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Christianity in Saudi Arabia

Accurate religious demographics are difficult to obtain in Saudi Arabia,[1] but it is believed that there are approximately 1.8 million Christians in Saudi Arabia.[2] Christians in Saudi Arabia are reported to face widespread discrimination, including both foreign-born Christians and native Christians.[3]

Early history

 
Saint Arethas, martyr and leader of the Najran Christian community in the early 6th century.

Christians had formed churches in Arabia prior to the time of Muhammad in the 7th century. Ancient Arab traders had traveled to Jerusalem for trade purposes and heard the gospel from Saint Peter (Acts 2:11) and Paul the Apostle spent several years in Arabia (Galatians 1:17), later further strengthened by the ministry of Saint Thomas who went to Arabia, Mesopotamia, Persia and later to the Indian subcontinent.

One of the earliest church buildings ever, known as Jubail Church, is located in Saudi Arabia; it was built around the 4th century.

Some parts of modern Saudi Arabia (such as Najran) were predominantly Christian until the 7th to 10th century, when most Christians were expelled or converted to Islam or left the region via the Sea route to Asia, with which merchant trade already existed, others migrated north to Jordan and Syria and settled into those new places. Some Arab Christians who remained lived as crypto-Christians, or secret Christians. Some Arabian tribes, such as Banu Taghlib and Banu Tamim, followed Christianity.

Ancient Arabian Christianity has largely vanished from the region, due to conversion and migration.

Persecution

On June 15, 1858, 21 Christian residents of Jeddah, then an Ottoman town of 5,000 predominantly Muslim inhabitants, were massacred, including the French and British consuls, by "some hundreds of Hadramites, inhabitants of Southern Arabia". Twenty-four others, mostly Greeks and Levantines, some "under British protection" plus the daughter of the French consul and the French interpreter, both badly wounded, escaped and took refuge, some by swimming to it, aboard the ship HMS Cyclops.[4][5][6][7]

International Christian Concern (ICC) protested what it reported as the 2001 detention of 11 Christians in Saudi Arabia, for practicing their religion in their homes.[8] In June 2004, at least 46 Christians were arrested in what the ICC described as a "pogrom-like" action by Saudi police. The arrests took place shortly after the media reported that a Quran had been desecrated in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.[9]

Community today

There are more than 1 million Roman Catholics in Saudi Arabia. Most of them are expatriate Filipinos who work there, but are not Saudi Arabian citizens.[1][10] As of 2008, the percentage of Christians of all denominations among the roughly 1.2 million Filipinos in Saudi Arabia was about 90%.[11] There are also Christians from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, Australia, Italy, Greece, South Korea, Ireland, the United Kingdom, India, China, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and as well a number of Christians from sub-Saharan countries who are working in the Saudi Kingdom.[11]

Saudi Arabia allows Christians to enter the country as foreign workers for work or tourism, but does not allow them to practice their faith openly. Saudi Arabia states that they are permitted to privately practice their religion, but this is not codified and raids on private practice by the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice do occur, though these have decreased since their powers were curtailed in 2016.[12] Bringing a Bible and other types of religious texts are allowed into the country as long as it is for personal use.[13]

Although textbooks in Saudi have moderated their extremist content since 2001, they still contain some content classified as "egregious" such as characterizing Christians and other non-Muslims as liars and are considered to promote religious hatred and intolerance towards non-Muslims,[3] while the NGO Human Rights Watch has also reported rising hate speech against Christians by Saudi leaders.[14]

The Saudi Arabian Mutaween (Arabic: مطوعين), or Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (i.e., the religious police) prohibits the practice of any religion other than Islam.[11] Conversion of a Muslim to another religion is considered apostasy,[11] a crime punishable by death if the accused does not recant. There have been no confirmed reports of executions for either crime in modern times.[11] The Government does not permit non-Muslim clergy to enter the country for the purpose of conducting religious services.[11] In spite of this, a 2015 study estimates that there are some 60,000 Christians with a Muslim background living in the country, though that does not mean that all of those are citizens of the country.[15]

Christians and other non-Muslims are prohibited from entering the city of Mecca and the central district of Medina,[16] i.e. in the vicinity inside of King Faisal Road, "1st Ring Road".

