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Wikipedia

Religious persecution

Religious persecution is the systematic mistreatment of an individual or a group of individuals as a response to their religious beliefs or affiliations or their lack thereof. The tendency of societies or groups within societies to alienate or repress different subcultures is a recurrent theme in human history. Moreover, because a person's religion often determines their sense of morality, worldview, self-image, attitudes towards others, and overall personal identity to a significant extent, religious differences can be significant cultural, personal, and social factors.

Religious persecution may be triggered by religious bigotry (i.e. when members of a dominant group denigrate religions other than their own) or it may be triggered by the state when it views a particular religious group as a threat to its interests or security. At a societal level, the dehumanization of a particular religious group may readily lead to violence or other forms of persecution. Religious persecution may be the result of societal and/or governmental regulation. Government regulation refer to the laws imposed by the government to regulate a religion, and societal regulation is the discrimination of citizens towards one or more religions.[1] Indeed, in many countries, religious persecution has resulted in so much violence that it is considered a human rights problem.

Definition

David T. Smith, in Religious Persecution and Political Order in the United States, defines religious persecution as "violence or discrimination against members of a religious minority because of their religious affiliation," referring to "actions that are intended to deprive individuals of their political rights and to force minorities to assimilate, leave, or live as second-class citizens.[2] In the aspect of a state's policy, it may be defined as violations of freedom of thought, conscience and belief which are spread in accordance with a systematic and active state policy which encourages actions such as harassment, intimidation and the imposition of punishments in order to infringe or threaten the targeted minority's right to life, integrity or liberty.[3] The distinction between religious persecution and religious intolerance lies in the fact that in most cases, the latter is motivated by the sentiment of the population, which may be tolerated or encouraged by the state.[3] The denial of people's civil rights on the basis of their religion is most often described as religious discrimination, rather than religious persecution.

Examples of persecution include the confiscation or destruction of property, incitement of hatred, arrests, imprisonment, beatings, torture, murder, and executions. Religious persecution can be considered the opposite of freedom of religion.

Bateman has differentiated different degrees of persecution. "It must be personally costly... It must be unjust and undeserved... it must be a direct result of one's faith."[4]

Sociological view

From a sociological perspective, the identity formation of strong social groups such as those generated by nationalism, ethnicity, or religion, is a causal aspect of practices of persecution. Hans G. Kippenberg [de] says it is these communities, who can be a majority or a minority, that generate violence.[5]: 8, 19, 24  Since the development of identity involves 'what we are not' as much as 'what we are', there are grounds for the fear that tolerance of 'what we are not' can contribute to the erosion of identity.[6] Brian J. Grim and Roger Finke say it is this perception of plurality as dangerous that leads to persecution.[7]: 2  Both the state, and any dominant religion, share the concern that to "leave religion unchecked and without adequate controls will result in the uprising of religions that are dangerous to both state and citizenry," and this concern gives both the dominant religion and the state motives for restricting religious activity.[7]: 2, 6  Grim and Finke say it is specifically this religious regulation that leads to religious persecution.[8] R.I. Moore says that persecution during the Middle Ages "provides a striking illustration of the classic deviance theory, [which is based on identity formation], as it was propounded by the father of sociology, Émile Durkheim".[9]: 100  Persecution is also, often, part of a larger conflict involving emerging states as well as established states in the process of redefining their national identity.[7]: xii, xiii 

James L.Gibson[10] adds that the greater the attitudes of loyalty and solidarity to the group identity, and the more the benefits to belonging there are perceived to be, the more likely a social identity will become intolerant of challenges.[11]: 93 [12]: 64  Combining a strong social identity with the state, increases the benefits, therefore it is likely persecution from that social group will increase.[7]: 8  Legal restriction from the state relies on social cooperation, so the state in its turn must protect the social group which supports it, increasing the likelihood of persecution from the state as well.[7]: 9  Grim and Finke say their studies indicate that the higher the degree of religious freedom, the lower the degree of violent religious persecution.[7]: 3  "When religious freedoms are denied through the regulation of religious profession or practice, violent religious persecution and conflict increase."[7]: 6 

Perez Zagorin writes that, "According to some philosophers, tolerance is a moral virtue; if this is the case, it would follow that intolerance is a vice. But virtue and vice are qualities solely of individuals, and intolerance and persecution [in the Christian Middle Ages] were social and collective phenomena sanctioned by society and hardly questioned by anyone. Religious intolerance and persecution, therefore, were not seen as vices, but as necessary and salutary for the preservation of religious truth and orthodoxy and all that was seen to depend upon them."[13] This view of persecution is not limited to the Middle Ages. As Christian R. Raschle[14] and Jitse H. F. Dijkstra,[15] say: "Religious violence is a complex phenomenon that exists in all places and times."[16]: 4, 6 

In the ancient societies of Egypt, Greece and Rome, torture was an accepted aspect of the legal system.[17]: 22  Gillian Clark says violence was taken for granted in the fourth century as part of both war and punishment; torture from the carnifex, the professional torturer of the Roman legal system, was an accepted part of that system.[18]: 137  Except for a few rare exceptions, such as the Persian empire under Cyrus and Darius,[19] Denis Lacorne says that examples of religious tolerance in ancient societies, "from ancient Greece to the Roman empire, medieval Spain to the Ottoman Empire and the Venetian Republic", are not examples of tolerance in the modern sense of the term.[20]

The sociological view indicates religious intolerance and persecution are largely social processes that are determined more by the context the social community exists within than anything else.[21][11]: 94 [5]: 19, 24  When governments ensure equal freedom for all, there is less persecution.[7]: 8 

Statistics

The following statistics from Pew Research Center show that Christianity, Islam, and Judaism are persecuted in more countries around the world than other religions.[22] As of 2018: Christians face harrassment in 145 countries, Muslims face harrassment in 139 countries, and Jews face harrassment in 88 countries. Respectively: Christians account for 31% of the world's population, Muslims account for 24%, and Jews account for 0.2%.[23]

Forms

Religious cleansing

"Religious cleansing" is sometimes used to refer to the removal of a population from a certain territory based on its religion.[24] Throughout antiquity, population cleansing was largely motivated by economic and political factors, although ethnic factors occasionally played a role.[24] During the Middle Ages, population cleansing took on a largely religious character.[24] The religious motivation lost much of its salience early in the modern era, although until the 18th century ethnic enmity in Europe remained couched in religious terms.[24] Richard Dawkins has argued that references to ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia and Iraq are euphemisms for what should more accurately be called religious cleansing.[25] According to Adrian Koopman, the widespread use of the term ethnic cleansing in such cases suggests that in many situations there is confusion between ethnicity and religion.[25]

Ethnicity

 
During Nazi rule, Jews were forced to wear yellow stars which identified them as such. Jews are an ethno-religious group and Nazi persecution of them was based on their race.

Other acts of violence which are not always committed against adherents of particular religions such as war, torture, and ethnic cleansing, may take on the qualities of religious persecution when one or more of the parties which are involved in them are characterized by their religious homogeneity; an example of this occurs when conflicting populations that belong to different ethnic groups also belong to different religions or denominations. The difference between religious and ethnic identity might sometimes be obscure (see Ethnoreligious); nevertheless, cases of genocide in the 20th century cannot be fully-explained by the citation of religious differences. Still, cases such as the Greek genocide, the Armenian genocide, and the Assyrian genocide are sometimes seen as cases of religious persecution and as a result, the lines between ethnic and religious violence are sometimes blurry.

Since the Early modern period, an increasing number of religious cleansings were entwined with ethnic elements.[26] Since religion is an important or a central marker of ethnic identity, some conflicts can best be described as "ethno-religious conflicts".[27]

Nazi antisemitism provides another example of the contentious divide between ethnic and religious persecution, because Nazi propaganda tended to construct its image of Jews as belonging to a race, it de-emphasized Jews as being defined by their religion. In keeping with what they were taught in Nazi propaganda, the perpetrators of the Holocaust made no distinction between secular Jews, atheistic Jews, orthodox Jews and Jews who had converted to Christianity.

Persecution for heresy and blasphemy

The persecution of beliefs that are deemed schismatic is one thing; the persecution of beliefs that are deemed heretical or blasphemous is another. Although a public disagreement on secondary matters might be serious enough, it has often only led to religious discrimination. A public renunciation of the core elements of a religious doctrine under the same circumstances would, on the other hand, have put one in far greater danger. While dissenters from the official Church only faced fines and imprisonment in Protestant England, six people were executed for heresy or blasphemy during the reign of Elizabeth I, and two more were executed in 1612 under James I.[28]

Similarly, heretical sects like Cathars, Waldensians and Lollards were brutally suppressed in Western Europe, while, at the same time, Catholic Christians lived side by side with 'schismatic' Orthodox Christians after the East-West Schism in the borderlands of Eastern Europe.[29]

Persecution for political reasons

 
Protestant Bishop John Hooper was burned at the stake by Queen Mary I of England.

More than 300 Roman Catholics were put to death for treason by English governments between 1535 and 1681, thus they were officially executed for secular rather than religious offenses.[28] In 1570, Pope Pius V issued his papal bull Regnans in Excelsis, which absolved Catholics from their obligations to the government.[30] This dramatically worsened the persecution of Catholics in England. The 1584 Parliament of England, declared in "An Act against Jesuits, seminary priests, and such other like disobedient persons" that the purpose of all Catholic missionaries who had come to Britain was "to stir up and move sedition, rebellion and open hostility".[31] Consequently, even strictly apolitical priests like Saint John Ogilvie, Dermot O'Hurley, and Robert Southwell were subjected to torture and execution, as were members of the laity like Sts. Margaret Clitherow and Richard Gwyn. This drastically contrasts with the image of the Elizabethan era as a golden age, but compared to the antecedent Marian Persecutions there is an important difference to consider. Queen Mary was motivated by determination to exterminate Protestantism from all her Kingdoms and to restore the independence of the English Church from control by the state. During her short reign from 1553 to 1558, about 290 Protestants[32] were burned at the stake. While Mary's sister Queen Elizabeth I allegedly, "acted out of fear for the security of her realm",[33] she sought to coerce both Catholics and Protestants to embrace a national church that was completely subservient to the state.

Over the centuries that followed, English governments continued to fear and prosecute both real and imaginary conspiracies like the Popish Plot, an alleged plan to assassinate King Charles II and massacre the Protestants of the British Isles. In reality, the plot was a fictitious concoction by Titus Oates and Whig politician Lord Shaftesbury. Before the falsity of their claims were exposed, however, at least 22 innocent clergy and laity, including Archbishop Oliver Plunkett, had been unjustly convicted of high treason and executed at Tyburn.

By location

The descriptive use of the term religious persecution is rather difficult. Religious persecution has occurred in different historical, geographical and social contexts since at least antiquity. Until the 18th century, some groups were nearly universally persecuted for their religious views, such as atheists,[34] Jews[35] and Zoroastrians.[36]

Roman Empire

 
Saint Peter, an apostle of Jesus, was executed by the Romans.

Early Christianity also came into conflict with the Roman Empire, and it may have been more threatening to the established polytheistic order than Judaism had been, because of the importance of evangelism in Christianity. Under Nero, the Jewish exemption from the requirement to participate in public cults was lifted and Rome began to actively persecute monotheists. This persecution ended in 313 AD with the Edict of Milan, and Christianity was made the official religion of the empire in 380 AD. By the eighth century, Christianity had attained a clear ascendancy across Europe and neighboring regions, and a period of consolidation began which was marked by the pursuit of heretics, heathens, Jews, Muslims, and various other religious groups.

Europe

Religious uniformity in early modern Europe

 
The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of French Protestants in 1572

By contrast to the notion of civil tolerance in early modern Europe, the subjects were required to attend the state church; this attitude can be described as territoriality or religious uniformity, and its underlying assumption is brought to a point by a statement of the Anglican theologian Richard Hooker: "There is not any man of the Church of England, but the same man is also a member of the [English] commonwealth; nor any man a member of the commonwealth, which is not also of the Church of England."[37]

Before a vigorous debate about religious persecution took place in England (starting in the 1640s), for centuries in Europe, religion had been tied to territory. In England, there had been several Acts of Uniformity; in continental Europe, the Latin phrase "cuius regio, eius religio" had been coined in the 16th century and applied as a fundament for the Peace of Augsburg (1555). It was pushed to the extreme by absolutist regimes, particularly by the French kings Louis XIV and his successors. It was under their rule that Catholicism became the sole compulsory allowed religion in France and that the huguenots had to massively leave the country. Persecution meant that the state was committed to secure religious uniformity by coercive measures, as eminently obvious in a statement of Roger L'Estrange: "That which you call persecution, I translate Uniformity".[38]

However, in the 17th century, writers like Pierre Bayle, John Locke, Richard Overton and Roger William broke the link between territory and faith, which eventually resulted in a shift from territoriality to religious voluntarism.[39] It was Locke who, in his Letter Concerning Toleration, defined the state in purely secular terms:[40] "The commonwealth seems to me to be a society of men constituted only for the procuring, preserving, and advancing their own civil interests."[41] Concerning the church, he went on: "A church, then, I take to be a voluntary society of men, joining themselves together of their own accord."[41] With this treatise, John Locke laid one of the most important intellectual foundations of the separation of church and state, which ultimately led to the secular state.

Early modern England

One period of religious persecution which has been extensively studied is early modern England, since the rejection of religious persecution, now common in the Western world, originated there. The English 'Call for Toleration' was a turning point in the Christian debate on persecution and toleration, and early modern England stands out to the historians as a place and time in which literally "hundreds of books and tracts were published either for or against religious toleration."[42]

The most ambitious chronicle of that time is W.K.Jordan's magnum opus The Development of Religious Toleration in England, 1558–1660 (four volumes, published 1932–1940). Jordan wrote as the threat of fascism rose in Europe, and this work is seen as a defense of the fragile values of humanism and tolerance.[43] More recent introductions to this period are Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England, 1558–1689 (2000) by John Coffey and Charitable hatred. Tolerance and intolerance in England, 1500–1700 (2006) by Alexandra Walsham. To understand why religious persecution has occurred, historians like Coffey "pay close attention to what the persecutors said they were doing."[42]

Ecclesiastical dissent and civil tolerance

No religion is free from internal dissent, although the degree of dissent that is tolerated within a particular religious organization can strongly vary. This degree of diversity tolerated within a particular church is described as ecclesiastical tolerance,[44] and is one form of religious toleration. However, when people nowadays speak of religious tolerance, they most often mean civil tolerance, which refers to the degree of religious diversity that is tolerated within the state.

In the absence of civil toleration, someone who finds himself in disagreement with his congregation does not have the option to leave and chose a different faith—simply because there is only one recognized faith in the country (at least officially). In modern western civil law any citizen may join and leave a religious organization at will; In western societies, this is taken for granted, but actually, this legal separation of Church and State only started to emerge a few centuries ago.

In the Christian debate on persecution and toleration, the notion of civil tolerance allowed Christian theologians to reconcile Jesus' commandment to love one's enemies with other parts of the New Testament that are rather strict regarding dissent within the church. Before that, theologians like Joseph Hall had reasoned from the ecclesiastical intolerance of the early Christian church in the New Testament to the civil intolerance of the Christian state.[45]

Russia

The Bishop of Vladimir Feodor turned some people into slaves, others were locked in prison, cut their heads, burnt eyes, cut tongues or crucified on walls. Some heretics were executed by burning them alive. According to an inscription of Khan Mengual-Temir, Metropolitan Kiril was granted the right to heavily punish with death for blasphemy against the Orthodox Church or breach of ecclesiastical privileges. He advised all means of destruction to be used against heretics, but without bloodshed, in the name of 'saving souls'. Heretics were drowned. Novgorod Bishop Gennady Gonzov turned to Tsar Ivan III requesting the death of heretics. Gennady admired the Spanish inquisitors, especially his contemporary Torquemada, who for 15 years of inquisition activity burned and punished thousands of people.[citation needed] As in Rome, persecuted fled to depopulated areas. The most terrible punishment was considered an underground pit, where rats lived. Some people had been imprisoned and tied to the wall there, and untied after their death.[46] Old Believers were persecuted and executed, the order was that even those renouncing completely their beliefs and baptized in the state church to be lynched without mercy. The writer Lomonosov opposed the religious teachings and by his initiative a scientific book against them was published. The book was destroyed, the Russian synod insisted Lomonosov's works to be burned and requested his punishment.[citation needed]

...were cutting heads, hanging, some by the neck, some by the foot, many of them were stabbed with sharp sticks and impaled on hooks. This included the tethering to a ponytail, drowning and freezing people alive in lakes. The winners did not spare even the sick and the elderly, taking them out of the monastery and throwing them mercilessly in icy 'vises'. The words step back, the pen does not move, in eternal darkness the ancient Solovetsky monastery is going. Of the more than 500 people, only a few managed to avoid the terrible court.[47]

Contemporary

 
President Donald Trump meets with survivors of religious persecution from 17 countries in July 2019.

Although his book was written before the September 11 attacks, John Coffey explicitly compares Islamophobia in the contemporary Western world to the English Whig Party's paranoia about the fictitious Popish Plot.[48] Mehdi Ghezali and Murat Kurnaz were among the Muslims who were imprisoned in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, but they were not found to have any connections to terrorism, because they had previously traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan to pursue their religious interests.

