Indonesia has a relatively large Catholic minority population (something like 9% of the population) and has many mosques and churches side-by-side.
Iran also affords legal protection and representation of Jews and Christians as being ‘People of the Book’. Iran has also some Jewish and Christian politicians and senior government members.
Azerbaijan also has a significant population of both Jews and Christians, and its move towards secularism ensures that anti-Semitic and anti-Christian attacks rarely happen. There are Orthodox, Catholic, Coptic and other Christian churches in this country.
Egypt has a long history of peaceful Coptic Christianity which largely existed without problem until recently.
Lebanon also has a largely peaceful existence between Muslims and Christians/Jewish people. Politically power is equal between the Islamic and Christian population and Christians hold major power including in the Army.
Syria has also a significant Syriac Christian Church, and given that there is no religious restriction in this country, Christianity has continued to survive peacefully there, present events not withstanding. Possibly the one restrition is that the President of Syria must be a Muslim as per the Syrian constitution.
In Syria in particular, there are Christian/Catholic schools, and Christian Syrians are given the day off to attend church, even though Sunday is a working day in Syrian culture.
Thanks for your response and charitable patience. Threads like this get heated when they take on tones of “Of course you’re wrong and I’m right” and you’ve done a good job of sticking up for your convictions without belligerency. But I do have some quibbles.
Indonesia is hardly a safe place to be a christian. I had Indonesian friends in college including some converts to christianity from Islam. They were VERY concerned about having to go back after college, including two who faced the very real possibility of being killed by their own family members if they found out about the conversion to christianity. Add in the atrocious treatment of the christian East Timorese by their largely muslim neighbors in recent years, I’m not sure how you place Indonesia on the list of places of harmony between christians and muslims. Maybe grading on a curve compared to Saudi Arabia it’s good, but it’s hardly Milwaukee, is it?
Iran, you have to be kidding. They are in the paper all the time for imprisoning and threatening to execute people ‘caught’ preaching christianity.
Azerbaijan I know nothing about and will look into, thanks.
Egypt was dominated by secular dictators for decades who used their power to suppress all threats against them. Religious groups were ALL considered potetial threats, so they were marginalized as a matter of government policy. Now that the dictators are gone, aren’t we seeing the true character of the people there? Seems like an extermination in progress to me, not an example of how divergent beliefs can live side by side in peace.
Lebanon is one of the most war torn places on earth! There seems to be peace only insofar as each side has their armed groups staking out turf and people have learned where they can safely go and where they can’t. But maybe I’m too far removed to understand.
Syria has been dominated by fairly secular rulers for a long time. It remains to be seen how christians will be treated once the ‘Arab Spring’ throws off that secular leaning authority. I hopy you’re right, but based on the Egypt experience, I worry you aren’t.
I hope the Azerbaijan example pans out because if the others are the pinnacle of Islamic peace and tolerance, I’m pretty scared of it.
Too much of my inside view of Islamic life comes from outside sources. I enjoyed the novel Kite Runner about life in 80’s Afghanistan by someone who lived it, but most of my other reading is by outsiders. Would you care to recommend some reading that you believe would give me a more accurate picture of what life is like in an Islamic society and how that society actually treats non-muslims?
Thanks.