There are also Christian communities on expatriate compounds, including Catholic services in the Aramco compound in Dhahran.

Currently there are no official churches in Saudi Arabia. According to the Society of Architectural Heritage Protection Jeddah and the Municipality of Jeddah, a long-abandoned house in Al-Baghdadiyya district has never been an Anglican church, contrary to the "'myth' that had spread on the Internet". However, in 1930 there was a non-Muslim cemetery in Jeddah.[17]

Discovered in 1986, the church ruins at Jubail originally belonged to the Church of the East, a branch of Eastern Christianity in the Middle East.

Recently, the government put a fence around the church to prevent potential tourists from entering. However, the fences have not stopped locals from coming in to vandalise and damage the building.[18][19][20][21][22] In 2018, Saudi Arabia had its first big mass.[23] In 2022, the taboo around Christmas trees lightened, allowing for open sales and decorations.[24]

Demographics

According to Pew Research Center, the percentage of Christians in Saudi Arabia constitute 4.4% of the country’s population,[25] however, the percentage of Saudi Arabian citizens who are Christians is zero de jure,[26] as Saudi Arabia forbids religious conversion from Islam and punishes it by death.[11][27]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . 2009-10-31. Archived from the original on 2009-10-31. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  2. ^ "First Christian mass held in Saudi Arabia | Amr Emam". AW. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  3. ^ a b "Bishop of Truro's Independent Review for the Foreign Secretary of FCO Support for Persecuted Christians". Christian Persecution Review. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  4. ^ The Church of England quarterly review, 1858 p.218-219
  5. ^ John McDowell Leavitt, Nathaniel Smith Richardson, Henry Mason Baum G.B. Bassett, The Church Review, Volume 11, 1859 p.527
  6. ^ The Protestant Episcopal Quarterly Review, and Church Register, Volume 5, H. Dyer, 1858 p.560-561
  7. ^ "Details of the Jeddah Massacre", Taranaki Herald, Volume VII, Issue 331, 4 December 1858, Supplement
  8. ^ Human Rights Watch World Report, 2003. Human Rights Watch. 2003. ISBN 9781564322852. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
  9. ^ Saudi Arabia : friend or foe in the war on terror?: Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary. November 8, 2005. ISBN 9781422323731. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
  10. ^ Giuseppe Caffulli (September 7, 2004). "A catacomb Church? Perhaps, but one that is alive and well . . . and universal". AsiaNews.it. Retrieved 2008-11-21.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g International Religious Freedom Report 2008 - Saudi Arabia
  12. ^ United States Report on International Religious Freedoms (PDF). Washington. April 2018. pp. 82–89.
  13. ^ "Local laws and customs - Saudi Arabia travel advice". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2021-04-10.
  14. ^ ""They Are Not Our Brothers"". Human Rights Watch. 26 September 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  15. ^ Johnstone, Patrick; Miller, Duane Alexander (2015). "Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background: A Global Census". Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 11: 17. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  16. ^ "Israeli man's photos in holy Muslim site cause social media rage". BBC News. 21 November 2017.
  17. ^ Fouzia Khan, "Misconception about old Jeddah edifice cleared", Arab News, 14 October 2012
  18. ^ J.A. Langfeldt, "Recently Discovered Early Christian Monuments in Northeastern Arabia", Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, 5 (1994), 32–60 [1].
  19. ^ Changing Identities in the Arabian Gulf: Archaeology, Religion, and Ethnicity in Context T. Insoll – The Archaeology of Plural and Changing Identities, 2005 – Springer "He mentions how access to the monuments was restricted, and how the church in Jubail supposedly had its impressed crosses obliterated. Besides vandalism, the presence of these Christian remains caused a debate over what exactly they signified."
  20. ^ The Nestorians in the Gulf: Just Passing Through? Recent Discoveries on the Island of Sir Bani Yas, Abu Dhabi Emirate, UAE J Elders – Archaeology of the United Arab Emirates, 2003 "There are sites along the Gulf coast of Saudi Arabia, at Jubail (Langfeldt 1994), and inland at Thaj and also Jebel Berri (Potts 1994). There is at least one. possibly two. church sites on Qatar."
  21. ^ A Pre-Islamic Christian site on Sir Bani Yas G R D King, P Heliyer – Tribulus, 1994 ".. Bani Yas discovery can also be related to the discovery of a church with a fine cross at Failaka, in Kuwait, in 1990 by Vincent Bernard and JF Salles. Their stucco crosses are dated to the Fifth-Sixth Centuries AD. The discovery of two churches and crosses at Al Jubail and Thaj ..."
  22. ^ Crossing the Line L Castoro – 2002 – The lost churches of the Arabian Gulf: recent discoveries on the islands of Sir Bani Yas and Marawah, Abu Dhabi emirate, United Arab Emirates J Elders – Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, 2001 "There are two known sites along the Gulf coast of Saudi Arabia, at Jubail (Langfeldt 1994) and slightly inland at Jebel Berri (Potts 1994). There are unconfirmed but persistent reports of at least one, more probably two church sites on Qatar."
  23. ^ "First Christian mass held in Saudi Arabia | Amr Emam".
  24. ^ Chulov, Martin (2022-12-24). "'You see trees on sale': the easing of Saudi Arabia's Christmas taboo". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  25. ^ "Religious Composition By Country" (PDF). Pew Research Center. 23 March 2018.
  26. ^ Central Intelligence Agency (April 28, 2010). "Saudi Arabia". The World Factbook. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  27. ^ Cookson, Catharine (2003). Encyclopedia of religious freedom. Taylor & Francis. p. 207. ISBN 0-415-94181-4.