The United States submits an annual report on religious freedom and persecution to the Congress. The report contains data which the United States collects from U.S. embassies around the world in collaboration with the Office of International Religious Freedom and other relevant U.S. government and non-governmental institutions. The data is available to the public.[49] The 2018 study details, country by country, the violations of religious freedom taking place in approximately 75% of the 195 countries in the world. Between 2007 and 2017, the PEW organization[50] found that "Christians experienced harassment by governments or social groups in the largest number of countries"—144 countries—but that it is almost equal to the number of countries (142) in which Muslims experience harassment.[50] PEW has published a caution concerning the interpretation of these numbers: "The Center's recent report ... does not attempt to estimate the number of victims in each country... it does not speak to the intensity of harassment..."[51]

No religious group is free from harassment in the contemporary world. Klaus Wetzel, an expert on religious persecution for the German Bundestag, the House of Lords, the US House of Representatives, the European Parliament, and the International Institute for Religious Freedom, explains that "In around a quarter of all countries in the world, the restrictions imposed by governments, or hostilities towards one or more religious groups, are high or very high. Some of the most populous countries in the world belong to this group, such as China, India, Indonesia and Pakistan. Therefore, around three quarters of the world's population live in them."[52]

At the symposium on law and religion in 2014, Michelle Mack said: "Despite what appears to be a near-universal expression of commitment to religious human rights, the frequency-and severity-of religious persecution worldwide is staggering. Although it is impossible to determine with certainty the exact numbers of people persecuted for their faith or religious affiliation, it is unquestioned that "violations of freedom of religion and belief, including acts of severe persecution, occur with fearful frequency."[53]: 462, note 24  She quotes Irwin Colter, human rights advocate and author as saying "[F]reedom of religion remains the most persistently violated human right in the annals of the species."[54]

Despite the ubiquitous nature of religious persecution, the traditional human rights community typically chooses to emphasize "more tangible encroachments on human dignity," such as violations based on race, gender, and class using national, ethnic, and linguistic groupings instead.[55]

By religion

Persecutions of atheists

Used before the 18th century as an insult,[56] atheism was punishable by death in ancient Greece as well as in the Christian[disputed ] and Muslim worlds during the Middle Ages.[citation needed] Today, atheism is punishable by death in 13 countries (Afghanistan, Iran, Malaysia, the Maldives, Mauritania, Nigeria, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen), all of them Muslim, while "the overwhelming majority" of the 192 United Nations member countries "at best discriminate against citizens who have no belief in a god and at worst they can jail them for offences which are dubbed blasphemy".[57][58]

State atheism

State atheism has been defined by David Kowalewski as the official "promotion of atheism" by a government, typically by the active suppression of religious freedom and practice.[59] It is a misnomer which is used in reference to a government's anti-clericalism, its opposition to religious institutional power and influence, whether it is real or alleged, in all aspects of public and political life, including the involvement of religion in the everyday life of the citizen.[60]

State atheism was first practiced for a brief period in Revolutionary France[citation needed] and later it was practiced in Revolutionary Mexico and Communist states. The Soviet Union had a long history of state atheism,[61] in which social success largely required individuals to profess atheism, stay away from churches and even vandalize them; this attitude was especially militant during the middle Stalinist era from 1929 to 1939.[62][63][64] The Soviet Union attempted to suppress religion over wide areas of its influence, including places like central Asia,[65] and the post-World War II Eastern bloc. One state within that bloc, the Socialist People's Republic of Albania under Enver Hoxha, went so far as to officially ban all religious practices.[66]

Persecution of Baháʼís

The Baháʼís are Iran's largest religious minority, and Iran is the location of one of the seventh largest Baháʼí population in the world, with just over 251,100 as of 2010.[67] Baháʼís in Iran have been subject to unwarranted arrests, false imprisonment, beatings, torture, unjustified executions, confiscation and destruction of property owned by individuals and the Baháʼí community, denial of employment, denial of government benefits, denial of civil rights and liberties, and denial of access to higher education.

More recently, in the later months of 2005, an intensive anti-Baháʼí campaign was conducted by Iranian newspapers and radio stations. The state-run and influential Kayhan newspaper, whose managing editor is appointed by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei The press in Iran, ran nearly three dozen articles defaming the Baháʼí Faith. Furthermore, a confidential letter sent on 29 October 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forced in Iran states that the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khamenei has instructed the Command Headquarters to identify people who adhere to the Baháʼí Faith and to monitor their activities and gather any and all information about the members of the Baháʼí Faith. The letter was brought to the attention of the international community by Asma Jahangir, the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on freedom of religion or belief, in a 20 March 2006 press release .[dead link]

In the press release the Special Rapporteur states that she "is highly concerned by information she has received concerning the treatment of members of the Baháʼí community in Iran." She further states that "The Special Rapporteur is concerned that this latest development indicates that the situation with regard to religious minorities in Iran is, in fact, deteriorating." .[dead link]

Persecution of Buddhists

Persecution of Buddhists was a widespread phenomenon throughout the history of Buddhism, lasting to this day. This began as early as the 3rd century AD, by the Zoroastrian high priest Kirder of the Sasanian Empire.[citation needed]

Anti-Buddhist sentiments in Imperial China between the 5th and 10th century led to the Four Buddhist Persecutions in China of which the Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution of 845 was probably the most severe. However Buddhism managed to survive but was greatly weakened. During the Northern Expedition, in 1926 in Guangxi, Kuomintang Muslim General Bai Chongxi led his troops in destroying Buddhist temples and smashing idols, turning the temples into schools and Kuomintang party headquarters.[68] During the Kuomintang Pacification of Qinghai, the Muslim General Ma Bufang and his army wiped out many Tibetan Buddhists in the northeast and eastern Qinghai, and destroyed Tibetan Buddhist temples.[69]

The Muslim invasion of the Indian subcontinent was the first great iconoclastic invasion into the Indian subcontinent.[70] According to William Johnston, hundreds of Buddhist monasteries and shrines were destroyed, Buddhist texts were burnt by the Muslim armies, monks and nuns killed during the 12th and 13th centuries in the Indo-Gangetic Plain region.[71] The Buddhist university of Nalanda was mistaken for a fort because of the walled campus. The Buddhist monks who had been slaughtered were mistaken for Brahmins according to Minhaj-i-Siraj.[72] The walled town, the Odantapuri monastery, was also conquered by his forces. Sumpa basing his account on that of Śākyaśrībhadra who was at Magadha in 1200, states that the Buddhist university complexes of Odantapuri and Vikramshila were also destroyed and the monks massacred.[73] Muslim forces attacked the north-western regions of the Indian subcontinent many times.[74] Many places were destroyed and renamed. For example, Odantapuri's monasteries were destroyed in 1197 by Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji and the town was renamed.[75] Likewise, Vikramashila was destroyed by the forces of Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji around 1200.[76] The sacred Mahabodhi Temple was almost completely destroyed by the Muslim invaders.[77][78] Many Buddhist monks fled to Nepal, Tibet, and South India to avoid the consequences of war.[79] Tibetan pilgrim Chöjepal (1179–1264), who arrived in India in 1234,[80] had to flee advancing Muslim troops multiple times, as they were sacking Buddhist sites.[81]

In Japan, the haibutsu kishaku during the Meiji Restoration (starting in 1868) was an event triggered by the official policy of separation of Shinto and Buddhism (or shinbutsu bunri). This caused great destruction to Buddhism in Japan, the destruction of Buddhist temples, images and texts took place on a large scale all over the country and Buddhist monks were forced to return to secular life.[citation needed]

During the 2012 Ramu violence in Bangladesh, a 25,000-strong Muslim mob set fire to destroy at least twelve Buddhist temples and around fifty homes throughout the town and surrounding villages after seeing a picture of an allegedly desecrated Quran, which they claimed had been posted on Facebook by Uttam Barua, a local Buddhist man.[82][83] The actual posting of the photo was not done by the Buddhist who was falsely slandered.[84]

Persecution of Christians

 
According to tradition, early Christians were fed to lions in the Colosseum of Rome.

From the beginnings of Christianity as a movement within Judaism, Early Christians were persecuted for their faith at the hands of both Jews and the Roman Empire, which controlled much of the areas where Christianity was first distributed. This continued from the first century until the early fourth, when the religion was legalized by the Edict of Milan, eventually becoming the State church of the Roman Empire. Many Christians fled persecution in the Roman empire by emigrating to the Persian empire where for a century and a half after Constantine's conversion, they were persecuted under the Sassanids, with thousands losing their lives.[85]: 76  Christianity continued to spread through "merchants, slaves, traders, captives and contacts with Jewish communities" as well as missionaries who were often killed for their efforts.[85]: 97, 131, 224–225, 551  This killing continued into the Early modern period beginning in the fifteenth century, to the Late modern period of the twentieth century, and into the contemporary period today.[86][87][88][89][90]

 
Greek Christians in 1922, fleeing their homes from Kharput to Trebizond. In the 1910s and 1920s the Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian genocides were perpetrated by the Ottoman government[91][92]

In contemporary society, Christians are persecuted in Iran and other parts of the Middle East, for example, for proselytising, which is illegal there.[93][94][95] Of the 100–200 million Christians alleged to be under assault, the majority are persecuted in Muslim-majority nations.[96] Every year, the Christian non-profit organization Open Doors publishes the World Watch List—a list of the top 50 countries which it designates as the most dangerous for Christians.

The 2018 World Watch List has the following countries as its top ten: North Korea, and Eritrea, whose Christian and Muslim religions are controlled by the state, and Afghanistan, Myanmar, Somalia, Sudan, Pakistan, Libya, Iraq, Yemen, India and Iran, which are all predominantly non-Christian.[97] Due to the large number of Christian majority countries, differing groups of Christians are harassed and persecuted in Christian countries such as Eritrea[98] and Mexico[99] more often than in Muslim countries, although not in greater numbers.[100]

There are low to moderate restrictions on religious freedom in three-quarters of the world's countries, with high and very high restrictions in a quarter of them, according to the State Department's report on religious freedom and persecution delivered annually to Congress.[101] The Internationale Gesellschaft für Menschenrechte[102]—the International Society for Human Rights—in Frankfurt, Germany is a non-governmental organization with 30,000 members from 38 countries who monitor human rights. In September 2009, then chairman Martin Lessenthin,[103] issued a report estimating that 80% of acts of religious persecution around the world were aimed at Christians at that time.[104][105] According to the World Evangelical Alliance, over 200 million Christians are denied fundamental human rights solely because of their faith.[106]

A report released by the UK's Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, and a report by the PEW organization studying worldwide restrictions of religious freedom, both have Christians suffering in the highest number of countries, rising from 125 in 2015 to 144 as of 2018.[107][50][108] PEW has published a caution concerning the interpretation of these numbers: "The Center's recent report ... does not attempt to estimate the number of victims in each country... it does not speak to the intensity of harassment..."[51] France, who restricts the wearing of the hijab, is counted as a persecuting country equally with Nigeria and Pakistan where, according to the Global Security organization, Christians have been killed for their faith.[109]

In December 2016, the Center for the Study of Global Christianity (CSGC) at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts, published a statement that "between 2005 and 2015 there were 900,000 Christian martyrs worldwide—an average of 90,000 per year, marking a Christian as persecuted every 8 minutes."[110][111] However, the BBC has reported that others such as Open Doors and the International Society for Human Rights have disputed that number's accuracy.[112][52][113] Gina Zurlo, the CSGC's assistant director, explained that two-thirds of the 90,000 died in tribal conflicts, and nearly half were victims of the civil war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[114] Klaus Wetzel, an internationally recognized expert on religious persecution, explains that Gordon-Conwell defines Christian martyrdom in the widest possible sense, while Wetzel and Open doors and others such as The International Institute for Religious Freedom (IIRF) use a more restricted definition: "those who are killed, who would not have been killed, if they had not been Christians."[115] Open Doors documents that anti-Christian sentiment is presently based on direct evidence and makes conservative estimates based on indirect evidence.[116] This approach dramatically lowers the numerical count. Open Doors says that, while numbers fluctuate every year, they estimate 11 Christians are currently dying for their faith somewhere in the world every day.[117]

Persecution of Copts

The persecution of Copts is a historical and ongoing issue in Egypt against Coptic Orthodox Christianity and its followers. It is also a prominent example of the poor status of Christians in the Middle East despite the religion being native to the region. Copts are the Christ followers in Egypt, usually Oriental Orthodox, who currently make up around 10% of the population of Egypt—the largest religious minority of that country.[a] Copts have cited instances of persecution throughout their history and Human Rights Watch has noted "growing religious intolerance" and sectarian violence against Coptic Christians in recent years, as well as a failure by the Egyptian government to effectively investigate properly and prosecute those responsible.[122][123]

The Muslim conquest of Egypt took place in AD 639, during the Byzantine empire. Despite the political upheaval, Egypt remained a mainly Christian, but Copts lost their majority status after the 14th century,[124] as a result of the intermittent persecution and the destruction of the Christian churches there,[125] accompanied by heavy taxes for those who refused to convert.[126] From the Muslim conquest of Egypt onwards, the Coptic Christians were persecuted by different Muslims regimes,[127] such as the Umayyad Caliphate,[128] Abbasid Caliphate,[129][130][131] Fatimid Caliphate,[132][133][134] Mamluk Sultanate,[135][136] and Ottoman Empire; the persecution of Coptic Christians included closing and demolishing churches and forced conversion to Islam.[137][138][139]

Since 2011 hundreds of Egyptian Copts have been killed in sectarian clashes, and many homes, Churches and businesses have been destroyed. In just one province (Minya), 77 cases of sectarian attacks on Copts between 2011 and 2016 have been documented by the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights.[140] The abduction and disappearance of Coptic Christian women and girls also remains a serious ongoing problem.[141][142][143]

Persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses

 
Countries where Jehovah's Witnesses' activities are banned

Political and religious animosity against Jehovah's Witnesses has at times led to mob action and government oppression in various countries. Their stance regarding political neutrality and their refusal to serve in the military has led to imprisonment of members who refused conscription during World War II and at other times where national service has been compulsory. Their religious activities are currently banned or restricted in some countries,[144] including China, Vietnam, and many Islamic states.[145][146]

Authors including William Whalen, Shawn Francis Peters and former Witnesses Barbara Grizzuti Harrison, Alan Rogerson and William Schnell have claimed the arrests and mob violence in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s were the consequence of what appeared to be a deliberate course of provocation of authorities and other religious groups by Jehovah's Witnesses. Whalen, Harrison and Schnell have suggested Rutherford invited and cultivated opposition for publicity purposes in a bid to attract dispossessed members of society, and to convince members that persecution from the outside world was evidence of the truth of their struggle to serve God.[161][162][163][164][165] Watch Tower Society literature of the period directed that Witnesses should "never seek a controversy" nor resist arrest, but also advised members not to co-operate with police officers or courts that ordered them to stop preaching, and to prefer jail rather than pay fines.[166]

Persecution of Dogons

For almost 1000 years,[167] the Dogon people, an ancient tribe in Mali[168] had faced religious and ethnic persecution—through jihads by dominant Muslim communities.[167] These jihadic expeditions were undertaken in order to force the Dogon to abandon their traditional religious beliefs and convert to Islam. Such jihads caused the Dogon to abandon their original villages and move up to the cliffs of Bandiagara in search of a place where they could defend themselves more efficiently and escape persecution—which they often did by building their dwellings in little nooks and crannies.[167][169] In the early era of French colonialism in Mali, the French authorities appointed Muslim relatives of El Hadj Umar Tall as chiefs of the Bandiagara—despite the fact that the area has been a Dogon area for centuries.[170]

In 1864, Tidiani Tall, the nephew and successor of the 19th century Senegambian jihadist and Muslim leader—El Hadj Umar Tall, chose to make Bandiagara the capital of the Toucouleur Empire thereby exacerbating the inter-religious and inter-ethnic conflict. In recent years, the Dogon have accused the Fulanis of supporting Islamic terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda and they have also accused the Fulanis of sheltering members of these same terrorist groups in Dogon country, leading to the creation of the Dogon militia Dan Na Ambassagou in 2016—whose aim is to defend the Dogon against systematic attacks. That action resulted in the Ogossagou massacre of Fulanis in March 2019, and the Fula retaliated by committing the Sobane Da massacre in June of that year. In the wake of the Ogossagou massacre, the President of Mali, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta and his government ordered the dissolution of Dan Na Ambassagou—whom they hold partly responsible for the attacks. The Dogon militia group denied its involvement in the massacre and it also rejected calls to disband itself.[171]

Persecution of Druze

 
Qalb Loze: in June 2015, Druze were massacred there by the jihadist Nusra Front.[172]

Historically the relationship between the Druze and Muslims has been characterized by intense persecution.[173][174][175] The Druze faith is often classified as a branch of Isma'ilism. Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam, most Druze do not identify as Muslims,[176][177][178] and they do not accept the Five Pillars of Islam.[179] The Druze have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes such as the Shia Fatimid Caliphate,[180] Mamluk,[181] Sunni Ottoman Empire,[182] and Egypt Eyalet.[183][184] The persecution of the Druze included massacres, demolishing Druze prayer houses and holy places and forced conversion to Islam.[185] Those were no ordinary killings in the Druze's narrative, they were meant to eradicate the whole community according to the Druze narrative.[186] Most recently, the Syrian Civil War, which began in 2011, saw persecution of the Druze at the hands of Islamic extremists.[187][188]

Ibn Taymiyya a prominent Muslim scholar muhaddith, dismissed the Druze as non-Muslims,[189] and his fatwa cited that Druzes: "Are not at the level of ′Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book) nor mushrikin (polytheists). Rather, they are from the most deviant kuffār (Infidel) ... Their women can be taken as slaves and their property can be seized ... they are to be killed whenever they are found and cursed as they described ... It is obligatory to kill their scholars and religious figures so that they do not misguide others",[190] which in that setting would have legitimized violence against them as apostates.[191][192] Ottomans have often relied on Ibn Taymiyya religious ruling to justify their persecution of Druze.[193]

Persecution of Falun Gong

The persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual practice began with campaigns initiated in 1999 by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to eliminate Falun Gong in China. It is characterised by multifaceted propaganda campaign, a program of enforced ideological conversion and re-education, and a variety of extralegal coercive measures such as arbitrary arrests, forced labor, and physical torture, sometimes resulting in death.[194]
There have being reports of organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners in China. Several researchers—most notably Canadian human rights lawyer David Matas, former parliamentarian David Kilgour, and investigative journalist Ethan Gutmann—estimate that tens of thousands of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience have been killed to supply a lucrative trade in human organs and cadavers.[195]

Persecution of Hindus

 
Ruins of the Martand Sun Temple. The temple was completely destroyed on the orders of Muslim Sultan Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century, with demolition lasting a year.[196][197]

Hindus have experienced historical and current religious persecution and systematic violence. These occurred in the form of forced conversions, documented massacres, demolition and desecration of temples, as well as the destruction of educational centers.

For example, Hindus have been one of the targeted and persecuted minorities in Pakistan. Militancy and sectarianism has been rising in Pakistan since the 1990s, and the religious minorities have "borne the brunt of the Islamist's ferocity" suffering "greater persecution than in any earlier decade", states Farahnaz Ispahani—a Public Policy Scholar at the Wilson Center. This has led to attacks and forced conversion of Hindus, and other minorities such as Christians.[198][199][200] According to Tetsuya Nakatani—a Japanese scholar of Cultural Anthropology specializing in South Asia refugee history, after the mass exodus of Hindu, Sikh and other non-Muslim refugees during the 1947 partition of British India, there were several waves of Hindu refugees arrival into India from its neighbors.[201] The fearful and persecuted refugee movements were often after various religious riots between 1949 and 1971 that targeted non-Muslims within West Pakistan or East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). The status of these persecuted Hindu refugees in India was in political limbo until the passage of Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 by the Indian Government. Systemically in Pakistan, Hindus are persecuted under the government's Blasphemy Law (with often consequence of death irrelevant of the legal claim's accuracy), and as per the rhetoric of mainstream politicians interpreting vague constitutional law, have second-class rights in the nation regarding places of worship and facets of their religion.

