While European and American involvement
in the Middle East created new tensions, it also resulted in the
establishment of schools and hospitals that served both Christians and
Muslims, as well as a recent influx of Jewish immigrants to the region.
In 1866, the Syrian Protestant College was founded; it is known today as
the American University of Beirut. Nine years later, French Jesuits
established St. Joseph University in Beirut. Not only have both
institutions survived Lebanon’s tumultuous recent past, but their
continued presence in the face of ongoing sectarian violence remains a
beacon of hope. These institutions were followed, in 1919, with the
establishment of the American University in Cairo, an outreach of the
United Presbyterian Church of North America.
In 1932, the year in which the League of Nations granted independence
to Iraq, four French Jesuits arrived in Baghdad to found Baghdad
College, which was open to both Christian and Muslim young men. This was
followed in 1955 by the creation of Al-Hikmah (“Wisdom”) University.
The fact that these institutions refrained from proselytizing was an
irritant to their American Catholic donors. Cardinal Richard Cushing of
Boston complained that the Jesuit mission in Baghdad was “the biggest
waste of money and manpower in the history of the Church,” for not
producing a single convert from Islam. Al-Hikmah University was closed
and the Jesuits were evicted from Iraq in 1969 when the Ba’ath Party
seized control of the government. Today, Jesuit Refugee Service brings
much needed humanitarian aid to the people of Iraq. Jesuits also serve
heroically in apostolates in Jordan.
The growing influence of European and American Christians in the
region fueled resentments that led to violence. Angered by what they saw
as the rising economic and political fortunes of their Christian
neighbors, Muslims retaliated. Between 1850 and 1860, Christian homes
and businesses were attacked in Iraq, Syria, and Palestine. By far the
most widespread and devastating violence took place in Lebanon. What
began in May 1858 as a dispute between Maronite Christian sharecroppers
and their Maronite landlords erupted into full-scale sectarian violence
between Maronite peasants and Druze landlords, who belonged to an
offshoot of Isma’ili Islam. More than twenty thousand Christians were
massacred before the conflict spilled into neighboring Syria. In
Damascus alone, between ten and fifteen thousand Christians were killed,
while European consulates were torched. The slaughter spread to Aleppo,
a major Christian economic and cultural hub, and eventually to Nablus
and Gaza in Palestine. The carnage continued until August 16, 1860, when
an expeditionary force of six thousand French troops intervened on
behalf of their Maronite Christian clients in Lebanon.
French intervention on behalf of the Maronites was not exceptional,
but the arrival of the French fleet signaled a departure from previous
efforts. Rather than docking in the coastal cities of Batroun or Jounieh
in the Maronite heartland, the flotilla continued south along the coast
to the international port of Beirut. The French were sending a message
to anyone who would threaten the Maronites of Lebanon. What began as a
struggle between competing religious minorities had acquired a political
component.
Violence against Christian minorities would continue into the
twentieth century. In 1915, a joint force of Ottoman and Kurdish
infantry murdered 1.5 million Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian Christians.
Although the Turkish government continues to frame the killings as
accidents of war, the systematic slaughter has been deemed a genocide.
The Coptic Orthodox Christians of Egypt have been subject to the most
recent—and arguably the most horrific—persecution. Coptic Christians
account for a tenth of Egypt’s population, followed by smaller
Protestant and Roman Catholic minorities. Between 2011 and 2017, the
Muslim Brotherhood began attacking churches, convents, and monasteries.
In 2015, twenty-one Coptic Christians were beheaded by ISIS on a beach
in Libya. Two years later, suicide bombers entered two churches during
Palm Sunday Mass and detonated explosives. Three hundred sixty-three
Coptic faithful were killed; more than five hundred sustained serious
injuries. In a historic show of unity, Pope Francis and Bartholomew,
Ecumenical Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church, travelled to Egypt
where they joined Pope Tawadros II of the Coptic Orthodox Church to
solemnly commemorate the Coptic martyrs. In 2023, Francis, in
consultation with Pope Tawadros II, added the names of the twenty-one
Coptic martyrs to the Roman Martyrology.
The significance of Lebanon for the future of Christianity in the
Middle East cannot be overestimated. As the most Catholic country in the
region, Lebanon has been the recipient of unflagging attention and
support from the Vatican. In 1964, Pope Paul VI made a brief stop there
on his way to the Eucharistic Congress in Mumbai, India. John Paul II
visited in 1997, followed by Benedict XVI in 2012. In 2021, Pope Francis
hosted a meeting of Lebanon’s Catholic and Orthodox religious leaders
at the Vatican. He had to cancel a planned visit in 2022 because of poor
health. Today, Lebanon is gripped by political dysfunction and economic
collapse that make such a trip unimaginable anytime soon.
Tragically, when it comes to Lebanon, there is blood on everyone’s
hands. Between September 16 and 18, 1982, Lebanese Christian militias,
in collusion with IDF charged with security, entered the Palestinian
refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila in western Beirut and
indiscriminately opened fire. At the request of Christian militia
leaders, Israeli troops took up positions at the exits of the area to
prevent those living in the camps from escaping the carnage. Over the
course of two days, 3,500 Palestinian and Lebanese Shia civilians were
mowed down. An independent commission chaired by Seán MacBride,
assistant to the secretary general of the United Nations, determined
that the massacre constituted a genocide.
Today, Lebanon risks becoming a failed state. The country has been
without a president since October 2022. Political infighting has
paralyzed the parliament. Gross mismanagement and corruption in the
banking system have plunged more than 80 percent of the population into
poverty and fueled the exodus of Christians from the country. As if all
this were not enough, mounting tensions between Israel and Hezbollah,
which controls Lebanon’s southern border, threaten to erupt into
full-scale war.
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