christianity, saudi, arabia, accurate, religious, demographics, difficult, obtain, saudi, arabia, believed, that, there, approximately, million, christians, saudi, arabia, christians, saudi, arabia, reported, face, widespread, discrimination, including, both, . Accurate religious demographics are difficult to obtain in Saudi Arabia 1 but it is believed that there are approximately 1 8 million Christians in Saudi Arabia 2 Christians in Saudi Arabia are reported to face widespread discrimination including both foreign born Christians and native Christians 3 Contents 1 Early history 2 Persecution 3 Community today 4 Demographics 5 See also 6 ReferencesEarly history Edit Saint Arethas martyr and leader of the Najran Christian community in the early 6th century Christians had formed churches in Arabia prior to the time of Muhammad in the 7th century Ancient Arab traders had traveled to Jerusalem for trade purposes and heard the gospel from Saint Peter Acts 2 11 and Paul the Apostle spent several years in Arabia Galatians 1 17 later further strengthened by the ministry of Saint Thomas who went to Arabia Mesopotamia Persia and later to the Indian subcontinent One of the earliest church buildings ever known as Jubail Church is located in Saudi Arabia it was built around the 4th century Some parts of modern Saudi Arabia such as Najran were predominantly Christian until the 7th to 10th century when most Christians were expelled or converted to Islam or left the region via the Sea route to Asia with which merchant trade already existed others migrated north to Jordan and Syria and settled into those new places Some Arab Christians who remained lived as crypto Christians or secret Christians Some Arabian tribes such as Banu Taghlib and Banu Tamim followed Christianity Ancient Arabian Christianity has largely vanished from the region due to conversion and migration Persecution EditMain article Jeddah massacre of 1858 On June 15 1858 21 Christian residents of Jeddah then an Ottoman town of 5 000 predominantly Muslim inhabitants were massacred including the French and British consuls by some hundreds of Hadramites inhabitants of Southern Arabia Twenty four others mostly Greeks and Levantines some under British protection plus the daughter of the French consul and the French interpreter both badly wounded escaped and took refuge some by swimming to it aboard the ship HMS Cyclops 4 5 6 7 International Christian Concern ICC protested what it reported as the 2001 detention of 11 Christians in Saudi Arabia for practicing their religion in their homes 8 In June 2004 at least 46 Christians were arrested in what the ICC described as a pogrom like action by Saudi police The arrests took place shortly after the media reported that a Quran had been desecrated in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp 9 Community today EditThere are more than 1 million Roman Catholics in Saudi Arabia Most of them are expatriate Filipinos who work there but are not Saudi Arabian citizens 1 10 As of 2008 update the percentage of Christians of all denominations among the roughly 1 2 million Filipinos in Saudi Arabia was about 90 11 There are also Christians from Canada the United States New Zealand Australia Italy Greece South Korea Ireland the United Kingdom India China Pakistan Sri Lanka Ethiopia Kenya Lebanon Syria Egypt and as well a number of Christians from sub Saharan countries who are working in the Saudi Kingdom 11 Saudi Arabia allows Christians to enter the country as foreign workers for work or tourism but does not allow them to practice their faith openly Saudi Arabia states that they are permitted to privately practice their