Similar concerns about religious persecution of Hindu and other minorities in Bangladesh have also been expressed. A famous report by Dr. Abul Barkat, a famous Bangladeshi economist and research, projects that there will be no Hindus left in Bangladesh in 30 years.[202][203][204] The USCIRF notes hundreds of cases of "killings, attempted killings, death threats, assaults, rapes, kidnappings, and attacks on homes, businesses, and places of worship" on religious minorities in 2017.[205] Since the 1990s, Hindus have been a persecuted minority in Afghanistan, and a subject of "intense hate" with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan.[206] Their "targeted persecution" triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum.[207] The persecuted Hindus have remained stateless and without citizenship rights in India, since it has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees, state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi, though the recent Citizen Amendment Act passed by India is a form of solace for those Hindus having entered India before 2015.[206][208]

The Bangladesh Liberation War (1971) resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century. While estimates of the number of casualties was 3,000,000, it is reasonably certain that Hindus bore a disproportionate brunt of the Pakistan Army's onslaught against the Bengali population of what was East Pakistan. An article in Time magazine dated 2 August 1971, stated "the Hindus, who account for three-fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead, have borne the brunt of the Muslim military hatred."[209] Senator Edward Kennedy wrote in a report that was part of United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations testimony dated 1 November 1971, "Hardest hit have been members of the Hindu community who have been robbed of their lands and shops, systematically slaughtered, and in some places, painted with yellow patches marked "H". All of this has been officially sanctioned, ordered and implemented under martial law from Islamabad". In the same report, Senator Kennedy reported that 80% of the refugees in India were Hindus and according to numerous international relief agencies such as UNESCO and World Health Organization the number of East Pakistani refugees at their peak in India was close to 10 million. Given that the Hindu population in East Pakistan was around 11 million in 1971, this suggests that up to 8 million, or more than 70% of the Hindu population had fled the country. The Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Sydney Schanberg covered the start of the war and wrote extensively on the suffering of the East Bengalis, including the Hindus both during and after the conflict. In a syndicated column "The Pakistani Slaughter That Nixon Ignored", he wrote about his return to liberated Bangladesh in 1972. "Other reminders were the yellow "H"s the Pakistanis had painted on the homes of Hindus, particular targets of the Muslim army" (by "Muslim army", meaning the Pakistan Army, which had targeted Bengali Muslims as well), (Newsday, 29 April 1994).

Hindus constitute approximately 0.5% of the total population of the United States. Hindus in the US enjoy both de jure and de facto legal equality. However, a series of attacks were made on people Indian origin by a street gang called the "Dotbusters" in New Jersey in 1987, the dot signifying the Bindi dot sticker worn on the forehead by Indian women.[210] The lackadaisical attitude of the local police prompted the South Asian community to arrange small groups all across the state to fight back against the street gang. The perpetrators have been put to trial. On 2 January 2012, a Hindu worship center in New York City was firebombed.[211] The Dotbusters were primarily based in New York and New Jersey and committed most of their crimes in Jersey City. A number of perpetrators have been brought to trial for these assaults. Although tougher anti-hate crime laws were passed by the New Jersey legislature in 1990, the attacks continued, with 58 cases of hate crimes against Indians in New Jersey reported in 1991.[212]

Persecution of Hindus also contemporarily has been seen in the Indian-controlled, Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir. In the Kashmir region, approximately 300 Kashmiri Pandits were killed between September 1989 to 1990 in various incidents.[213] In early 1990, local Urdu newspapers Aftab and Al Safa called upon Kashmiris to wage jihad against India and ordered the expulsion of all Hindus choosing to remain in Kashmir.[213] In the following days masked men ran in the streets with AK-47s, shooting to kill Hindus who would not leave.[213] Notices were placed on the houses of all Hindus, telling them to leave within 24 hours or die.[213] Since March 1990, estimates of between 300,000 and 500,000 pandits have migrated outside Kashmir due to persecution by Islamic fundamentalists in the largest case of ethnic cleansing since the partition of India.[214] Many Kashmiri Pandits have been killed by Islamist militants in incidents such as the Wandhama massacre and the 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre.[215][216][217] The incidents of massacring and forced eviction have been termed ethnic cleansing by some observers.[213]

In Bangladesh, on 28 February 2013, the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, the Vice President of the Jamaat-e-Islami to death for the war crimes committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War. Following the sentence, the Hindus were attacked in different parts of the country. Hindu properties were looted, Hindu houses were burnt into ashes and Hindu temples were desecrated and set on fire.[218][219] This trend has continued, sadly; Islamist groups in Bangladesh, nearing the 50th anniversary of the Bengali Hindu Genocide, set fire to and vandalized several Hindu temples along with 80 houses.[220][221]

Persecutions of Jews

 
Woodcut of the Seleucid persecution depicting martyrs refusing to sacrifice from Die Bibel in Bildern

A major component of Jewish history, persecutions have been committed by Seleucids,[222] ancient Greeks,[35] ancient Romans, Christians (Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant), Muslims, Nazis, etc. Some of the most important events which constitute this history include the 1066 Granada massacre, the Rhineland massacres (by Catholics but against papal orders, see also : Sicut Judaeis), the Alhambra Decree after the Reconquista and the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition, the publication of On the Jews and Their Lies by Martin Luther which furthered Protestant anti-Judaism and was later used to strengthen German antisemitism and justify pogroms and the Holocaust.[citation needed]

According to FBI statistics, the majority of religiously motivated hate crimes which are committed in the United States are committed against Jews. In 2018, anti-Jewish hate crimes represented 57.8% of all religiously motivated hate crimes, while anti-Muslim hate crimes, which were the second most common, only represented 14.5%.[223]

Persecution of Muslims

Persecution of Muslims is the religious persecution that is inflicted upon followers of the Islamic faith. In the early days of Islam at Mecca, the new Muslims were often subjected to abuse and persecution by the pagan Meccans (often called Mushrikin: the unbelievers or polytheists).[224][225] Muslims were persecuted by Meccans at the time of Muhammed.

Currently, Muslims face religious restrictions in 142 countries according to the PEW report on rising religious restrictions around the world.[226] According to the US State Department's 2019 freedom of religion report, the Central African Republic remains divided between the Christian anti-Balaka and the predominantly Muslim ex-Seleka militia forces with many Muslim communities displaced and not allowed to practice their religion freely.[227] In Nigeria, "conflicts between predominantly Muslim Fulani herdsmen and predominantly Christian farmers in the North Central states continued throughout 2019."[228]

In China, General Secretary Xi Jinping has decreed that all members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) must be "unyielding Marxist atheists". In Xinjiang province, the government enforced restrictions on Muslims. The U.S. government estimates that

... since April 2017, the Chinese government arbitrarily detained more than one million Uighurs, ethnic Kazakhs, Hui, and members of other Muslim groups, as well as Uighur Christians, in specially built or converted internment camps in Xinjiang and subjected them to forced disappearance, political indoctrination, torture, physical and psychological abuse, including forced sterilization and sexual abuse, forced labor, and prolonged detention without trial because of their religion and ethnicity. There were reports of individuals dying as a result of injuries sustained during interrogations... Authorities in Xinjiang restricted access to mosques and barred youths from participating in religious activities, including fasting during Ramadan... maintained extensive and invasive security and surveillance... forcing Uighurs and other ethnic and religious minorities to install spyware on their mobile phones and accept government officials and CCP members living in their homes. Satellite imagery and other sources indicated the government destroyed mosques, cemeteries, and other religious sites... The government sought the forcible repatriation of Uighur and other Muslims from foreign countries and detained some of those who returned... Anti-Muslim speech in social media remained widespread."[229]

Shia-Sunni conflicts persist. Indonesia is approximately 87% Sunni Muslim, and "Shia and Ahmadi Muslims reported feeling under constant threat." Anti-Shia rhetoric was common throughout 2019 in some online media outlets and on social media."[230]

In Saudi Arabia, the government "is based largely on sharia as interpreted by the Hanbali school of Sunni Islamic jurisprudence. Freedom of religion is not provided under the law." In January and May 2019, police raided predominantly Shia villages in the al-Qatif Governorate... In April the government executed 37 citizens ... 33 of the 37 were from the country's minority Shia community and had been convicted following what they stated were unfair trials for various alleged crimes, including protest-related offenses... Authorities detained ... three Shia Muslims who have written in the past on the discrimination faced by Shia Muslims, with no official charges filed; they remained in detention at year's end... Instances of prejudice and discrimination against Shia Muslims continued to occur..."[231]

Islamophobia continues. In Finland, "A report by the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) said hate crimes and intolerant speech in public discourse, principally against Muslims and asylum seekers (many of whom belong to religious minorities), had increased in recent years... A Finns Party politician publicly compared Muslim asylum seekers to an invasive species." There were several demonstrations by neo-Nazis and nativist groups in 2019. One neo-Nazi group, the NRM (the Nordic Resistance Movement), "continued to post anti-Muslim and anti-Semitic statements online and demonstrated with the anti-immigrant group Soldiers of Odin."[232]

The ongoing Rohingya genocide has resulted in over 25,000 deaths from 2016 to present.[233][234] Over 700,000 refugees have been sent abroad since 2017.[235] Gang rapes and other acts of sexual violence, mainly against Rohingya women and girls, have also been committed by the Rakhine Buddhists and the Burmese military's soldiers, along with the arson of Rohingya homes and mosques, as well as many other human rights violations.[236]

The ongoing Uyghur genocide is a series of human rights abuses perpetrated by the Chinese government against the majority-Muslim Uyghur people and other ethnic and religious minorities in and around the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) of the People's Republic of China.[237][238][239] Since 2014,[240] the Chinese government, under the direction of the CCP during the administration of CCP general secretary Xi Jinping, has pursued policies leading to more than one million Muslims[241][242][243][244][245] (the majority of them Uyghurs) being held in secretive internment camps without any legal process[246][247] in what has become the largest-scale and most systematic detention of ethnic and religious minorities since the Holocaust.[248][249][250] The Chinese Government has subjected hundreds of thousands of members of Muslim minority groups living in Xinjiang to forced abortions, forced sterilizations, and the forced administration of contraceptives (including contraceptive implants), methods of birth control that had exempted ethnic minorities up until that point.[251][252][253] Uyghurs and members of other minority groups have been made subject to a widespread forced labor apparatus.[254][255][256][257][250] Uyghurs and other religious minorities detained within the Xinjiang internment camps have also been subjected to systematic rape and torture.[258][259][260]

Persecution of Pagans and Heathens

Persecution of Serers

The persecution of the Serer people of Senegal, Gambia and Mauritania is multifaceted, and it includes both religious and ethnic elements. Religious and ethnic persecution of the Serer people dates back to the 11th century when King War Jabi usurped the throne of Tekrur (part of present-day Senegal) in 1030, and by 1035, introduced Sharia law and forced his subjects to submit to Islam.[261] With the assistance of his son (Leb), their Almoravid allies and other African ethnic groups who have embraced Islam, the Muslim coalition army launched jihads against the Serer people of Tekrur who refused to abandon Serer religion in favour of Islam.[262][263][264][265] The number of Serer deaths are unknown, but it triggered the exodus of the Serers of Tekrur to the south following their defeat, where they were granted asylum by the lamanes.[265] Persecution of the Serer people continued from the medieval era to the 19th century, resulting in the Battle of Fandane-Thiouthioune. From the 20th to the 21st centuries, persecution of the Serers is less obvious, nevertheless, they are the object of scorn and prejudice.[266][267]

Persecutions of Sikhs

Sikhism is a Dharmic religion that originated in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent[268] around the end of the 15th century CE. The Sikh religion developed and evolved in times of religious persecution, gaining converts from both Hinduism and Islam.[269] Mughal rulers of India tortured and executed two of the Sikh gurus—Guru Arjan (1563–1605) and Guru Tegh Bahadur (1621–1675)—after they refused to convert to Islam.[270][271][272][273][274]

The Islamic era persecution of Sikhs triggered the founding of the Khalsa by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699 as an order to protect the freedom of conscience and religion,[270][275][276] with members expressing the qualities of a Sant-Sipāhī—a saint-soldier.[277][278]

According to Ashish Bose, a population research scholar, Sikhs and Hindus were well integrated in Afghanistan until the Soviet invasion when their economic condition worsened. Thereafter, they became a subject of "intense hate" with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan.[206] Their "targeted persecution" triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum.[207][206] Many of them started arriving in and after 1992 as refugees in India, with some seeking asylum in the United Kingdom and other western countries.[206][207] Unlike the arrivals in the West, the persecuted Sikh refugees who arrived in India have remained stateless and lived as refugees because India has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees, state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi.[206][208]

On 7 November 1947, thousands of Hindus and Sikhs were targeted in the Rajouri Massacre in the Jammu and Kashmir princely state. It is estimated 30,000+ Hindus and Sikhs were either killed, abducted or injured.[279][280][281] In one instance, on 12 November 1947 alone between 3000 and 7000 were killed.[282] A few weeks after on 25 November 1947, tribal forces began the 1947 Mirpur massacre of thousands more Hindus and Sikhs. An estimated 20,000+ died in the massacre.[283][284][285][286][287][288][289][290]

In June 1984, during Operation Blue Star, Indira Gandhi ordered the Indian Army to attack the Golden Temple and eliminate any insurgents, as it had been occupied by Sikh separatists who were stockpiling weapons. Later operations by Indian paramilitary forces were initiated to clear the separatists from the countryside of Punjab state.[291]

The 1984 anti-Sikhs riots were a series of pogroms[292][293][294][295] directed against Sikhs in India, by anti-Sikh mobs, in response to the assassination of Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards. There were more than 8,000[296] deaths, including 3,000 in Delhi.[294]

The violence in Delhi was triggered by the assassination of Indira Gandhi, India's prime minister, on 31 October 1984, by two of her Sikh bodyguards in response to her actions authorising the military operation. After the assassination following Operation Blue Star, many Indian National Congress workers including Jagdish Tytler, Sajjan Kumar and Kamal Nath were accused of inciting and participating in riots targeting the Sikh population of the capital. The Indian government reported 2,700 deaths in the ensuing chaos. In the aftermath of the riots, the Indian government reported 20,000 had fled the city, however the People's Union for Civil Liberties reported "at least" 1,000 displaced persons.[297] The most affected regions were the Sikh neighbourhoods in Delhi. The Central Bureau of Investigation, the main Indian investigating agency, is of the opinion that the acts of violence were organized with the support from the then Delhi police officials and the central government headed by Indira Gandhi's son, Rajiv Gandhi.[298] Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister after his mother's death and, when asked about the riots, said "when a big tree falls (Mrs. Gandhi's death), the earth shakes (occurrence of riots)" thus trying to justify communal strife.[299]

There are allegations that the Indian National Congress government at that time destroyed evidence and shielded the guilty. The Asian Age front-page story called the government actions "the Mother of all Cover-ups"[300][301] There are allegations that the violence was led and often perpetrated by Indian National Congress activists and sympathisers during the riots.[302] The government, then led by the Congress, was widely criticised for doing very little at the time, possibly acting as a conspirator. The conspiracy theory is supported by the fact that voting lists were used to identify Sikh families. Despite their communal conflict and riots record, the Indian National Congress claims to be a secular party.

The Chittisinghpura massacre of 35 villagers of the Sikh faith that was carried out on 20 March 2000 in the Chittisinghpora (Chittisinghpura) village of Anantnag district, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on the eve of President Bill Clinton's state visit to India. The identity of the perpetrators remains unknown. The Indian government asserts that the massacre was conducted by Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT). Pakistani accounts accuse the Indian Army and RSS of the massacre.[303][304][305][306]

On 25 March 2020, ISIS-Haqqani network Gunmen and Suicide bombers attacked the Gurdwara Har Rai Sahib (a Sikh shrine) in Kabul, Afghanistan.

About 200 worshipers were reported to have been in the building, in which 25 Sikh worshippers were killed and leaving at least 8 wounded after an hour-long siege which ended in all assailants being killed by responding security forces. At least one child was said to have been among people who were killed, according to the ministry of interior's statement.

Persecution of Yazidis

The Persecution of Yazidis has been ongoing since at least the 10th century.[307][308] The Yazidi religion is regarded as devil worship by Islamists.[309] Yazidis have been persecuted by Muslim Kurdish tribes since the 10th century,[307] and by the Ottoman Empire from the 17th to the 20th centuries.[310] After the 2014 Sinjar massacre of thousands of Yazidis by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Yazidis still face violence from the Turkish Armed Forces and its ally the Syrian National Army, as well as discrimination from the Kurdistan Regional Government. According to Yazidi tradition (based on oral traditions and folk songs), estimated that 74 genocides against the Yazidis have been carried out in the past 800 years.[311]

Persecution of Zoroastrians

 
A Zoroastrian family in Qajar Iran, about 1910

Persecution of Zoroastrians is the religious persecution inflicted upon the followers of the Zoroastrian faith. The persecution of Zoroastrians occurred throughout the religion's history. The discrimination and harassment began in the form of sparse violence and forced conversions. Muslims are recorded to have destroyed fire temples. Zoroastrians living under Muslim rule were required to pay a tax called jizya.[312]

Zoroastrian places of worship were desecrated, fire temples were destroyed and mosques were built in their place. Many libraries were burned and much of their cultural heritage was lost. Gradually an increasing number of laws were passed which regulated Zoroastrian behavior and limited their ability to participate in society. Over time, the persecution of Zoroastrians became more common and widespread, and the number of believers decreased by force significantly.[312]

Most were forced to convert due to the systematic abuse and discrimination inflicted upon them by followers of Islam. Once a Zoroastrian family was forced to convert to Islam, the children were sent to an Islamic school to learn Arabic and study the teachings of Islam, as a result some of these people lost their Zoroastrian faith. However, under the Samanids, who were Zoroastrian converts to Islam, the Persian language flourished. On occasion, the Zoroastrian clergy assisted Muslims in attacks against those whom they deemed Zoroastrian heretics.[312]

A Zoroastrian astrologer named Mulla Gushtasp predicted the fall of the Zand dynasty to the Qajar army in Kerman. Because of Gushtasp's forecast, the Zoroastrians of Kerman were spared by the conquering army of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar. Despite the aforementioned favorable incident, the Zoroastrians during the Qajar dynasty remained in agony and their population continued to decline. Even during the rule of Agha Mohammad Khan, the founder of the dynasty, many Zoroastrians were killed and some were taken as captives to Azerbaijan.[313] Zoroastrians regard the Qajar period as one of their worst.[314] During the Qajar dynasty, religious persecution of the Zoroastrians was rampant. Due to the increasing contacts with influential Parsi philanthropists such as Maneckji Limji Hataria, many Zoroastrians left Iran for India. There, they formed the second major Indian Zoroastrian community known as the Iranis.[315]

Persecution of philosophers

Throughout the history of philosophy, philosophers have been imprisoned for various offenses by courts and tribunals, often as a result of their philosophical activities, and some of them have even been put to death. The most famous case in which a philosopher was put on trial is the case of Socrates, who was tried for, amongst other charges, corrupting the youth and impiety.[316] Others include:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In 2017, the Wall Street Journal reported that "the vast majority of Egypt's estimated 9.5 million Christians, approximately 10% of the country's population, are Orthodox Copts."[118] In 2019, the Associated Press cited an estimate of 10 million Copts in Egypt.[119] In 2015, the Wall Street Journal reported: "The Egyptian government estimates about 5 million Copts, but the Coptic Orthodox Church says 15–18 million. Reliable numbers are hard to find but estimates suggest they make up somewhere between 6% and 18% of the population."[120] The CIA World Factbook reported a 2015 estimate that 10% of the Egyptian population is Christian (including both Copts and non-Copts).[121]

References

  1. ^ Grim, Brian J.; Finke, Roger (August 2007). "Religious Persecution in Cross-National Context: Clashing Civilizations or Regulated Religious Economies?". American Sociological Review. 72 (4): 633–658. doi:10.1177/000312240707200407. S2CID 145734744.
  2. ^ David T. Smith (12 November 2015). Religious Persecution and Political Order in the United States. Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-107-11731-0. "Persecution" in this study refers to violence or discrimination against members of a religious minority because of their religious affiliation. Persecution involves the most damaging expressions of prejudice against an out-group, going beyond verbal abuse and social avoidance. It refers to actions that are intended to deprive individuals of their political rights and force minorities to assimilate, leave, or live as second-class citizens. When these actions persistently happen over a period of time, and include large numbers of both perpetrators and victims, we may refer to them as being part of a "campaign" of persecution that usually has the goal of excluding the targeted minority from the polity.
  3. ^ a b Nazila Ghanea-Hercock (11 November 2013). The Challenge of Religious Discrimination at the Dawn of the New Millennium. Springer. pp. 91–92. ISBN 978-94-017-5968-7.
  4. ^ Bateman, J. Keith. 2013. Don't call it persecution when it's not. Evangelical Missions Quarterly 49.1: 54–56, also pp. 57–62.
  5. ^ a b Kippenberg, Hans G. (2020). "1". In Raschle, Christian R.; Dijkstra, Jitse H. F. (eds.). Religious Violence in the Ancient World From Classical Athens to Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108849210.
  6. ^ Jinkins, Michael. Christianity, Tolerance and Pluralism: A Theological Engagement with Isaiah Berlin's Social Theory. United Kingdom, Taylor & Francis, 2004. Chapter 3. no page #s available
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Further reading

  • John Coffey (2000), Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England 1558–1689, Studies in Modern History, Pearson Education.
  • Stausberg, Michael (March 2021). Feldt, Laura; Valk, Ülo (eds.). "The Demise, Dissolution, and Elimination of Religions". Numen. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. 68 (2–3 - Special Issue: The Dissolution of Religions): 103–131. doi:10.1163/15685276-12341617. ISSN 1568-5276. LCCN 58046229.

