The army's violent suppression of a Christian protest in Cairo
reflects the growing threat to Egypt's Coptic minority
By William Dalrymple
Coptic Christian protests such as this demonstration in March 2011 have faced a brutal response from Islamists and the Egyptian army. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images
Yesterday's
violence in Cairo marks an ominous development in the story of Egypt's
unfinished revolution. It is very bad news for several reasons. First, it
demonstrates more starkly than ever the dubious role being played by the army.
Eyewitness reports are clear that it was firing by the army, followed by the
repeated crushing of unarmed demonstrators by an armoured car, that turned a
peaceful demonstration for justice into a violent altercation that left 24
people dead. Twitter and Facebook networks are alive with conspiracy theorists
speculating whether this is the army looking for excuses to delay the
elections, or just clumsy crowd control by heavy-handed officers, but it marks
a more direct face-off between army and demonstrators than we have seen for
several months.
More
specifically, the violence is very bad news for Egypt's beleaguered Coptic
minority – the ancient Christian community that makes up between 10 and 15% of
a population of 82 million, and is by far the largest Christian community in
the region. The Copts stand to lose more than any other group in Egypt's
current drift following the fall of an unpopular autocracy, and now face an
uncertain future with a wide spectrum of possible outcomes, from a liberal
democracy to an Islamic republic, or most likely of all, a continuation of army
rule with different window-dressing.
That
sectarian violence was likely to follow the end of Mubarak's regime was
something that the Copts have been fearing for decades. Three years ago I
attended some workshops organised by the Coptic newspaper editor Youssef
Sidhom, intended to prepare his people for the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood,
something many Copts believed was inevitable. Sidhom, editor of Watani, Egypt's
leading Coptic newspaper, believed that dialogue between the two faiths was a
pressing necessity and that the Copts would have to learn to live with the
Islamists and reach an accommodation with a political grouping they have long
feared.: "After the success of the Muslim Brothers in the elections we can
no longer ignore them," he told me in 2008. "We need to enter into
dialogue, to clarify their policies towards us, and end mutual mistrust."
The
Copts have long suffered petty discrimination. But the revival of the Islamists
over the last few years made the Copts' position more uneasy, and their
prospects more uncertain, than they had been for centuries. Throughout the
1990s the Copts, especially in upper Egypt, were targeted by the Islamist
guerrillas of the Gama'a Islamiyya. Since then, the Gama'a have renounced violence,
and the Islamists concentrated on reaching power through the ballot box,
something the Mubarak regime's passive policy towards Salafism encouraged. The
Copts reacted by retreating ever deeper into a sectarian laager, further
polarising the country. A generation ago, most Egyptians chose names for their
children which could be either Christian or Muslim, such as Karim or Adel. Now
they tend to give their children names such Mohammed or Girgis (George) that
immediately define their sectarian affiliation. Likewise, the near-universal
adoption of the hijab by Muslim women has left Coptic women exposed and
sometimes subject to threats and abuse. In the face of growing polarisation and
discrimination, the Copts have tended to form their own schools and social
clubs, keeping their distance from the Muslim majority. This is something the
Coptic clergy – every bit as conservative as their Muslim counterparts – have
often encouraged.
At
the same time, the Copts have seen their political influence slowly diminish:
under Mubarak's last government there was still one Coptic provincial governor
and two Coptic ministers. But in contrast to the situation at the time of
Nasser and Sadat, no senior policemen are Copts, nor judges, nor university
vice chancellors, nor military generals.
Yet
if the Copts faced a certain amount of institutional discrimination, Mubarak
was himself largely sympathetic to the community, and he made some significant
gestures such making Christmas a national holiday and freeing up the rules on
building new churches. Certainly, the Copts were well aware that things could
get much worse for them.
Initially,
the Tahrir Square demonstrations were a model of sectarian amity, with Muslim
and Christian demonstrators protecting each other from the violence of the
police and the regime's thugs. But in the growing uncertainty and violence that
followed the fall of Mubarak, a spate of anti-Coptic riots of growing violence
broke out in both Cairo and Alexandria which the army did very little to stop.
In March a small clash in a Cairo suburb ended with the army sending in a
Salafist sheikh to bring about reconciliation. In May, churches were attacked
by Salafist mobs in the Cairo suburb of Imbaba, after rumours spread that a
Muslim woman had been kidnapped by Copts, and Salafists called on Twitter for
their supporters to mass "and free a Muslim sister". The army looked
on as the churches burned, encouraging radicals to take the law into their own
hands elsewhere. Yesterday the army-controlled media went a step further,
encouraging patriotic citizens to defend the beleaguered army against what it
described as "a Christian mob".
The
dilemma and fears of the Copts mirror that of Christian minorities across the
Middle East. Just as the elderly Coptic Pope Shenoudah supported Mubarak right
up until the moment of his fall, whatever individual Copts were doing in Tahrir
Square, so the churches in Syria are still publicly supporting the Asad regime,
even if many Christian activists are at the forefront of the opposition.
At
the back of their minds, the Christian hierarchies are aware of the devastation
of the Iraqi Christian community after the fall of Saddam, when over half the
Christian population – some 400,000 people – were forced to leave the country
in a wave of Islamist pogroms. The Arab spring, it is widely feared, could yet
mark the onset of the final Christian winter for the forgotten faithful of the
Middle East. Only elections and the advent of sympathetic and stable democratic
governments across the region is likely to allay such fears. Sadly, at the
moment this outcome seems less likely with every passing day.
-This commentary was published in The Guardian on 10/10/2011- William Dalrymple's most recent book is Nine Lives: in Search of
the Sacred in Modern India (Bloomsbury)
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