Author Topic: I'm a Christian from Niger. Don’t ignore horrifying attacks on African Christians  (Read 45 times)

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Offline libertybele

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I'm a Christian from Niger. Don’t ignore horrifying attacks on African Christians

When noted religious skeptic and TV host Bill Maher highlighted the plight of Christians in Nigeria in September during a conversation with South Carolina Republican Rep. Nancy Mace, he raised a conversation that’s been an ongoing tension for many of us in the humanitarian space: the conflicts that cause the greatest suffering don’t always correlate to the greatest attention.

Reflecting on the atrocities taking place in Nigeria, Maher bemoaned on the show: "This is so much more of a genocide attempt than what’s going on in Gaza. They are literally attempting to wipe out the Christian population of an entire country. Where are the kids protesting this?"

Here’s the thing: Gazans' suffering is legitimate. Just as Israel’s suffering on Oct. 7, 2023, and beyond was legitimate. And also, so is the suffering in Sudan and Yemen and Syria and Nigeria. What differs is the attention we bestow and our willingness to sit in the complexities and discomfort necessary to come to lasting solutions.

I grew up in Niger. I spent my childhood in the Sahel region in a time when a Christian in a Muslim-majority region could expect to live in relative peace and optimism. Growing up, I knew many mixed-faith Nigerian families that lived in harmony. As a nation and as a region, we had hope. The promises of the green revolution, trade and the West African economic community caused us to anticipate a trajectory of growth.

oday’s Nigeria does not look like that of my youth. Climate change, capitalism, debt, corruption, the COVID-19 crisis and shifting donor trends have all caused more poverty, less hope and more conflict. It's been tragic to see my home region devolve into a dangerous area where tolerance has been replaced with extremism and religion has become weaponized to fill the void left as hope dispersed and hunger increased.

When people are desperate, we see increases in extremism and religious persecution. Nigeria is divided almost along the cardinal ordinances into Muslim-majority regions and Christian and Catholic sections. Factors embedded from colonial days compound with climate shifts that make a nomadic lifestyle unsustainable have spilled into untenable animosity that cuts along religious affiliations.........................


https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/im-christian-from-niger-dont-ignore-horrifying-attacks-african-christians
Live in  harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.

Romans 12:16-18