External links

  • United Nations – Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights on freedom of religion or belief
  • United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
  • About.com section on Religious Intolerance
  • U.S. State Department 2006 Annual Report on International Religious Freedom
  • xTome: News and Information on Religious Freedom 18 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine

religious, persecution, confused, with, religious, bias, religious, discrimination, systematic, mistreatment, individual, group, individuals, response, their, religious, beliefs, affiliations, their, lack, thereof, tendency, societies, groups, within, societie. Not to be confused with Religious bias or Religious discrimination Religious persecution is the systematic mistreatment of an individual or a group of individuals as a response to their religious beliefs or affiliations or their lack thereof The tendency of societies or groups within societies to alienate or repress different subcultures is a recurrent theme in human history Moreover because a person s religion often determines their sense of morality worldview self image attitudes towards others and overall personal identity to a significant extent religious differences can be significant cultural personal and social factors Religious persecution may be triggered by religious bigotry i e when members of a dominant group denigrate religions other than their own or it may be triggered by the state when it views a particular religious group as a threat to its interests or security At a societal level the dehumanization of a particular religious group may readily lead to violence or other forms of persecution Religious persecution may be the result of societal and or governmental regulation Government regulation refer to the laws imposed by the government to regulate a religion and societal regulation is the discrimination of citizens towards one or more religions 1 Indeed in many countries religious persecution has resulted in so much violence that it is considered a human rights problem Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Sociological view 2 Statistics 3 Forms 3 1 Religious cleansing 3 2 Ethnicity 4 Persecution for heresy and blasphemy 5 Persecution for political reasons 6 By location 6 1 Roman Empire 6 2 Europe 6 2 1 Religious uniformity in early modern Europe 6 3 Early modern England 6 3 1 Ecclesiastical dissent and civil tolerance 6 4 Russia 7 Contemporary 8 By religion 8 1 Persecutions of atheists 8 1 1 State atheism 8 2 Persecution of Bahaʼis 8 3 Persecution of Buddhists 8 4 Persecution of Christians 8 4 1 Persecution of Copts 8 4 2 Persecution of Jehovah s Witnesses 8 5 Persecution of Dogons 8 6 Persecution of Druze 8 7 Persecution of Falun Gong 8 8 Persecution of Hindus 8 9 Persecutions of Jews 8 10 Persecution of Muslims 8 11 Persecution of Pagans and Heathens 8 12 Persecution of Serers 8 13 Persecutions of Sikhs 8 14 Persecution of Yazidis 8 15 Persecution of Zoroastrians 9 Persecution of philosophers 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksDefinition EditDavid T Smith in Religious Persecution and Political Order in the United States defines religious persecution as violence or discrimination against members of a religious minority because of their religious affiliation referring to actions that are intended to deprive individuals of their political rights and to force minorities to assimilate leave or live as second class citizens 2 In the aspect of a state s policy it may be defined as violations of freedom of thought conscience and belief which are spread in accordance with a systematic and active state policy which encourages actions such as harassment intimidation and the imposition of punishments in order to infringe or threaten the targeted minority s right to life integrity or liberty 3 The distinction between religious persecution and religious intolerance lies in the fact that in most cases the latter is motivated by the sentiment of the population which may be tolerated or encouraged by the state 3 The denial of people s civil rights on the basis of their religion is most often described as religious discrimination rather than religious persecution Examples of persecution include the confiscation or destruction of property incitement of hatred arrests imprisonment beatings torture murder and executions Religious persecution can be considered the opposite of freedom of religion Bateman has differentiated different degrees of persecution It must be personally costly It must be unjust and undeserved it must be a direct result of one s faith 4 Sociological view Edit From a sociological perspective the identity formation of strong social groups such as those generated by nationalism ethnicity or religion is a causal aspect of practices of persecution Hans G Kippenberg de says it is these communities who can be a majority or a minority that generate violence 5 8 19 24 Since the development of identity involves what we are not as much as what we are there are grounds for the fear that tolerance of what we are not can contribute to the erosion of identity 6 Brian J Grim and Roger Finke say it is this perception of plurality as dangerous that leads to persecution 7 2 Both the state and any dominant religion share the concern that to leave religion unchecked and without adequate controls will result in the uprising of religions that are dangerous to both state and citizenry and this concern gives both the dominant religion and the state motives for restricting religious activity 7 2 6 Grim and Finke say it is specifically this religious regulation that leads to religious persecution 8 R I Moore says that persecution during the Middle Ages provides a striking illustration of the classic deviance theory which is based on identity formation as it was propounded by the father of sociology Emile Durkheim 9 100 Persecution is also often part of a larger conflict involving emerging states as well as established states in the process of redefining their national identity 7 xii xiii James L Gibson 10 adds that the greater the attitudes of loyalty and solidarity to the group identity and the more the benefits to belonging there are perceived to be the more likely a social identity will become intolerant of challenges 11 93 12 64 Combining a strong social identity with the state increases the benefits therefore it is likely persecution from that social group will increase 7 8 Legal restriction from the state relies on social cooperation so the state in its turn must protect the social group which supports it increasing the likelihood of persecution from the state as well 7 9 Grim and Finke say their studies indicate that the higher the degree of religious freedom the lower the degree of violent religious persecution 7 3 When religious freedoms are denied through the regulation of religious profession or practice violent religious persecution and conflict increase 7 6 Perez Zagorin writes that According to some philosophers tolerance is a moral virtue if this is the case it would follow that intolerance is a vice But virtue and vice are qualities solely of individuals and intolerance and persecution in the Christian Middle Ages were social and collective phenomena sanctioned by society and hardly questioned by anyone Religious intolerance and persecution therefore were not seen as vices but as necessary and salutary for the preservation of religious truth and orthodoxy and all that was seen to depend upon them 13 This view of persecution is not limited to the Middle Ages As Christian R Raschle 14 and Jitse H F Dijkstra 15 say Religious violence is a complex phenomenon that exists in all places and times 16 4 6 In the ancient societies of Egypt Greece and Rome torture was an accepted aspect of the legal system 17 22 Gillian Clark says violence was taken for granted in the fourth century as part of both war and punishment torture from the carnifex the professional torturer of the Roman legal system was an accepted part of that system 18 137 Except for a few rare exceptions such as the Persian empire under Cyrus and Darius 19 Denis Lacorne says that examples of religious tolerance in ancient societies from ancient Greece to the Roman empire medieval Spain to the Ottoman Empire and the Venetian Republic are not examples of tolerance in the modern sense of the term 20 The sociological view indicates religious intolerance and persecution are largely social processes that are determined more by the context the social community exists within than anything else 21 11 94 5 19 24 When governments ensure equal freedom for all there is less persecution 7 8 Statistics EditThe following statistics from Pew Research Center show that Christianity Islam and Judaism are persecuted in more countries around the world than other religions 22 As of 2018 Christians face harrassment in 145 countries Muslims face harrassment in 139 countries and Jews face harrassment in 88 countries Respectively Christians account for 31 of the world s population Muslims account for 24 and Jews account for 0 2 23 Forms EditReligious cleansing Edit Not to be confused with Ritual cleansing Religious cleansing is sometimes used to refer to the removal of a population from a certain territory based on its religion 24 Throughout antiquity population cleansing was largely motivated by economic and political factors although ethnic factors occasionally played a role 24 During the Middle Ages population cleansing took on a largely religious character 24 The religious motivation lost much of its salience early in the modern era although until the 18th century ethnic enmity in Europe remained couched in religious terms 24 Richard Dawkins has argued that references to ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia and Iraq are euphemisms for what should more accurately be called religious cleansing 25 According to Adrian Koopman the widespread use of the term ethnic cleansing in such cases suggests that in many situations there is confusion between ethnicity and religion 25 Ethnicity Edit During Nazi rule Jews were forced to wear yellow stars which identified them as such Jews are an ethno religious group and Nazi persecution of them was based on their race Other acts of violence which are not always committed against adherents of particular religions such as war torture and ethnic cleansing may take on the qualities of religious persecution when one or more of the parties which are involved in them are characterized by their religious homogeneity an example of this occurs when conflicting populations that belong to different ethnic groups also belong to different religions or denominations The difference between religious and ethnic identity might sometimes be obscure see Ethnoreligious nevertheless cases of genocide in the 20th century cannot be fully explained by the citation of religious differences Still cases such as the Greek genocide the Armenian genocide and the Assyrian genocide are sometimes seen as cases of religious persecution and as a result the lines between ethnic and religious violence are sometimes blurry Since the Early modern period an increasing number of religious cleansings were entwined with ethnic elements 26 Since religion is an important or a central marker of ethnic identity some conflicts can best be described as ethno religious conflicts 27 Nazi antisemitism provides another example of the contentious divide between ethnic and religious persecution because Nazi propaganda tended to construct its image of Jews as belonging to a race it de emphasized Jews as being defined by their religion In keeping with what they were taught in Nazi propaganda the perpetrators of the Holocaust made no distinction between secular Jews atheistic Jews orthodox Jews and Jews who had converted to Christianity Persecution for heresy and blasphemy EditMain articles Heresy and Blasphemy See also Christian heresy Heresy in Orthodox Judaism Islam and blasphemy and Apostasy The persecution of beliefs that are deemed schismatic is one thing the persecution of beliefs that are deemed heretical or blasphemous is another Although a public disagreement on secondary matters might be serious enough it has often only led to religious discrimination A public renunciation of the core elements of a religious doctrine under the same circumstances would on the other hand have put one in far greater danger While dissenters from the official Church only faced fines and imprisonment in Protestant England six people were executed for heresy or blasphemy during the reign of Elizabeth I and two more were executed in 1612 under James I 28 Similarly heretical sects like Cathars Waldensians and Lollards were brutally suppressed in Western Europe while at the same time Catholic Christians lived side by side with schismatic Orthodox Christians after the East West Schism in the borderlands of Eastern Europe 29 Persecution for political reasons Edit Protestant Bishop John Hooper was burned at the stake by Queen Mary I of England More than 300 Roman Catholics were put to death for treason by English governments between 1535 and 1681 thus they were officially executed for secular rather than religious offenses 28 In 1570 Pope Pius V issued his papal bull Regnans in Excelsis which absolved Catholics from their obligations to the government 30 This dramatically worsened the persecution of Catholics in England The 1584 Parliament of England declared in An Act against Jesuits seminary priests and such other like disobedient persons that the purpose of all Catholic missionaries who had come to Britain was to stir up and move sedition rebellion and open hostility 31 Consequently even strictly apolitical priests like Saint John Ogilvie Dermot O Hurley and Robert Southwell were subjected to torture and execution as were members of the laity like Sts Margaret Clitherow and Richard Gwyn This drastically contrasts with the image of the Elizabethan era as a golden age but compared to the antecedent Marian Persecutions there is an important difference to consider Queen Mary was motivated by determination to exterminate Protestantism from all her Kingdoms and to restore the independence of the English Church from control by the state During her short reign from 1553 to 1558 about 290 Protestants 32 were burned at the stake While Mary s sister Queen Elizabeth I allegedly acted out of fear for the security of her realm 33 she sought to coerce both Catholics and Protestants to embrace a national church that was completely subservient to the state Over the centuries that followed English governments continued to fear and prosecute both real and imaginary conspiracies like the Popish Plot an alleged plan to assassinate King Charles II and massacre the Protestants of the British Isles In reality the plot was a fictitious concoction by Titus Oates and Whig politician Lord Shaftesbury Before the falsity of their claims were exposed however at least 22 innocent clergy and laity including Archbishop Oliver Plunkett had been unjustly convicted of high treason and executed at Tyburn By location EditThe descriptive use of the term religious persecution is rather difficult Religious persecution has occurred in different historical geographical and social contexts since at least antiquity Until the 18th century some groups were nearly universally persecuted for their religious views such as atheists 34 Jews 35 and Zoroastrians 36 Roman Empire Edit Saint Peter an apostle of Jesus was executed by the Romans See also Persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire and Persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire Early Christianity also came into conflict with the Roman Empire and it may have been more threatening to the established polytheistic order than Judaism had been because of the importance of evangelism in Christianity Under Nero the Jewish exemption from the requirement to participate in public cults was lifted and Rome began to actively persecute monotheists This persecution ended in 313 AD with the Edict of Milan and Christianity was made the official religion of the empire in 380 AD By the eighth century Christianity had attained a clear ascendancy across Europe and neighboring regions and a period of consolidation began which was marked by the pursuit of heretics heathens Jews Muslims and various other religious groups Europe Edit Religious uniformity in early modern Europe Edit Main article Religious uniformity The St Bartholomew s Day massacre of French Protestants in 1572 By contrast to the notion of civil tolerance in early modern Europe the subjects were required to attend the state church this attitude can be described as territoriality or religious uniformity and its underlying assumption is brought to a point by a statement of the Anglican theologian Richard Hooker There is not any man of the Church of England but the same man is also a member of the English commonwealth nor any man a member of the commonwealth which is not also of the Church of England 37 Before a vigorous debate about religious persecution took place in England starting in the 1640s for centuries in Europe religion had been tied to territory In England there had been several Acts of Uniformity in continental Europe the Latin phrase cuius regio eius religio had been coined in the 16th century and applied as a fundament for the Peace of Augsburg 1555 It was pushed to the extreme by absolutist regimes particularly by the French kings Louis XIV and his successors It was under their rule that Catholicism became the sole compulsory allowed religion in France and that the huguenots had to massively leave the country Persecution meant that the state was committed to secure religious uniformity by coercive measures as eminently obvious in a statement of Roger L Estrange That which you call persecution I translate Uniformity 38 However in the 17th century writers like Pierre Bayle John Locke Richard Overton and Roger William broke the link between territory and faith which eventually resulted in a shift from territoriality to religious voluntarism 39 It was Locke who in his Letter Concerning Toleration defined the state in purely secular terms 40 The commonwealth seems to me to be a society of men constituted only for the procuring preserving and advancing their own civil interests 41 Concerning the church he went on A church then I take to be a voluntary society of men joining themselves together of their own accord 41 With this treatise John Locke laid one of the most important intellectual foundations of the separation of church and state which ultimately led to the secular state Early modern England Edit One period of religious persecution which has been extensively studied is early modern England since the rejection of religious persecution now common in the Western world originated there The English Call for Toleration was a turning point in the Christian debate on persecution and toleration and early modern England stands out to the historians as a place and time in which literally hundreds of books and tracts were published either for or against religious toleration 42 The most ambitious chronicle of that time is W K Jordan s magnum opus The Development of Religious Toleration in England 1558 1660 four volumes published 1932 1940 Jordan wrote as the threat of fascism rose in Europe and this work is seen as a defense of the fragile values of humanism and tolerance 43 More recent introductions to this period are Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England 1558 1689 2000 by John Coffey and Charitable hatred Tolerance and intolerance in England 1500 1700 2006 by Alexandra Walsham To understand why religious persecution has occurred historians like Coffey pay close attention to what the persecutors said they were doing 42 Ecclesiastical dissent and civil tolerance Edit No religion is free from internal dissent although the degree of dissent that is tolerated within a particular religious organization can strongly vary This degree of diversity tolerated within a particular church is described as ecclesiastical tolerance 44 and is one form of religious toleration However when people nowadays speak of religious tolerance they most often mean civil tolerance which refers to the degree of religious diversity that is tolerated within the state In the absence of civil toleration someone who finds himself in disagreement with his congregation does not have the option to leave and chose a different faith simply because there is only one recognized faith in the country at least officially In modern western civil law any citizen may join and leave a religious organization at will In western societies this is taken for granted but actually this legal separation of Church and State only started to emerge a few centuries ago In the Christian debate on persecution and toleration the notion of civil tolerance allowed Christian theologians to reconcile Jesus commandment to love one s enemies with other parts of the New Testament that are rather strict regarding dissent within the church Before that theologians like Joseph Hall had reasoned from the ecclesiastical intolerance of the early Christian church in the New Testament to the civil intolerance of the Christian state 45 Russia Edit The Bishop of Vladimir Feodor turned some people into slaves others were locked in prison cut their heads burnt eyes cut tongues or crucified on walls Some heretics were executed by burning them alive According to an inscription of Khan Mengual Temir Metropolitan Kiril was granted the right to heavily punish with death for blasphemy against the Orthodox Church or breach of ecclesiastical privileges He advised all means of destruction to be used against heretics but without bloodshed in the name of saving souls Heretics were drowned Novgorod Bishop Gennady Gonzov turned to Tsar Ivan III requesting the death of heretics Gennady admired the Spanish inquisitors especially his contemporary Torquemada who for 15 years of inquisition activity burned and punished thousands of people citation needed As in Rome persecuted fled to depopulated areas The most terrible punishment was considered an underground pit where rats lived Some people had been imprisoned and tied to the wall there and untied after their death 46 Old Believers were persecuted and executed the order was that even those renouncing completely their beliefs and baptized in the state church to be lynched without mercy The writer Lomonosov opposed the religious teachings and by his initiative a scientific book against them was published The book was destroyed the Russian synod insisted Lomonosov s works to be burned and requested his punishment citation needed were cutting heads hanging some by the neck some by the foot many of them were