religion but this is not codified and raids on private practice by the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice do occur though these have decreased since their powers were curtailed in 2016 12 Bringing a Bible and other types of religious texts are allowed into the country as long as it is for personal use 13 Although textbooks in Saudi have moderated their extremist content since 2001 they still contain some content classified as egregious such as characterizing Christians and other non Muslims as liars and are considered to promote religious hatred and intolerance towards non Muslims 3 while the NGO Human Rights Watch has also reported rising hate speech against Christians by Saudi leaders 14 The Saudi Arabian Mutaween Arabic مطوعين or Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice i e the religious police prohibits the practice of any religion other than Islam 11 Conversion of a Muslim to another religion is considered apostasy 11 a crime punishable by death if the accused does not recant There have been no confirmed reports of executions for either crime in modern times 11 The Government does not permit non Muslim clergy to enter the country for the purpose of conducting religious services 11 In spite of this a 2015 study estimates that there are some 60 000 Christians with a Muslim background living in the country though that does not mean that all of those are citizens of the country 15 Christians and other non Muslims are prohibited from entering the city of Mecca and the central district of Medina 16 i e in the vicinity inside of King Faisal Road 1st Ring Road There are also Christian communities on expatriate compounds including Catholic services in the Aramco compound in Dhahran Currently there are no official churches in Saudi Arabia According to the Society of Architectural Heritage Protection Jeddah and the Municipality of Jeddah a long abandoned house in Al Baghdadiyya district has never been an Anglican church contrary to the myth that had spread on the Internet However in 1930 there was a non Muslim cemetery in Jeddah 17 Discovered in 1986 the church ruins at Jubail originally belonged to the Church of the East a branch of Eastern Christianity in the Middle East Recently the government put a fence around the church to prevent potential tourists from entering However the fences have not stopped locals from coming in to vandalise and damage the building 18 19 20 21 22 In 2018 Saudi Arabia had its first big mass 23 In 2022 the taboo around Christmas trees lightened allowing for open sales and decorations 24 Demographics EditAccording to Pew Research Center the percentage of Christians in Saudi Arabia constitute 4 4 of the country s population 25 however the percentage of Saudi Arabian citizens who are Christians is zero de jure 26 as Saudi Arabia forbids religious conversion from Islam and punishes it by death 11 27 See also EditEastern Orthodox Christianity in Saudi Arabia Freedom of religion in Saudi Arabia Human rights in Saudi Arabia Protestantism in Saudi Arabia Roman Catholicism in Saudi ArabiaReferences Edit a b Saudi Arabia 2009 10 31 Archived from the original on 2009 10 31 Retrieved 2021 02 21 First Christian mass held in Saudi Arabia Amr Emam AW Retrieved 2021 02 21 a b Bishop of Truro s Independent Review for the Foreign Secretary of FCO Support for Persecuted Christians Christian Persecution Review Retrieved 6 September 2021 The Church of England quarterly review 1858 p 218 219 John McDowell Leavitt Nathaniel Smith Richardson Henry Mason Baum G B Bassett The Church Review Volume 11 1859 p 527 The Protestant Episcopal Quarterly Review and Church Register Volume 5 