed political secular 
thinkers and young men who managed to achieve a balance in the religious
 profile of the revolution.
The challenge today for Christians in 
Egypt is to make use of the open atmosphere to act positively in order 
to achieve a series of legislative and constitutional reformations in 
order to guard the right of citizenship of every Egyptian regardless of 
his/her ideological or religious background. Citizenship should be the 
main challenge for the next stage in the political life of Egypt. But it
 won’t see any progress without a faithful contribution in forming a 
better and modern civil state that can express its diversity within the 
articles of a new constitution guarded by a sincere  love for Egypt and 
all Egyptians.
Minas-monir@live.com 
   
   
   
     
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