stabbed with sharp sticks and impaled on hooks This included the tethering to a ponytail drowning and freezing people alive in lakes The winners did not spare even the sick and the elderly taking them out of the monastery and throwing them mercilessly in icy vises The words step back the pen does not move in eternal darkness the ancient Solovetsky monastery is going Of the more than 500 people only a few managed to avoid the terrible court 47 Contemporary Edit President Donald Trump meets with survivors of religious persecution from 17 countries in July 2019 Although his book was written before the September 11 attacks John Coffey explicitly compares Islamophobia in the contemporary Western world to the English Whig Party s paranoia about the fictitious Popish Plot 48 Mehdi Ghezali and Murat Kurnaz were among the Muslims who were imprisoned in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp but they were not found to have any connections to terrorism because they had previously traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan to pursue their religious interests The United States submits an annual report on religious freedom and persecution to the Congress The report contains data which the United States collects from U S embassies around the world in collaboration with the Office of International Religious Freedom and other relevant U S government and non governmental institutions The data is available to the public 49 The 2018 study details country by country the violations of religious freedom taking place in approximately 75 of the 195 countries in the world Between 2007 and 2017 the PEW organization 50 found that Christians experienced harassment by governments or social groups in the largest number of countries 144 countries but that it is almost equal to the number of countries 142 in which Muslims experience harassment 50 PEW has published a caution concerning the interpretation of these numbers The Center s recent report does not attempt to estimate the number of victims in each country it does not speak to the intensity of harassment 51 No religious group is free from harassment in the contemporary world Klaus Wetzel an expert on religious persecution for the German Bundestag the House of Lords the US House of Representatives the European Parliament and the International Institute for Religious Freedom explains that In around a quarter of all countries in the world the restrictions imposed by governments or hostilities towards one or more religious groups are high or very high Some of the most populous countries in the world belong to this group such as China India Indonesia and Pakistan Therefore around three quarters of the world s population live in them 52 At the symposium on law and religion in 2014 Michelle Mack said Despite what appears to be a near universal expression of commitment to religious human rights the frequency and severity of religious persecution worldwide is staggering Although it is impossible to determine with certainty the exact numbers of people persecuted for their faith or religious affiliation it is unquestioned that violations of freedom of religion and belief including acts of severe persecution occur with fearful frequency 53 462 note 24 She quotes Irwin Colter human rights advocate and author as saying F reedom of religion remains the most persistently violated human right in the annals of the species 54 Despite the ubiquitous nature of religious persecution the traditional human rights community typically chooses to emphasize more tangible encroachments on human dignity such as violations based on race gender and class using national ethnic and linguistic groupings instead 55 By religion EditPersecutions of atheists Edit Main article Discrimination against atheists Used before the 18th century as an insult 56 atheism was punishable by death in ancient Greece as well as in the Christian disputed discuss and Muslim worlds during the Middle Ages citation needed Today atheism is punishable by death in 13 countries Afghanistan Iran Malaysia the Maldives Mauritania Nigeria Pakistan Qatar Saudi Arabia Somalia Sudan the United Arab Emirates and Yemen all of them Muslim while the overwhelming majority of the 192 United Nations member countries at best discriminate against citizens who have no belief in a god and at worst they can jail them for offences which are dubbed blasphemy 57 58 State atheism Edit Main article State atheism State atheism has been defined by David Kowalewski as the official promotion of atheism by a government typically by the active suppression of religious freedom and practice 59 It is a misnomer which is used in reference to a government s anti clericalism its opposition to religious institutional power and influence whether it is real or alleged in all aspects of public and political life including the involvement of religion in the everyday life of the citizen 60 State atheism was first practiced for a brief period in Revolutionary France citation needed and later it was practiced in Revolutionary Mexico and Communist states The Soviet Union had a long history of state atheism 61 in which social success largely required individuals to profess atheism stay away from churches and even vandalize them this attitude was especially militant during the middle Stalinist era from 1929 to 1939 62 63 64 The Soviet Union attempted to suppress religion over wide areas of its influence including places like central Asia 65 and the post World War II Eastern bloc One state within that bloc the Socialist People s Republic of Albania under Enver Hoxha went so far as to officially ban all religious practices 66 Persecution of Bahaʼis Edit Main article Persecution of Bahaʼis The Bahaʼis are Iran s largest religious minority and Iran is the location of one of the seventh largest Bahaʼi population in the world with just over 251 100 as of 2010 67 Bahaʼis in Iran have been subject to unwarranted arrests false imprisonment beatings torture unjustified executions confiscation and destruction of property owned by individuals and the Bahaʼi community denial of employment denial of government benefits denial of civil rights and liberties and denial of access to higher education More recently in the later months of 2005 an intensive anti Bahaʼi campaign was conducted by Iranian newspapers and radio stations The state run and influential Kayhan newspaper whose managing editor is appointed by Iran s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei The press in Iran ran nearly three dozen articles defaming the Bahaʼi Faith Furthermore a confidential letter sent on 29 October 2005 by the Chairman of the Command Headquarters of the Armed Forced in Iran states that the Supreme Leader of Iran Ayatollah Khamenei has instructed the Command Headquarters to identify people who adhere to the Bahaʼi Faith and to monitor their activities and gather any and all information about the members of the Bahaʼi Faith The letter was brought to the attention of the international community by Asma Jahangir the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on freedom of religion or belief in a 20 March 2006 press release 3 dead link In the press release the Special Rapporteur states that she is highly concerned by information she has received concerning the treatment of members of the Bahaʼi community in Iran She further states that The Special Rapporteur is concerned that this latest development indicates that the situation with regard to religious minorities in Iran is in fact deteriorating 4 dead link Persecution of Buddhists Edit Main articles Persecution of Buddhists Decline of Buddhism in the Indian subcontinent Chittagong Hill Tracts conflict 2012 Ramu violence Genocide of indigenous peoples Bangladesh Chakma people Jumma people Buddhist crisis Xa Lợi Pagoda raids Four Buddhist Persecutions in China Huichang Persecution of Buddhism Islamization and Turkification of Xinjiang and Haibutsu kishaku Persecution of Buddhists was a widespread phenomenon throughout the history of Buddhism lasting to this day This began as early as the 3rd century AD by the Zoroastrian high priest Kirder of the Sasanian Empire citation needed Anti Buddhist sentiments in Imperial China between the 5th and 10th century led to the Four Buddhist Persecutions in China of which the Great Anti Buddhist Persecution of 845 was probably the most severe However Buddhism managed to survive but was greatly weakened During the Northern Expedition in 1926 in Guangxi Kuomintang Muslim General Bai Chongxi led his troops in destroying Buddhist temples and smashing idols turning the temples into schools and Kuomintang party headquarters 68 During the Kuomintang Pacification of Qinghai the Muslim General Ma Bufang and his army wiped out many Tibetan Buddhists in the northeast and eastern Qinghai and destroyed Tibetan Buddhist temples 69 The Muslim invasion of the Indian subcontinent was the first great iconoclastic invasion into the Indian subcontinent 70 According to William Johnston hundreds of Buddhist monasteries and shrines were destroyed Buddhist texts were burnt by the Muslim armies monks and nuns killed during the 12th and 13th centuries in the Indo Gangetic Plain region 71 The Buddhist university of Nalanda was mistaken for a fort because of the walled campus The Buddhist monks who had been slaughtered were mistaken for Brahmins according to Minhaj i Siraj 72 The walled town the Odantapuri monastery was also conquered by his forces Sumpa basing his account on that of Sakyasribhadra who was at Magadha in 1200 states that the Buddhist university complexes of Odantapuri and Vikramshila were also destroyed and the monks massacred 73 Muslim forces attacked the north western regions of the Indian subcontinent many times 74 Many places were destroyed and renamed For example Odantapuri s monasteries were destroyed in 1197 by Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji and the town was renamed 75 Likewise Vikramashila was destroyed by the forces of Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji around 1200 76 The sacred Mahabodhi Temple was almost completely destroyed by the Muslim invaders 77 78 Many Buddhist monks fled to Nepal Tibet and South India to avoid the consequences of war 79 Tibetan pilgrim Chojepal 1179 1264 who arrived in India in 1234 80 had to flee advancing Muslim troops multiple times as they were sacking Buddhist sites 81 In Japan the haibutsu kishaku during the Meiji Restoration starting in 1868 was an event triggered by the official policy of separation of Shinto and Buddhism or shinbutsu bunri This caused great destruction to Buddhism in Japan the destruction of Buddhist temples images and texts took place on a large scale all over the country and Buddhist monks were forced to return to secular life citation needed During the 2012 Ramu violence in Bangladesh a 25 000 strong Muslim mob set fire to destroy at least twelve Buddhist temples and around fifty homes throughout the town and surrounding villages after seeing a picture of an allegedly desecrated Quran which they claimed had been posted on Facebook by Uttam Barua a local Buddhist man 82 83 The actual posting of the photo was not done by the Buddhist who was falsely slandered 84 Persecution of Christians Edit Main articles Persecution of Christians and History of Christian thought on persecution and tolerance See also Armenian genocide Seyfo Greek genocide Hamidian massacres Persecution of Christians by ISIL and Persecution of Copts According to tradition early Christians were fed to lions in the Colosseum of Rome This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions January 2021 From the beginnings of Christianity as a movement within Judaism Early Christians were persecuted for their faith at the hands of both Jews and the Roman Empire which controlled much of the areas where Christianity was first distributed This continued from the first century until the early fourth when the religion was legalized by the Edict of Milan eventually becoming the State church of the Roman Empire Many Christians fled persecution in the Roman empire by emigrating to the Persian empire where for a century and a half after Constantine s conversion they were persecuted under the Sassanids with thousands losing their lives 85 76 Christianity continued to spread through merchants slaves traders captives and contacts with Jewish communities as well as missionaries who were often killed for their efforts 85 97 131 224 225 551 This killing continued into the Early modern period beginning in the fifteenth century to the Late modern period of the twentieth century and into the contemporary period today 86 87 88 89 90 Greek Christians in 1922 fleeing their homes from Kharput to Trebizond In the 1910s and 1920s the Armenian Greek and Assyrian genocides were perpetrated by the Ottoman government 91 92 In contemporary society Christians are persecuted in Iran and other parts of the Middle East for example for proselytising which is illegal there 93 94 95 Of the 100 200 million Christians alleged to be under assault the majority are persecuted in Muslim majority nations 96 Every year the Christian non profit organization Open Doors publishes the World Watch List a list of the top 50 countries which it designates as the most dangerous for Christians The 2018 World Watch List has the following countries as its top ten North Korea and Eritrea whose Christian and Muslim religions are controlled by the state and Afghanistan Myanmar Somalia Sudan Pakistan Libya Iraq Yemen India and Iran which are all predominantly non Christian 97 Due to the large number of Christian majority countries differing groups of Christians are harassed and persecuted in Christian countries such as Eritrea 98 and Mexico 99 more often than in Muslim countries although not in greater numbers 100 There are low to moderate restrictions on religious freedom in three quarters of the world s countries with high and very high restrictions in a quarter of them according to the State Department s report on religious freedom and persecution delivered annually to Congress 101 The Internationale Gesellschaft fur Menschenrechte 102 the International Society for Human Rights in Frankfurt Germany is a non governmental organization with 30 000 members from 38 countries who monitor human rights In September 2009 then chairman Martin Lessenthin 103 issued a report estimating that 80 of acts of religious persecution around the world were aimed at Christians at that time 104 105 According to the World Evangelical Alliance over 200 million Christians are denied fundamental human rights solely because of their faith 106 A report released by the UK s Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and a report by the PEW organization studying worldwide restrictions of religious freedom both have Christians suffering in the highest number of countries rising from 125 in 2015 to 144 as of 2018 107 50 108 PEW has published a caution concerning the interpretation of these numbers The Center s recent report does not attempt to estimate the number of victims in each country it does not speak to the intensity of harassment 51 France who restricts the wearing of the hijab is counted as a persecuting country equally with Nigeria and Pakistan where according to the Global Security organization Christians have been killed for their faith 109 In December 2016 the Center for the Study of Global Christianity CSGC at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts published a statement that between 2005 and 2015 there were 900 000 Christian martyrs worldwide an average of 90 000 per year marking a Christian as persecuted every 8 minutes 110 111 However the BBC has reported that others such as Open Doors and the International Society for Human Rights have disputed that number s accuracy 112 52 113 Gina Zurlo the CSGC s assistant director explained that two thirds of the 90 000 died in tribal conflicts and nearly half were victims of the civil war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 114 Klaus Wetzel an internationally recognized expert on religious persecution explains that Gordon Conwell defines Christian martyrdom in the widest possible sense while Wetzel and Open doors and others such as The International Institute for Religious Freedom IIRF use a more restricted definition those who are killed who would not have been killed if they had not been Christians 115 Open Doors documents that anti Christian sentiment is presently based on direct evidence and makes conservative estimates based on indirect evidence 116 This approach dramatically lowers the numerical count Open Doors says that while numbers fluctuate every year they estimate 11 Christians are currently dying for their faith somewhere in the world every day 117 Persecution of Copts Edit Main article Persecution of Copts See also Category Persecution of Copts The persecution of Copts is a historical and ongoing issue in Egypt against Coptic Orthodox Christianity and its followers It is also a prominent example of the poor status of Christians in the Middle East despite the religion being native to the region Copts are the Christ followers in Egypt usually Oriental Orthodox who currently make up around 10 of the population of Egypt the largest religious minority of that country a Copts have cited instances of persecution throughout their history and Human Rights Watch has noted growing religious intolerance and sectarian violence against Coptic Christians in recent years as well as a failure by the Egyptian government to effectively investigate properly and prosecute those responsible 122 123 The Muslim conquest of Egypt took place in AD 639 during the Byzantine empire Despite the political upheaval Egypt remained a mainly Christian but Copts lost their majority status after the 14th century 124 as a result of the intermittent persecution and the destruction of the Christian churches there 125 accompanied by heavy taxes for those who refused to convert 126 From the Muslim conquest of Egypt onwards the Coptic Christians were persecuted by different Muslims regimes 127 such as the Umayyad Caliphate 128 Abbasid Caliphate 129 130 131 Fatimid Caliphate 132 133 134 Mamluk Sultanate 135 136 and Ottoman Empire the persecution of Coptic Christians included closing and demolishing churches and forced conversion to Islam 137 138 139 Since 2011 hundreds of Egyptian Copts have been killed in sectarian clashes and many homes Churches and businesses have been destroyed In just one province Minya 77 cases of sectarian attacks on Copts between 2011 and 2016 have been documented by the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights 140 The abduction and disappearance of Coptic Christian women and girls also remains a serious ongoing problem 141 142 143 Persecution of Jehovah s Witnesses Edit Main article Persecution of Jehovah s Witnesses Countries where Jehovah s Witnesses activities are banned Political and religious animosity against Jehovah s Witnesses has at times led to mob action and government oppression in various countries Their stance regarding political neutrality and their refusal to serve in the military has led to imprisonment of members who refused conscription during World War II and at other times where national service has been compulsory Their religious activities are currently banned or restricted in some countries 144 including China Vietnam and many Islamic states 145 146 In 1933 there were approximately 20 000 Jehovah s Witnesses in Nazi Germany 147 of whom about 10 000 were imprisoned Jehovah s Witnesses were brutally persecuted by the Nazis because they refused military service and allegiance to Hitler s National Socialist Party 148 149 150 151 152 Of those 2 000 were sent to Nazi concentration camps where they were identified by purple triangles 150 as many as 1 200 died including 250 who were executed 153 154 In Canada during World War II Jehovah s Witnesses were interned in camps 155 along with political dissidents and people of Chinese and Japanese descent 156 Jehovah s Witnesses faced discrimination in Quebec until the Quiet Revolution including bans on distributing literature or holding meetings 157 158 In 1951 about 9 300 Jehovah s Witnesses in the Soviet Union were deported to Siberia as part of Operation North in April 1951 159 In April 2017 the Supreme Court of Russia labeled Jehovah s Witnesses an extremist organization banned its activities in Russia and issued an order to confiscate the organization s assets 160 Authors including William Whalen Shawn Francis Peters and former Witnesses Barbara Grizzuti Harrison Alan Rogerson and William Schnell have claimed the arrests and mob violence in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s were the consequence of what appeared to be a deliberate course of provocation of authorities and other religious groups by Jehovah s Witnesses Whalen Harrison and Schnell have suggested Rutherford invited and cultivated opposition for publicity purposes in a bid to attract dispossessed members of society and to convince members that persecution from the outside world was evidence of the truth of their struggle to serve God 161 162 163 164 165 Watch Tower Society literature of the period directed that Witnesses should never seek a controversy nor resist arrest but also advised members not to co operate with police officers or courts that ordered them to stop preaching and to prefer jail rather than pay fines 166 Persecution of Dogons Edit Main articles Dogon people and Dogon religion For almost 1000 years 167 the Dogon people an ancient tribe in Mali 168 had faced religious and ethnic persecution through jihads by dominant Muslim communities 167 These jihadic expeditions were undertaken in order to force the Dogon to abandon their traditional religious beliefs and convert to Islam Such jihads caused the Dogon to abandon their original villages and move up to the cliffs of Bandiagara in search of a place where they could defend themselves more efficiently and escape persecution which they often did by building their dwellings in little nooks and crannies 167 169 In the early era of French colonialism in Mali the French authorities appointed Muslim relatives of El Hadj Umar Tall as chiefs of the Bandiagara despite the fact that the area has been a Dogon area for centuries 170 In 1864 Tidiani Tall the nephew and successor of the 19th century Senegambian jihadist and Muslim leader El Hadj Umar Tall chose to make Bandiagara the capital of the Toucouleur Empire thereby exacerbating the inter religious and inter ethnic conflict In recent years the Dogon have accused the Fulanis of supporting Islamic terrorist groups like Al Qaeda and they have also accused the Fulanis of sheltering members of these same terrorist groups in Dogon country leading