H Dyer 1858 p 560 561 Details of the Jeddah Massacre Taranaki Herald Volume VII Issue 331 4 December 1858 Supplement Human Rights Watch World Report 2003 Human Rights Watch 2003 ISBN 9781564322852 Retrieved June 10 2011 Saudi Arabia friend or foe in the war on terror Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary November 8 2005 ISBN 9781422323731 Retrieved August 6 2015 Giuseppe Caffulli September 7 2004 A catacomb Church Perhaps but one that is alive and well and universal AsiaNews it Retrieved 2008 11 21 a b c d e f g International Religious Freedom Report 2008 Saudi Arabia United States Report on International Religious Freedoms PDF Washington April 2018 pp 82 89 Local laws and customs Saudi Arabia travel advice GOV UK Retrieved 2021 04 10 They Are Not Our Brothers Human Rights Watch 26 September 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Johnstone Patrick Miller Duane Alexander 2015 Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background A Global Census Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion 11 17 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Israeli man s photos in holy Muslim site cause social media rage BBC News 21 November 2017 Fouzia Khan Misconception about old Jeddah edifice cleared Arab News 14 October 2012 J A Langfeldt Recently Discovered Early Christian Monuments in Northeastern Arabia Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 5 1994 32 60 1 Changing Identities in the Arabian Gulf Archaeology Religion and Ethnicity in Context T Insoll The Archaeology of Plural and Changing Identities 2005 Springer He mentions how access to the monuments was restricted and how the church in Jubail supposedly had its impressed crosses obliterated Besides vandalism the presence of these Christian remains caused a debate over what exactly they signified The Nestorians in the Gulf Just Passing Through Recent Discoveries on the Island of Sir Bani Yas Abu Dhabi Emirate UAE J Elders Archaeology of the United Arab Emirates 2003 There are sites along the Gulf coast of Saudi Arabia at Jubail Langfeldt 1994 and inland at Thaj and also Jebel Berri Potts 1994 There is at least one possibly two church sites on Qatar A Pre Islamic Christian site on Sir Bani Yas G R D King P Heliyer Tribulus 1994 Bani Yas discovery can also be related to the discovery of a church with a fine cross at Failaka in Kuwait in 1990 by Vincent Bernard and JF Salles Their stucco crosses are dated to the Fifth Sixth Centuries AD The discovery of two churches and crosses at Al Jubail and Thaj Crossing the Line L Castoro 2002 The lost churches of the Arabian Gulf recent discoveries on the islands of Sir Bani Yas and Marawah Abu Dhabi emirate United Arab EmiratesJ Elders Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 2001 There are two known sites along the Gulf coast of Saudi Arabia at Jubail Langfeldt 1994 and slightly inland at Jebel Berri Potts 1994 There are unconfirmed but persistent reports of at least one more probably two church sites on Qatar First Christian mass held in Saudi Arabia Amr Emam Chulov Martin 2022 12 24 You see trees on sale the easing of Saudi Arabia s Christmas taboo The Guardian Retrieved 2022 12 24 Religious Composition By Country PDF Pew Research Center 23 March 2018 Central Intelligence Agency April 28 2010 Saudi Arabia The World Factbook Retrieved 2010 05 22 Cookson Catharine 2003 Encyclopedia of religious freedom Taylor amp Francis p 207 ISBN 0 415 94181 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christianity in Saudi Arabia amp oldid 1131513186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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