to the creation of the Dogon militia Dan Na Ambassagou in 2016 whose aim is to defend the Dogon against systematic attacks That action resulted in the Ogossagou massacre of Fulanis in March 2019 and the Fula retaliated by committing the Sobane Da massacre in June of that year In the wake of the Ogossagou massacre the President of Mali Ibrahim Boubacar Keita and his government ordered the dissolution of Dan Na Ambassagou whom they hold partly responsible for the attacks The Dogon militia group denied its involvement in the massacre and it also rejected calls to disband itself 171 Persecution of Druze Edit Qalb Loze in June 2015 Druze were massacred there by the jihadist Nusra Front 172 Historically the relationship between the Druze and Muslims has been characterized by intense persecution 173 174 175 The Druze faith is often classified as a branch of Isma ilism Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam most Druze do not identify as Muslims 176 177 178 and they do not accept the Five Pillars of Islam 179 The Druze have frequently experienced persecution by different Muslim regimes such as the Shia Fatimid Caliphate 180 Mamluk 181 Sunni Ottoman Empire 182 and Egypt Eyalet 183 184 The persecution of the Druze included massacres demolishing Druze prayer houses and holy places and forced conversion to Islam 185 Those were no ordinary killings in the Druze s narrative they were meant to eradicate the whole community according to the Druze narrative 186 Most recently the Syrian Civil War which began in 2011 saw persecution of the Druze at the hands of Islamic extremists 187 188 Ibn Taymiyya a prominent Muslim scholar muhaddith dismissed the Druze as non Muslims 189 and his fatwa cited that Druzes Are not at the level of Ahl al Kitab People of the Book nor mushrikin polytheists Rather they are from the most deviant kuffar Infidel Their women can be taken as slaves and their property can be seized they are to be killed whenever they are found and cursed as they described It is obligatory to kill their scholars and religious figures so that they do not misguide others 190 which in that setting would have legitimized violence against them as apostates 191 192 Ottomans have often relied on Ibn Taymiyya religious ruling to justify their persecution of Druze 193 Persecution of Falun Gong Edit Main articles Persecution of Falun Gong 610 Office and Organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners in China The persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual practice began with campaigns initiated in 1999 by the Chinese Communist Party CCP to eliminate Falun Gong in China It is characterised by multifaceted propaganda campaign a program of enforced ideological conversion and re education and a variety of extralegal coercive measures such as arbitrary arrests forced labor and physical torture sometimes resulting in death 194 There have being reports of organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners in China Several researchers most notably Canadian human rights lawyer David Matas former parliamentarian David Kilgour and investigative journalist Ethan Gutmann estimate that tens of thousands of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience have been killed to supply a lucrative trade in human organs and cadavers 195 Persecution of Hindus Edit Main article Persecution of Hindus See also Anti Hindu sentiment Ruins of the Martand Sun Temple The temple was completely destroyed on the orders of Muslim Sultan Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century with demolition lasting a year 196 197 Hindus have experienced historical and current religious persecution and systematic violence These occurred in the form of forced conversions documented massacres demolition and desecration of temples as well as the destruction of educational centers For example Hindus have been one of the targeted and persecuted minorities in Pakistan Militancy and sectarianism has been rising in Pakistan since the 1990s and the religious minorities have borne the brunt of the Islamist s ferocity suffering greater persecution than in any earlier decade states Farahnaz Ispahani a Public Policy Scholar at the Wilson Center This has led to attacks and forced conversion of Hindus and other minorities such as Christians 198 199 200 According to Tetsuya Nakatani a Japanese scholar of Cultural Anthropology specializing in South Asia refugee history after the mass exodus of Hindu Sikh and other non Muslim refugees during the 1947 partition of British India there were several waves of Hindu refugees arrival into India from its neighbors 201 The fearful and persecuted refugee movements were often after various religious riots between 1949 and 1971 that targeted non Muslims within West Pakistan or East Pakistan now Bangladesh The status of these persecuted Hindu refugees in India was in political limbo until the passage of Citizenship Amendment Act 2019 by the Indian Government Systemically in Pakistan Hindus are persecuted under the government s Blasphemy Law with often consequence of death irrelevant of the legal claim s accuracy and as per the rhetoric of mainstream politicians interpreting vague constitutional law have second class rights in the nation regarding places of worship and facets of their religion Similar concerns about religious persecution of Hindu and other minorities in Bangladesh have also been expressed A famous report by Dr Abul Barkat a famous Bangladeshi economist and research projects that there will be no Hindus left in Bangladesh in 30 years 202 203 204 The USCIRF notes hundreds of cases of killings attempted killings death threats assaults rapes kidnappings and attacks on homes businesses and places of worship on religious minorities in 2017 205 Since the 1990s Hindus have been a persecuted minority in Afghanistan and a subject of intense hate with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan 206 Their targeted persecution triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum 207 The persecuted Hindus have remained stateless and without citizenship rights in India since it has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi though the recent Citizen Amendment Act passed by India is a form of solace for those Hindus having entered India before 2015 206 208 The Bangladesh Liberation War 1971 resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century While estimates of the number of casualties was 3 000 000 it is reasonably certain that Hindus bore a disproportionate brunt of the Pakistan Army s onslaught against the Bengali population of what was East Pakistan An article in Time magazine dated 2 August 1971 stated the Hindus who account for three fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead have borne the brunt of the Muslim military hatred 209 Senator Edward Kennedy wrote in a report that was part of United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations testimony dated 1 November 1971 Hardest hit have been members of the Hindu community who have been robbed of their lands and shops systematically slaughtered and in some places painted with yellow patches marked H All of this has been officially sanctioned ordered and implemented under martial law from Islamabad In the same report Senator Kennedy reported that 80 of the refugees in India were Hindus and according to numerous international relief agencies such as UNESCO and World Health Organization the number of East Pakistani refugees at their peak in India was close to 10 million Given that the Hindu population in East Pakistan was around 11 million in 1971 this suggests that up to 8 million or more than 70 of the Hindu population had fled the country The Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Sydney Schanberg covered the start of the war and wrote extensively on the suffering of the East Bengalis including the Hindus both during and after the conflict In a syndicated column The Pakistani Slaughter That Nixon Ignored he wrote about his return to liberated Bangladesh in 1972 Other reminders were the yellow H s the Pakistanis had painted on the homes of Hindus particular targets of the Muslim army by Muslim army meaning the Pakistan Army which had targeted Bengali Muslims as well Newsday 29 April 1994 Hindus constitute approximately 0 5 of the total population of the United States Hindus in the US enjoy both de jure and de facto legal equality However a series of attacks were made on people Indian origin by a street gang called the Dotbusters in New Jersey in 1987 the dot signifying the Bindi dot sticker worn on the forehead by Indian women 210 The lackadaisical attitude of the local police prompted the South Asian community to arrange small groups all across the state to fight back against the street gang The perpetrators have been put to trial On 2 January 2012 a Hindu worship center in New York City was firebombed 211 The Dotbusters were primarily based in New York and New Jersey and committed most of their crimes in Jersey City A number of perpetrators have been brought to trial for these assaults Although tougher anti hate crime laws were passed by the New Jersey legislature in 1990 the attacks continued with 58 cases of hate crimes against Indians in New Jersey reported in 1991 212 Persecution of Hindus also contemporarily has been seen in the Indian controlled Muslim majority state of Jammu and Kashmir In the Kashmir region approximately 300 Kashmiri Pandits were killed between September 1989 to 1990 in various incidents 213 In early 1990 local Urdu newspapers Aftab and Al Safa called upon Kashmiris to wage jihad against India and ordered the expulsion of all Hindus choosing to remain in Kashmir 213 In the following days masked men ran in the streets with AK 47s shooting to kill Hindus who would not leave 213 Notices were placed on the houses of all Hindus telling them to leave within 24 hours or die 213 Since March 1990 estimates of between 300 000 and 500 000 pandits have migrated outside Kashmir due to persecution by Islamic fundamentalists in the largest case of ethnic cleansing since the partition of India 214 Many Kashmiri Pandits have been killed by Islamist militants in incidents such as the Wandhama massacre and the 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre 215 216 217 The incidents of massacring and forced eviction have been termed ethnic cleansing by some observers 213 In Bangladesh on 28 February 2013 the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi the Vice President of the Jamaat e Islami to death for the war crimes committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War Following the sentence the Hindus were attacked in different parts of the country Hindu properties were looted Hindu houses were burnt into ashes and Hindu temples were desecrated and set on fire 218 219 This trend has continued sadly Islamist groups in Bangladesh nearing the 50th anniversary of the Bengali Hindu Genocide set fire to and vandalized several Hindu temples along with 80 houses 220 221 Persecutions of Jews Edit Main articles Persecution of Jews Religious antisemitism Antisemitism in Christianity Martin Luther and the Jews Antisemitism in Islam and Martyrdom in Judaism Woodcut of the Seleucid persecution depicting martyrs refusing to sacrifice from Die Bibel in Bildern A major component of Jewish history persecutions have been committed by Seleucids 222 ancient Greeks 35 ancient Romans Christians Catholic Orthodox and Protestant Muslims Nazis etc Some of the most important events which constitute this history include the 1066 Granada massacre the Rhineland massacres by Catholics but against papal orders see also Sicut Judaeis the Alhambra Decree after the Reconquista and the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition the publication of On the Jews and Their Lies by Martin Luther which furthered Protestant anti Judaism and was later used to strengthen German antisemitism and justify pogroms and the Holocaust citation needed According to FBI statistics the majority of religiously motivated hate crimes which are committed in the United States are committed against Jews In 2018 anti Jewish hate crimes represented 57 8 of all religiously motivated hate crimes while anti Muslim hate crimes which were the second most common only represented 14 5 223 Persecution of Muslims Edit Main article Persecution of Muslims See also Persecution of minority Muslim groups Persecution of Muslims is the religious persecution that is inflicted upon followers of the Islamic faith In the early days of Islam at Mecca the new Muslims were often subjected to abuse and persecution by the pagan Meccans often called Mushrikin the unbelievers or polytheists 224 225 Muslims were persecuted by Meccans at the time of Muhammed Currently Muslims face religious restrictions in 142 countries according to the PEW report on rising religious restrictions around the world 226 According to the US State Department s 2019 freedom of religion report the Central African Republic remains divided between the Christian anti Balaka and the predominantly Muslim ex Seleka militia forces with many Muslim communities displaced and not allowed to practice their religion freely 227 In Nigeria conflicts between predominantly Muslim Fulani herdsmen and predominantly Christian farmers in the North Central states continued throughout 2019 228 In China General Secretary Xi Jinping has decreed that all members of the Chinese Communist Party CCP must be unyielding Marxist atheists In Xinjiang province the government enforced restrictions on Muslims The U S government estimates that since April 2017 the Chinese government arbitrarily detained more than one million Uighurs ethnic Kazakhs Hui and members of other Muslim groups as well as Uighur Christians in specially built or converted internment camps in Xinjiang and subjected them to forced disappearance political indoctrination torture physical and psychological abuse including forced sterilization and sexual abuse forced labor and prolonged detention without trial because of their religion and ethnicity There were reports of individuals dying as a result of injuries sustained during interrogations Authorities in Xinjiang restricted access to mosques and barred youths from participating in religious activities including fasting during Ramadan maintained extensive and invasive security and surveillance forcing Uighurs and other ethnic and religious minorities to install spyware on their mobile phones and accept government officials and CCP members living in their homes Satellite imagery and other sources indicated the government destroyed mosques cemeteries and other religious sites The government sought the forcible repatriation of Uighur and other Muslims from foreign countries and detained some of those who returned Anti Muslim speech in social media remained widespread 229 Shia Sunni conflicts persist Indonesia is approximately 87 Sunni Muslim and Shia and Ahmadi Muslims reported feeling under constant threat Anti Shia rhetoric was common throughout 2019 in some online media outlets and on social media 230 In Saudi Arabia the government is based largely on sharia as interpreted by the Hanbali school of Sunni Islamic jurisprudence Freedom of religion is not provided under the law In January and May 2019 police raided predominantly Shia villages in the al Qatif Governorate In April the government executed 37 citizens 33 of the 37 were from the country s minority Shia community and had been convicted following what they stated were unfair trials for various alleged crimes including protest related offenses Authorities detained three Shia Muslims who have written in the past on the discrimination faced by Shia Muslims with no official charges filed they remained in detention at year s end Instances of prejudice and discrimination against Shia Muslims continued to occur 231 Islamophobia continues In Finland A report by the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance ECRI said hate crimes and intolerant speech in public discourse principally against Muslims and asylum seekers many of whom belong to religious minorities had increased in recent years A Finns Party politician publicly compared Muslim asylum seekers to an invasive species There were several demonstrations by neo Nazis and nativist groups in 2019 One neo Nazi group the NRM the Nordic Resistance Movement continued to post anti Muslim and anti Semitic statements online and demonstrated with the anti immigrant group Soldiers of Odin 232 The ongoing Rohingya genocide has resulted in over 25 000 deaths from 2016 to present 233 234 Over 700 000 refugees have been sent abroad since 2017 235 Gang rapes and other acts of sexual violence mainly against Rohingya women and girls have also been committed by the Rakhine Buddhists and the Burmese military s soldiers along with the arson of Rohingya homes and mosques as well as many other human rights violations 236 The ongoing Uyghur genocide is a series of human rights abuses perpetrated by the Chinese government against the majority Muslim Uyghur people and other ethnic and religious minorities in and around the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region XUAR of the People s Republic of China 237 238 239 Since 2014 240 the Chinese government under the direction of the CCP during the administration of CCP general secretary Xi Jinping has pursued policies leading to more than one million Muslims 241 242 243 244 245 the majority of them Uyghurs being held in secretive internment camps without any legal process 246 247 in what has become the largest scale and most systematic detention of ethnic and religious minorities since the Holocaust 248 249 250 The Chinese Government has subjected hundreds of thousands of members of Muslim minority groups living in Xinjiang to forced abortions forced sterilizations and the forced administration of contraceptives including contraceptive implants methods of birth control that had exempted ethnic minorities up until that point 251 252 253 Uyghurs and members of other minority groups have been made subject to a widespread forced labor apparatus 254 255 256 257 250 Uyghurs and other religious minorities detained within the Xinjiang internment camps have also been subjected to systematic rape and torture 258 259 260 Persecution of Pagans and Heathens Edit Main article Persecution of Heathens See also Category Persecution of Pagans Persecution of Serers Edit Main articles Serer religion and Serer history The persecution of the Serer people of Senegal Gambia and Mauritania is multifaceted and it includes both religious and ethnic elements Religious and ethnic persecution of the Serer people dates back to the 11th century when King War Jabi usurped the throne of Tekrur part of present day Senegal in 1030 and by 1035 introduced Sharia law and forced his subjects to submit to Islam 261 With the assistance of his son Leb their Almoravid allies and other African ethnic groups who have embraced Islam the Muslim coalition army launched jihads against the Serer people of Tekrur who refused to abandon Serer religion in favour of Islam 262 263 264 265 The number of Serer deaths are unknown but it triggered the exodus of the Serers of Tekrur to the south following their defeat where they were granted asylum by the lamanes 265 Persecution of the Serer people continued from the medieval era to the 19th century resulting in the Battle of Fandane Thiouthioune From the 20th to the 21st centuries persecution of the Serers is less obvious nevertheless they are the object of scorn and prejudice 266 267 Persecutions of Sikhs Edit See also Chhota Ghallughara Vadda Ghalughara 1947 Mirpur massacre 1947 1948 Rajouri massacre 1984 anti Sikh riots Chittisinghpura massacre and Kabul gurdwara attack Sikhism is a Dharmic religion that originated in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent 268 around the end of the 15th century CE The Sikh religion developed and evolved in times of religious persecution gaining converts from both Hinduism and Islam 269 Mughal rulers of India tortured and executed two of the Sikh gurus Guru Arjan 1563 1605 and Guru Tegh Bahadur 1621 1675 after they refused to convert to Islam 270 271 272 273 274 The Islamic era persecution of Sikhs triggered the founding of the Khalsa by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699 as an order to protect the freedom of conscience and religion 270 275 276 with members expressing the qualities of a Sant Sipahi a saint soldier 277 278 According to Ashish Bose a population research scholar Sikhs and Hindus were well integrated in Afghanistan until the Soviet invasion when their economic condition worsened Thereafter they became a subject of intense hate with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan 206 Their targeted persecution triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum 207 206 Many of them started arriving in and after 1992 as refugees in India with some seeking asylum in the United Kingdom and other western countries 206 207 Unlike the arrivals in the West the persecuted Sikh refugees who arrived in India have remained stateless and lived as refugees because India has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi 206 208 On 7 November 1947 thousands of Hindus and Sikhs were targeted in the Rajouri Massacre in the Jammu and Kashmir princely state It is estimated 30 000 Hindus and Sikhs were either killed abducted or injured 279 280 281 In one instance on 12 November 1947 alone between 3000 and 7000 were killed 282 A few weeks after on 25 November 1947 tribal forces began the 1947 Mirpur massacre of thousands more Hindus and Sikhs An estimated 20 000 died in the massacre 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 In June 1984 during Operation Blue Star Indira Gandhi ordered the Indian Army to attack the Golden Temple and eliminate any insurgents as it had been occupied by Sikh separatists who were stockpiling weapons Later operations by Indian paramilitary forces were initiated to clear the separatists from the countryside of Punjab state 291 The 1984 anti Sikhs riots were a series of pogroms 292 293 294 295 directed against Sikhs in India by anti Sikh mobs in response to the assassination of Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards There were more than 8 000 296 deaths including 3 000 in Delhi 294 The violence in Delhi was triggered by the assassination of Indira Gandhi India s prime minister on 31 October 1984 by two of her Sikh bodyguards in response to her actions authorising the military operation After the assassination following Operation Blue Star many Indian National Congress workers including Jagdish Tytler Sajjan Kumar and Kamal Nath were accused of inciting and participating in riots targeting the Sikh population of the capital The Indian government reported 2 700 deaths in the ensuing chaos In the aftermath of the riots the Indian government reported 20 000 had fled the city however the People s Union for Civil Liberties reported at least 1 000 displaced persons 297 The most affected regions were the Sikh neighbourhoods in Delhi The Central Bureau of Investigation the main Indian investigating agency is of the opinion that the acts of violence were organized with the support from the then Delhi police officials and the central government headed by Indira Gandhi s son Rajiv Gandhi 298 Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister after his mother s death and when asked about the riots said when a big tree falls Mrs Gandhi s death the earth shakes occurrence of riots thus trying to justify communal strife 299 There are allegations that the Indian National Congress government at that time destroyed evidence and shielded the guilty The Asian Age front page story called the government actions the Mother of all Cover ups 300 301 There are allegations that the violence was led and often perpetrated by Indian National Congress activists and sympathisers during the riots 302 The government then led by the Congress was widely criticised for doing very little at the time possibly acting as a conspirator The conspiracy theory is supported by the fact that voting lists were used to identify Sikh families Despite their communal conflict and riots record the Indian National Congress claims to be a secular party The Chittisinghpura massacre of 35 villagers of the Sikh faith that was carried out on 20 March 2000 in the Chittisinghpora Chittisinghpura village of Anantnag district Jammu and Kashmir India on the eve of President Bill Clinton s state visit to India The identity of the perpetrators remains unknown The Indian government asserts that the massacre was conducted by Pakistan based militant group Lashkar e Taiba LeT Pakistani accounts accuse the Indian Army and RSS of the massacre 303 304 305 306 On 25 March 2020 ISIS Haqqani network Gunmen and Suicide bombers attacked the Gurdwara Har Rai Sahib a Sikh shrine in Kabul Afghanistan About 200 worshipers were reported to have been in the building in which 25 Sikh worshippers were killed and leaving at least 8 wounded after an hour long siege which ended in all assailants being killed by responding security forces At least one child was said to have been among people who were killed according to the ministry of interior s statement Persecution of Yazidis Edit Main article Persecution of Yazidis See also Category Persecution of Yazidis The Persecution of Yazidis has been ongoing since at least the 10th century 307 308 The Yazidi religion is regarded as devil worship by Islamists 309 Yazidis have been persecuted by Muslim Kurdish tribes since the 10th century 307 and by the Ottoman Empire from the 17th to the 20th centuries 310 After the 2014 Sinjar massacre of thousands of Yazidis by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Yazidis still face violence from the Turkish Armed Forces and its ally the Syrian National Army as well as discrimination from the Kurdistan Regional Government According to Yazidi tradition based on oral traditions and folk songs estimated that 74 genocides against the Yazidis have been carried out in the past 800 years 311 Persecution of Zoroastrians Edit Main article Persecution of Zoroastrians A Zoroastrian family in Qajar Iran about 1910 Persecution of Zoroastrians is the religious persecution inflicted upon the followers of the Zoroastrian faith The persecution of Zoroastrians occurred throughout the religion s history The discrimination and harassment began in the form of sparse violence and forced conversions Muslims are recorded to have destroyed fire temples Zoroastrians living under Muslim rule were required to pay a tax called jizya 312 Zoroastrian places of worship were desecrated fire temples were destroyed and mosques were built in their place Many libraries were burned and much of their cultural heritage was lost Gradually an increasing number of laws were passed which regulated Zoroastrian behavior and limited their ability to participate in society Over time the persecution of Zoroastrians became more common and widespread and the number of believers decreased by force significantly 312 Most were forced to convert due to the systematic abuse and discrimination inflicted upon them by followers of Islam Once a Zoroastrian family was forced to convert to Islam the children were sent to an Islamic school to learn Arabic and study the teachings of Islam as a result some of these people lost their Zoroastrian faith However under the Samanids who were Zoroastrian converts to Islam the Persian language flourished On occasion the Zoroastrian clergy assisted Muslims in attacks against those whom they deemed Zoroastrian heretics 312 A Zoroastrian astrologer named Mulla Gushtasp predicted the fall of the Zand dynasty to the Qajar army in Kerman Because of Gushtasp s forecast the Zoroastrians of Kerman were spared by the conquering army of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar Despite the aforementioned favorable incident the Zoroastrians during the Qajar dynasty remained in agony and their population continued to decline Even during the rule of Agha Mohammad Khan the founder of the dynasty many Zoroastrians were killed and some were taken as captives to Azerbaijan 313 Zoroastrians regard the Qajar period as one of their worst 314 During the Qajar dynasty religious persecution of the Zoroastrians was rampant Due to the increasing contacts with influential Parsi philanthropists such as Maneckji Limji Hataria many Zoroastrians left Iran for India There they formed the second major Indian Zoroastrian community known as the Iranis 315 Persecution of philosophers EditMain article Persecution of philosophers See also Category Persecution of philosophers Throughout the history of philosophy philosophers have been imprisoned for various offenses by courts and tribunals often as a result of their philosophical activities and some of them have even been put to death The most famous case in which a philosopher was put on trial is the case of Socrates who was tried for amongst other charges corrupting the youth and impiety 316 Others include Giordano Bruno pantheist philosopher who was burned at the stake by the Roman Inquisition for his heretical religious views 317 and or his cosmological views 318 Tommaso Campanella confined to a convent for his heretical views namely an opposition to the authority of Aristotle and later imprisoned in a castle for 27 years during which he wrote his most famous works including The City of the Sun 319 Baruch Spinoza Jewish philosopher who at age 23 was put in cherem similar to excommunication by the Orthodox Jewish leadership of the Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam for heresies such as his controversial ideas regarding the authenticity of the Hebrew Bible which formed the foundations of modern biblical criticism and the allegedly pantheistic nature of the God of Israel 320 Prior to that Spinoza had been attacked on the steps of the Portuguese synagogue by a knife wielding assailant shouting Heretic 321 and later his books were added to the Roman Catholic Church s Index of Forbidden Books See also Edit Religion portalChristian privilege Conversion of non Islamic places of worship into mosques Cultural genocide Democide Discrimination Freedom of religion Fundamentalism Genocide Human rights abuses Islamic religious police List of Christian women of the patristic age Oppression Persecution Prejudice Price tag attack policy Religious abuse Religious discrimination Religious fanaticism Religious intolerance Religious pluralism Religious segregation Religious terrorism Religious violence Religious war State atheism State religionNotes Edit In 2017 the Wall Street Journal reported that the vast majority of Egypt s estimated 9 5 million Christians approximately 10 of the country s population are Orthodox Copts 118 In 2019 the Associated Press cited an estimate of 10 million Copts in Egypt 119 In 2015 the Wall Street Journal reported The Egyptian government estimates about 5 million Copts but the Coptic Orthodox Church says 15 18 million Reliable numbers are hard to find but estimates suggest they make up somewhere between 6 and 18 of the population 120 The CIA World Factbook reported a 2015 estimate that 10 of the Egyptian population is Christian including both Copts and non Copts 121 References Edit Grim Brian J Finke Roger August 2007 Religious Persecution in Cross National Context Clashing Civilizations or Regulated Religious Economies American Sociological Review 72 4 633 658 doi 10 1177 000312240707200407 S2CID 145734744 David T Smith 12 November 2015 Religious Persecution and Political Order in the United States Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 1 107 11731 0 Persecution in this study refers to violence or discrimination against members of a religious minority because of their religious affiliation Persecution involves the most damaging expressions of prejudice against an out group going beyond verbal abuse and social avoidance It refers to actions that are intended to deprive individuals of their political rights and force minorities to assimilate leave or live as second class citizens When these actions persistently happen over a period of time and include large numbers of both perpetrators and victims we may refer to them as being part of a campaign of persecution that usually has the goal of excluding the targeted minority from the polity a b Nazila Ghanea Hercock 11 November 2013 The Challenge of Religious Discrimination at the Dawn of the New Millennium Springer pp 91 92 ISBN 978 94 017 5968 7 Bateman J Keith 2013 Don t call it persecution when it s not Evangelical Missions Quarterly 49 1 54 56 also pp 57 62 a b Kippenberg Hans G 2020 1 In Raschle Christian R Dijkstra Jitse H F eds Religious Violence in the Ancient World From Classical Athens to Late Antiquity Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108849210 Jinkins Michael Christianity Tolerance and Pluralism A Theological Engagement with Isaiah Berlin s Social Theory United Kingdom Taylor amp Francis 2004 Chapter 3 no page s available a b c d e f g h Grim Brian J Finke Roger 2010 The Price of Freedom Denied Religious Persecution and Conflict in the Twenty First Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139492416 Grim BJ Finke R 2007 Religious Persecution in Cross National Context Clashing Civilizations or Regulated Religious Economies American Sociological Review 72 4 633 658 doi 10 1177 000312240707200407 S2CID 145734744 Moore R I 2007 The Formation of a Persecuting Society second ed Malden Massachusetts Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 2964 0 Gibson James L 25 March 2019 James L Gibson Department of Political Science Washington University in St Louis Arts and Sciences Sidney W Souers Professor of Government a b Gibson James L and Gouws Amanda Overcoming Intolerance in South Africa Experiments in Democratic Persuasion United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2005 Heisig James W Philosophers of Nothingness An Essay on the Kyoto School United States University of Hawai i Press 2001 Zagorin Perez 2013 How the Idea of Religious Toleration Came to the West Princeton University Press p 16 ISBN 9781400850716 Christian R Raschle academia edu University of Montreal Universite de Montreal Histoire Faculty Member AIA Lecturer Jitse H F Dijkstr Lecture Program Archaeological Institute of America Raschle Christian R Dijkstra Jitse H F eds 2020 Religious Violence in the Ancient World From Classical Athens to Late Antiquity Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108849210 Stanley Elizabeth 2008 Torture Truth and Justice The Case of Timor Leste Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781134021048 Clark Gillian 2006 11 Desires of the Hangman Augustine on legitimized violence In Drake H A ed Violence in Late Antiquity Perceptions and Practices Routledge ISBN 978 0754654988 Ezquerra Jaime Alvar 6 January 2020 History s first superpower sprang from ancient Iran History Magazine National Geographic Retrieved 20 October 2020 Lacorne Denis 2019 The Limits of Tolerance Enlightenment Values and Religious Fanaticism Religion Culture and Public Life Columbia University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0231187145 Dees Richard H Trust and Toleration N p Taylor amp Francis 2004 chapter 4 no page s available Harassment of religious groups continues to be reported in more than 90 of countries Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 10 November 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2022 Conrad Hackett David McClendon Christians remain world s largest religious group but they are declining in Europe Pew Research Group Retrieved 10 March 2023 a b c d Carrie Booth Walling 2012 The History and Politics of Ethnic Cleansing In Ken I Booth ed The Kosovo Tragedy The Human Rights Dimensions Routledge pp pp 49 51 ISBN 9781136334764 a b Adrian Koopman 2016 Ethnonyms In Crole Hough ed The Oxford Handbook of Names and Naming Oxford University Press p 256 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199656431 013 8 ISBN 978 0 19 965643 1 Michael Mann 2005 The Dark Side of Democracy Explaining Ethnic Cleansing Cambridge University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 521 53854 1 Jacob Bercovitch Victor Kremenyuk I William Zartman 3 December 2008 Characteristics of ethno religious conflicts The SAGE Handbook of Conflict Resolution SAGE Publications p 265 ISBN 978 1 4462 0659 1 a b John Coffey 2000 p 26 Benjamin j Kaplan 2007 Divided by Faith Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe p 3 Coffey 2000 85 Coffey 2000 86 Coffey 2000 81 Coffey 2000 92 Onfray Michel 2007 Atheist manifesto the case against Christianity Judaism and Islam Leggatt Jeremy translator Arcade Publishing ISBN 978 1 55970 820 3 a b Flannery Edward H The Anguish of the Jews Twenty Three Centuries of Antisemitism Paulist Press first published in 1985 this edition 2004 pp 11 2 ISBN 0 8091 2702 4 Edward Flannery Hinnells John R 1996 Zoroastrians in Britain 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Saiva Age The Rise and Dominance of Saivism during the Early Medieval Period In Genesis and Development of Tantrism edited by Shingo Einoo Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture University of Tokyo 2009 Institute of Oriental Culture Special Series 23 pp 89 The Maha Bodhi by Maha Bodhi Society Calcutta p 8 The Maha Bodhi by Maha Bodhi Society Calcutta p 205 Islam at War A History By Mark W Walton George F Nafziger Laurent W Mbanda p 226 The Holy Land Reborn Pilgrimage and the Tibetan Reinvention of Buddhist India University of Chicago Press 15 September 2008 ISBN 9780226356501 Roerich G 1959 Biography of Dharmasvamin Chag lo tsa ba Chos rje dpal A Tibetan Monk Pilgrim Patna K P Jayaswal Research Institute pp 61 62 64 98 Protesters burn Bangladesh Buddhist temples Al Jazeera 30 September 2012 Religious attacks lead to 300 arrests in Bangladesh ABC News 2 October 2012 Bangladesh rampage over Facebook Koran image BBC News 30 September 2012 a b Kling David W 2020 A History of Christian Conversion Oxford University Press USA ISBN 9780199717590 Walsh William Pakenham 1862 Christian Missions six discourses delivered before the University of Dublin being the Donnellan Lectures for 1861 The British Library pp 133 134 including footnotes Buckland A R Missionary Martyrs of the Nineteenth Century Quiver 831 1901 1 5 Carbonneau Robert Resurrecting the Dead Memorial Gravesites and Faith Stories of Twentieth Century Catholic Missionaries and Laity in West Hunan China US Catholic Historian 24 3 2006 19 37 Guidry Christopher R Crossing Peter F 2001 World Christian Trends Ad30 ad2200 hb Volume 2 of World Christian Trends AD 30 AD 2200 Interpreting the Annual Christian Megacensus Todd Michael Johnson William Carey Library ISBN 9780878086085 Fox Jonathan 2016 The Unfree Exercise of Religion A World Survey of Discrimination against Religious Minorities Cambridge University Press p 9 ISBN 9781316546277 8 facts about the Armenian genocide 100 years ago CNN com Retrieved 13 December 2015 100 Years Ago 1 5 Million Armenians Were Systematically Killed Today It s Still Not A Genocide The Huffington Post 23 April 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Bachelet calls for easing of sanctions to enable medical systems to fight COVID 19 and limit global contagion OHCHR Retrieved 2 January 2023 Ensor Josie 10 December 2018 Iran arrests more than 100 Christians in growing crackdown on minority The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Economist Intelligence Unit Great Britain Country Profile Iran The Unit 2001 p 17 Thornton Bruce 25 July 2013 Christian Tragedy in the Muslim World Defining Ideas Hoover institution Archived from the original on 28 July 2013 World Watch List Open Doors Australia Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 10 January 2018 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Eritrea OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM 2019 Report U S Department of State Retrieved 3 July 2020 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Mexico U S 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PDF on 2 October 2011 Persecution of Christians review Foreign Secretary s speech following the final report GOV UK Retrieved 2 January 2023 Mitchell Travis 15 July 2019 A Closer Look at How Religious Restrictions Have Risen Around the World Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Retrieved 2 January 2023 Nigeria Christian Muslim Conflict www globalsecurity org 90 000 Christians killed in 2016 us11 campaign archive com Retrieved 2 January 2023 1 CSGC numbers report Ruth Alexander 12 November 2013 Are there really 100 000 new Christian martyrs every year BBC News BBC News Retrieved 22 May 2020 Open Doors 14 November 2013 Number of Christian martyrs continues to cause debate Open Doors Retrieved 22 May 2020 Monitor World Watch 20 January 2017 90 000 Christian martyrs annually claim disputed World Watch Monitor Retrieved 2 January 2023 Christenverfolgung auf einen Blick Internationale Gesellschaft fur Menschenrechte IGFM in German Retrieved 2 January 2023 2 How the scoring works 11 Christians Killed Every Day for Their Decision to Follow Jesus Open Doors USA Open Doors USA www opendoorsusa org Kholaif Francis X Rocca and Dahlia Pope Francis Calls on Egypt s Catholics to Embrace Forgiveness WSJ Retrieved 2 January 2023 Egyptian woman fights unequal Islamic inheritance laws AP NEWS 7 May 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Five Things to Know About Egypt s Coptic Christians Wall Street Journal 16 February 2015 Egypt The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 11 February 2022 Egypt and Libya A Year of Serious Abuses Human Rights Watch 24 January 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Zaki Moheb 18 May 2010 Egypt s Persecuted Christians The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 3 June 2010 Retrieved 4 June 2010 Shea Nina June 2017 Do Copts have a future in Egypt Foreign Affairs Archived from the original on 20 June 2017 Etheredge Laura S 2011 Middle East Region in Transition Egypt Britannica Educational Publishing p 161 ISBN 9789774160936 Conversion 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appears to coincide with a period of forced rapid conversion to Islam N Swanson Mark 2010 The Coptic Papacy in Islamic Egypt 641 1517 American Univ in Cairo Press p 54 ISBN 9789774160936 By late 1012 the persecution had moved into high gear with demolitions of churches and the forced conversion of Christian ha Mizraḥit ha Yisreʼelit Ḥevrah 1988 Asian and African Studies Volume 22 Jerusalem Academic Press Muslim historians note the destruction of dozens of churches and the forced conversion of dozens of people to Islam under al Hakim bi Amr Allah in Egypt These events also reflect the Muslim attitude toward forced conversion and toward converts Eltahawy Mona 22 December 2016 Egypt s Cruelty to Christians The New York Times Archived from the original on 24 December 2016 Retrieved 22 December 2016 United States Congress Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe 18 July 2012 Escalating Violence Against Coptic Women and Girls Will the New Egypt be More Dangerous than the Old Hearing before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe One Hundred Twelfth Congress Second Session July 18 2012 Washington DC Government Printing Office Retrieved 8 March 2015 Masress Sectarian tensions rise in wake of crime boss death Masress Archived from the original on 25 January 2016 Retrieved 2 January 2016 Premier 9 May 2018 Newlywed becomes 8th Egyptian Christian woman to be kidnapped since April Premier Retrieved 14 October 2019 Countries Where Jehovah s Witnesses Activities Are Banned Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 7 February 2019 Jehovah s Witnesses Proclaimers of God s Kingdom Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 1993 p 490 Retrieved 25 October 2020 via Watchtower Online Library Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 1991 p 222 Retrieved 25 October 2020 via Watchtower Online Library Penton James 2004 Jehovah s Witnesses and the Third Reich sectarian politics under persecution Toronto University of Toronto Press p 376 ISBN 978 0802086785 Blainey Geoffrey 2011 A Short History of Christianity London Penguin Books pp 495 496 ISBN 9780281076208 Chu Jolene September 2004 God s things and Caesar s Jehovah s Witnesses and political neutrality Journal of Genocide Research Taylor amp Francis 6 3 319 342 doi 10 1080 1462352042000265837 S2CID 71908533 a b Wrobel Johannes S August 2006 Jehovah s Witnesses in National Socialist concentration camps 1933 45 PDF Religion State amp Society Taylor amp Francis 34 2 89 125 doi 10 1080 09637490600624691 S2CID 145110013 Archived PDF from the original on 21 May 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2020 Knox Zoe 2018 Politics Jehovah s Witnesses and the Secular World From the 1870s to the Present Histories of the Sacred and Secular 1700 2000 London Palgrave Macmillan pp 61 106 doi 10 1057 978 1 137 39605 1 3 ISBN 978 1 137 39604 4 Insight on the News Holocaust Questions The Watchtower Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 1 June 1979 p 20 Retrieved 25 October 2020 via Watchtower Online Library Garbe Detlef 2008 Between Resistance and Martyrdom Jehovah s Witnesses in the Third Reich Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press p 484 ISBN 978 0 299 20794 6 Jehovah s Witnesses Holocaust Teacher Resource Center Retrieved 2 January 2023 Kaplan William 1989 State and Salvation Toronto University of Toronto Press Yaffee Barbara 9 September 1984 Witnesses Seek Apology for Wartime Persecution The Globe and Mail p 4 Supreme Court of Canada Saumur v Quebec City of 1953 2 SCR 299 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Supreme Court of Canada Roncarelli v Duplessis 1959 SCR 121 Archived from the original on 12 January 2013 Valerij Pasat Trudnye stranicy istorii Moldovy 1940 1950 Moskva Izd Terra 1994 in Russian Russian court bans Jehovah s Witnesses as extremist Reuters delfi lt 20 April 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 Peters Shawn Francis 2000 Judging Jehovah s Witnesses Religious Persecution and the Dawn of the Rights Revolution University Press of Kansas pp 82 116 9 ISBN 978 0 7006 1008 2 Barbara Grizzuti Harrison Visions of Glory 1978 chapter 6 Whalen William J 1962 Armageddon Around the Corner A Report on Jehovah s Witnesses New York John Day Company p 190 Schnell William 1971 30 Years a Watchtower Slave Baker Book House Grand Rapids pp 104 106 ISBN 978 0 8010 6384 8 Rogerson Alan 1969 Millions Now Living Will Never Die A Study of Jehovah s Witnesses Constable amp Co London p 59 ISBN 978 0094559400 Advice for Kingdom Publishers Watchtower Bible and Tract Society 1939 pp 5 6 14 a b c Griaule Marcel Dieterlen Germaine 1965 Le mythe cosmologique Le renard pale 1 Paris Institut d Ethnologie Musee de l homme p 17 Caught in the crossfire of Mali s war The Independent 25 January 2013 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Africa Today Volume 7 Afro Media 2001 p 126 Wise Christopher 23 March 2017 Sorcery Totem and Jihad in African Philosophy Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 350 01310 0 Matfess Hilary 11 September 2019 What Explains the Rise of Communal Violence in Mali Nigeria and Ethiopia World Politics Review Retrieved 2 January 2023 Syria Druze back Sunnis revolt with words but not arms Agence France Presse 8 September 2012 Swayd Samy 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 132 ISBN 9781442246171 Some Muslim rulers and jurists have advocated the persecution of members of the Druze Movement beginning with the seventh Fatimi Caliph Al Zahir in 1022 Recurring period of persecutions in subsequent centuries failure to elucidate their beliefs and practices have contributed to the ambiguous relationship between Muslims and Druzes K Zartman Jonathan 2020 Conflict in the Modern Middle East An Encyclopedia of Civil War Revolutions and Regime Change ABC CLIO p 199 ISBN 9781440865039 Historically Islam classified Christians Jews and Zoroastrians as protected People of the Book a secondary status subject to payment of a poll tax Nevertheless Zoroastrians suffered significant persecution Other religions such as the Alawites Alevis and Druze often suffered more Layis Aharon 1982 Marriage Divorce and Succession in the Druze Family A Study Based on Decisions of Druze Arbitrators and Religious Courts in Israel and the Golan Heights BRILL p 1 ISBN 9789004064126 the Druze religion though originating from the Isma lliyya an extreme branch of the Shia seceded completely from Islam and has therefore experienced periods of persecution by the latter Are the Druze People Arabs or Muslims Deciphering Who They Are Arab America Arab America 8 August 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2020 J Stewart Dona 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Most Druze do not consider themselves Muslim Historically they faced much persecution and keep their religious beliefs secrets Yazbeck Haddad Yvonne 2014 The Oxford Handbook of American Islam Oxford University Press p 142 ISBN 9780199862634 While they appear parallel to those of normative Islam in the Druze religion they are different in meaning and interpretation The religion is consider distinct from the Ismaili as well as from other Muslims belief and practice Most Druze consider themselves fully assimilated in American society and do not necessarily identify as Muslims De McLaurin Ronald 1979 The Political Role of Minority Groups in the Middle East Michigan University Press p 114 ISBN 9780030525964 Theologically one would have to conclude that the Druze are not Muslims They do not accept the five pillars of Islam In place of these principles the Druze have instituted the seven precepts noted above Parsons L 2000 The Druze between Palestine and Israel 1947 49 Springer p 2 ISBN 9780230595989 With the succession of al Zahir to the Fatimid caliphate a mass persecution known by the Druze as the period of the mihna of the Muwaḥḥidun was instigated Hitti 1924 sfn error no target CITEREFHitti1924 help C Tucker Spencer C 2019 Middle East Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century An Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes ABC CLIO pp 364 366 ISBN 9781440853531 Taraze Fawaz Leila An occasion for war civil conflict in Lebanon and Damascus in 1860 p 63 Goren Haim Dead Sea Level Science Exploration and Imperial Interests in the Near East p 95 96 C Tucker Spencer C 2019 Middle East Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century An Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 364 ISBN 9781440853531 Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Routledge ISBN 9781317096726 Syria conflict Al Nusra fighters kill Druze villagers BBC News 11 June 2015 Retrieved 27 July 2015 Nusra Front kills Syrian villagers from minority Druze sect thestar com 11 June 2015 Retrieved 27 July 2015 Roald Anne Sofie 2011 Religious Minorities in the Middle East Domination Self Empowerment Accommodation BRILL p 255 ISBN 9789004207424 Therefore many of these scholars follow Ibn Taymiyya sfatwa from the beginning of the fourteenth century that declared the Druzes and the Alawis as heretics outside Islam Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Taylor amp Francis p 126 ISBN 9781317096733 Knight Michael 2009 Journey to the End of Islam Soft Skull Press p 129 ISBN 9781593765521 S Swayd Samy 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 37 ISBN 9780810868366 Subsequently Muslim opponents of the Druzes have often relied on Ibn Taymiyya s religious ruling to justify their attitudes and actions against Druzes S Swayd Samy 2009 The Druzes An Annotated Bibliography University of Michigan Press p 25 ISBN 9780966293203 China The crackdown on Falun Gong and other so called heretical organizations Amnesty International 23 March 2000 Retrieved 17 March 2010 An Independent Investigation into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China 关于指控中共摘取法轮功学员器官的独立调查报告 organharvestinvestigation net Retrieved 2 January 2023 Hindu temples were felled to the ground and for one year a large establishment was maintained for the demolition of the grand Martand temple But when the massive masonry resisted all efforts it was set on fire and the noble buildings cruelly defaced Firishta Muhammad Qasim Hindu Shah John Briggs translator 1829 1981 Reprint Tarikh i Firishta History of the Rise of the Mahomedan Power in India New Delhi Keay John 2000 India A History Atlantic Monthly Press p 288 ISBN 978 0 87113 800 2 The normally cordial pattern of Hindu Muslim relations was interrupted in the early fifteenth century The great Sun temple of Martand was destroyed and heavy penalties imposed on the mainly Brahman Hindus Farahnaz Ispahani 2017 Purifying the Land of the Pure A History of Pakistan s Religious Minorities Oxford University Press pp 165 171 ISBN 978 0 19 062165 0 Bert B Lockwood 2006 Women s Rights A Human Rights Quarterly Reader Johns Hopkins University Press pp 227 235 ISBN 978 0 8018 8373 6 Javaid Rehman 2000 The Weaknesses in the International Protection of Minority Rights Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 158 159 ISBN 90 411 1350 9 Tetsuya Nakatani 2000 Away from Home The Movement and Settlement of Refugees from East Pakistan in West Bengal India Journal of the Japanese Association for South Asian Studies Volume 12 pp 73 81 context 71 103 qayam 20 November 2016 No Hindus will be left in Bangladesh after 30 years researcher The Siasat Daily Archive Retrieved 11 April 2021 No Hindus will be left after 30 years Dhaka Tribune 20 November 2016 Retrieved 11 April 2021 No Hindus will be left in Bangladesh after 30 years professor The Hindu PTI 22 November 2016 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 11 April 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint others link Bangladesh 2018 International Religious Freedom Report US State Department 2019 pp 11 12 a b c d e f Ashish Bose 2004 Afghan Refugees in India Economic and Political Weekly Vol 39 No 43 pp 4698 4701 a b c Emadi Hafizullah 2014 Minorities and marginality pertinacity of Hindus and Sikhs in a repressive environment in Afghanistan Nationalities Papers Cambridge University Press 42 2 307 320 doi 10 1080 00905992 2013 858313 S2CID 153662810 Quote The situation of Hindus and Sikhs as a persecuted minority is a little studied topic in literature dealing with ethno sectarian conflict in Afghanistan the breakdown of state structure and the ensuing civil conflicts and targeted persecution in the 1990s that led to their mass exodus out of the country A combination of structural failure and rising Islamic fundamentalist ideology in the post Soviet era led to a war of ethnic cleansing as fundamentalists suffered a crisis of legitimation and resorted to violence as a means to establish their authority Hindus and Sikhs found themselves in an uphill battle to preserve their culture and religious traditions in a hostile political environment in the post Taliban period The international community and Kabul failed in their moral obligation to protect and defend the rights of minorities and oppressed communities a b Emadi Hafizullah 2014 Minorities and marginality pertinacity of Hindus and Sikhs in a repressive environment in Afghanistan Nationalities Papers Cambridge University Press 42 2 315 317 doi 10 1080 00905992 2013 858313 S2CID 153662810 World Pakistan The Ravaging of Golden Bengal Printout Time 2 August 1971 Archived from the original on 11 March 2007 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Marriott Michel Times Special To the New York 12 October 1987 In Jersey City Indians Protest Violence The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2 January 2023 New York firebomb attacks hit mosque Hindu site Archived 13 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine News Daily 2 January 2012 On Common Ground World Religions in America The Pluralism Project a b c d e 19 01 90 When Kashmiri Pandits fled Islamic terro www rediff com Retrieved 11 April 2021 Kashmiri Pandits in Nandimarg decide to leave Valley Outlook 30 March 2003 Retrieved 11 April 2021 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Religious Freedom Saudi Arabia OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM Report U S Department of State 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Finland OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM Report U S Department of State Burmese government kills more than 1 000 Rohingya Muslims in crackdown The Independent Retrieved 30 June 2020 Former UN chief says Bangladesh cannot continue hosting Rohingya www aljazeera com Retrieved 30 June 2020 OHCHR Myanmar UN Fact Finding Mission releases its full account of massive violations by military in Rakhine Kachin and Shan States www ohchr org Retrieved 30 June 2020 They raped us one by one says Rohingya woman who fled Myanmar www thenews com pk Retrieved 30 June 2020 Uyghur American Association holds rally in US to raise awareness about Muslim genocide in China Hindustan Times 3 October 2020 Allen Ebrahimian Bethany 10 February 2021 Norway s youth parties call for end to China free trade talks Axios O pposition to China s Uyghur genocide is 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policy is a major change in China s ethnic politics The Washington Post Retrieved 24 November 2019 UN Unprecedented Joint Call for China to End Xinjiang Abuses Human Rights Watch 10 July 2019 Archived from the original on 17 December 2019 Retrieved 18 December 2020 McNeill Sophie 14 July 2019 The Missing The families torn apart by China s campaign of cultural genocide ABC News Australia It appears to be the largest imprisonment of people on the basis of religion since the Holocaust Rajagopalan Megha Killing Alison 3 December 2020 Inside A Xinjiang Detention Camp BuzzFeed News a b Khatchadourian Raffi 5 April 2021 Surviving the Crackdown in Xinjiang The New Yorker China cuts Uighur births with IUDs abortion sterilization Associated Press 29 June 2020 China imposes forced abortion sterilisation on Uyghurs investigation shows Australian Broadcasting Corporation 29 June 2020 Allassan Fadel 29 June 2020 AP China engaging in campaign of forced birth control against Uighurs Axios China regularly conducts pregnancy checks forces intrauterine devices sterilization and even abortion on some of the Xinjiang region s minority women Chaudhury Dipanjan Roy 15 December 2020 China forcing Uyghurs other minorities into manual labour shows BBC research The Economic Times Facebook finds Chinese hacking operation targeting Uyghurs ABC News Associated Press 24 March 2021 Davidson Helen 15 December 2020 Xinjiang more than half a million forced to pick cotton report suggests The Guardian Hoshur Shohret 7 April 2021 Wife of Imprisoned Uyghur Taxi Driver Jailed For Weeping in Front of a Foreigner Radio Free Asia Hill Matthew Campanale David Gunter Joel 2 February 2021 Their goal is to destroy everyone Uighur camp detainees allege systematic rape BBC News Rozi Yalqun 9 April 2021 China hands death sentences to Uyghur former officials The Guardian there is evidence of authorities running enforce labour transfer programmes as well as systemic rape and torture forced sterilisation of women child separation and mass surveillance and intimidation Qing Han Long Quai 6 April 2021 China Launches Compulsory Film Screenings to Mark Party Centenary Radio Free Asia Clark Andrew F amp Phillips Lucie Colvin Historical Dictionary of Senegal ed 2 Metuchen New Jersey Scrarecrow Press 1994 p 265 Page Willie F Encyclopedia of African history and culture African kingdoms 500 to 1500 pp 209 676 Vol 2 Facts on File 2001 ISBN 0 8160 4472 4 Streissguth Thomas Senegal in Pictures Visual Geography Second Series p 23 Twenty First Century Books 2009 ISBN 1 57505 951 7 Oliver Roland Anthony Fage J D Journal of African history Volume 10 p 367 Cambridge University Press 1969 a b Mwakikagile Godfrey Ethnic Diversity and Integration in The Gambia The Land The People and The Culture 2010 p 11 ISBN 9987 9322 2 3 Abbey M T Rosalie Akouele Customary Law and Slavery in West Africa Trafford Publishing 2011 pp 481 482 ISBN 1 4269 7117 6 Mwakikagile Godfrey Ethnic Diversity and Integration in The Gambia The Land The People and The Culture 2010 p 241 ISBN 9987 9322 2 3 Moreno Luis Colino Cesar 1 July 2010 Diversity and Unity in Federal Countries McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 9087 8 Singh Pritam 2008 Federalism Nationalism and Development India and the Punjab Economy Abingdon on Thames England Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 04945 5 A large number of Hindu and Muslim peasants converted to Sikhism from conviction fear economic motives or a combination of the three Khushwant Singh 1999 106 Ganda Singh 1935 73 a b Pashaura Singh 2005 Understanding the Martyrdom of Guru Arjan Journal of Punjab Studies 12 1 pp 29 62 Singh Pashaura Fenech Louis E 2014 The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies Oxford University Press pp 236 238 ISBN 978 0 19 969930 8 Fenech Louis E 2001 Martyrdom and the Execution of Guru Arjan in Early Sikh Sources Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 1 20 31 doi 10 2307 606726 JSTOR 606726 Fenech Louis E 1997 Martyrdom and the Sikh Tradition Journal of the 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error no target CITEREFRamachandran Empire s First Soldiers2008 help Maini K D 12 April 2015 The day Rajouri was recaptured dailyexcelsior com Daily Excelsior Retrieved 19 October 2020 Gupta Jyoti Bhusan Das 6 December 2012 Jammu and Kashmir Springer p 97 ISBN 9789401192316 Snedden Christopher 15 September 2015 Understanding Kashmir and Kashmiris Oxford University Press p 167 ISBN 9781849046213 Puri Luv 21 February 2012 Across the Line of Control Inside Azad Kashmir Columbia University Press pp 28 30 ISBN 9780231800846 Madhok Balraj 1 January 1972 A Story of Bungling in Kashmir Young Asia Publications p 67 Sharma 2013 p 139 sfn error no target CITEREFSharma2013 help Hasan Mirpur 1947 2013 harvtxt error no target CITEREFHasan Mirpur 19472013 help Prakriiti Gupta 8 September 2011 Horrific Tales Over 3 00 000 Hindus Sikhs from PoK still fighting for their acceptance Uday India Archived from the original on 8 September 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template 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Sandeela 22 March 2021 Chattisingpora massacre masterminded by RSS The News Retrieved 14 June 2022 News desk 22 March 2021 Chattisingpora massacre masterminded by RSS Pakistan Observer Retrieved 14 June 2022 a b Naby Eden 2009 Yazidis In Esposito John ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195305135 Acikyildiz Birgul 20 August 2014 The Yezidis The History of a Community Culture and Religion Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 78453 216 1 Jalabi Raya 11 August 2014 Who are the Yazidis and why is Isis hunting them The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 1 December 2020 Evliya Celebi The Intimate Life of an Ottoman Statesman Melek Ahmed Pasha 1588 1662 Translated by Robert Dankoff 304 pp SUNY Press 1991 ISBN 0 7914 0640 7 pp 169 171 Kizilhan Jan Ilhan Noll Hussong Michael 2017 Individual collective and transgenerational traumatization in the Yazidi BMC Medicine 15 1 198 doi 10 1186 s12916 017 0965 7 ISSN 1741 7015 PMC 5724300 PMID 29224572 Hosseini S Behnaz 2020 Trauma and the Rehabilitation of Trafficked Women The Experiences of Yazidi Survivors Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 07869 5 von Joeden Forgey Elisa McGee Thomas 1 November 2019 Editors Introduction Palimpsestic Genocide in Kurdistan Genocide Studies International 13 1 1 9 doi 10 3138 gsi 13 1 01 ISSN 2291 1847 S2CID 208687918 Six Hohenbalken Maria 1 November 2019 The 72nd Firman of the Yezidis A Hidden Genocide during World War I Genocide Studies International 13 1 52 76 doi 10 3138 gsi 13 1 04 S2CID 208688838 a b c Houtsma Martijn Theodoor 1936 First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 E J Brill s Vol 2 BRILL p 100 ISBN 90 04 09796 1 9789004097964 Shahmardan Rashid History of Zoroastrians past Sasanians p 125 Price Massoume 2005 Iran s diverse peoples a reference sourcebook Illustrated ed ABC CLIO p 205 ISBN 9781576079935 ZOROASTRIANISM ii Arab Conquest to Modern Encyclopaedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Retrieved 3 April 2020 What Was the Charge Against Socrates ThoughtCo Retrieved 2 January 2023 Michael J Crowe The Extraterrestrial Life Debate 1750 1900 Cambridge University Press 1986 p 10 Bruno s sources seem to have been more numerous than his followers at least until the eighteenth and nineteenth century revival of interest in Bruno as a supposed martyr for science It is true that he was burned at the stake in Rome in 1600 but the church authorities who were guilty of this action were almost certainly more distressed by his denial of Christ s divinity and his alleged diabolism than they were by his cosmological doctrines Adam Frank 2009 The Constant Fire Beyond the Science vs Religion Debate University of California Press p 24 Though Bruno may have been a brilliant thinker whose work stands as a bridge between ancient and modern thought his persecution cannot be seen solely in light of the war between science and religion White Michael 2002 The Pope and the Heretic The True Story of Giordano Bruno the Man who Dared to Defy the Roman Inquisition p 7 Perennial New York This was perhaps the most dangerous notion of all If other worlds existed with intelligent beings living there did they too have their visitations The idea was quite unthinkable Shackelford Joel 2009 Myth 7 That Giordano Bruno was the first martyr of modern science In Numbers Ronald L ed Galileo goes to jail and other myths about science and religion Harvard University Press p 66 Yet the fact remains that cosmological matters notably the plurality of worlds were an identifiable concern all along and appear in the summary document Bruno was repeatedly questioned on these matters and he apparently refused to recant them at the end 14 So Bruno probably was burned alive for resolutely maintaining a series of heresies among which his teaching of the plurality of worlds was prominent but by no means singular Martinez Alberto A 2018 Burned Alive Giordano Bruno Galileo and the Inquisition University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 1780238968 Ernst Germana De Lucca Jean Paul 2021 Tommaso Campanella in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2 January 2023 Scruton Roger 2002 Spinoza A Very Short Introduction OUP Oxford p 144 ISBN 978 0 19 280316 0 Nadler Steven M 2001 Spinoza A Life Cambridge University Press pp 2 7 120 ISBN 978 0 521 00293 6 Smith Steven B 2003 Spinoza s Book of Life Freedom and Redemption in the Ethics Yale University Press p xx ISBN 978 0 300 12849 9 Nadler Steven 2020 Baruch Spinoza The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Spinoza Benedictus de 4 September 1989 Tractatus Theologico Politicus Gebhardt Edition 1925 BRILL ISBN 9004090991 Retrieved 4 September 2019 via Google Books Scruton Roger 2002 Spinoza A Very Short Introduction OUP Oxford p 21 ISBN 978 0 19 280316 0 Further reading EditJohn Coffey 2000 Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England 1558 1689 Studies in Modern History Pearson Education Stausberg Michael March 2021 Feldt Laura Valk Ulo eds The Demise Dissolution and Elimination of Religions Numen Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers 68 2 3 Special Issue The Dissolution of Religions 103 131 doi 10 1163 15685276 12341617 ISSN 1568 5276 LCCN 58046229 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Religious persecution United Nations Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights on freedom of religion or belief United States Commission on International Religious Freedom About com section on Religious Intolerance U S State Department 2006 Annual Report on International Religious Freedom xTome News and Information on Religious Freedom Archived 18 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religious persecution amp oldid 1143812545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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