Soviets killed 10 million Christians long before the
Nazis
In Memory Of The
50 Million Victims Of The Orthodox Christian Holocaust
Compiled by Rev. Archimandrite Nektarios Serfes
Boise, Idaho
U.S.A.
October 1999
During
1894-1923 the Ottoman Empire conducted a policy of
Genocide of the Christian population living within its
extensive territory. The Sultan, Abdul Hamid, first put
forth an official governmental policy of genocide
against the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire in 1894.
Systematic massacres took place in
1894-1896 when Abdul savagely killed300,000 Armenians
throughout the provinces. Massacres recurred, and in
1909 government troops killed, in the towns of Adana
alone, over 20,000 Christian Armenians.
When WW1 broke out the The Ottoman
Empire was ruled by the "Young Turk" dictatorship which
allied itself with Germany. Turkish government decided
to eliminate the whole of the Christian population of
Greeks, Armenians, Syrians and Nestorians. The
government slogan, "Turkey for the Turks", served to
encourage Turkish civilians on a policy of ethnic
cleansing.
The next step of the Armenian
Genocide began on 24 April 1915 with the mass arrest,
and ultimate murder, of religious, political and
intellectual leaders in Constantinople and elsewhere in
the empire. Then, in every Armenian community, a
carefully planned Genocide unfolded: Arrest of clergy
and other prominent persons, disarmament of the
population and Armenian soldiers serving in the Ottoman
army, segregation and public execution of leaders and
able-bodied men, and the deportation to the deserts of
the remaining Armenian women, children and elderly.
Renowned historian Arnold Toynbee wrote that "the
crime was concerted very systematically for there is
evidence of identical procedure from over fifty places."
The Genocide started from the border
districts and seacoasts, and worked inland to the most
remote hamlets. Over 1.5 million Armenian Christians,
including over 4,000 bishops and priests, were killed in
this step of the Genocide.
The Greek Christians, particularly in
the Black Sea area known as Pontus, who had been
suffering from Turkish persecutions and murders all the
while, saw the Turks turn more fiercely on them as WW1
came to a close. The Allied Powers, at a peace
conference in Paris in 1919, rewarded Greece for her
support by inviting Prime Minister Venizelos to occupy
the city of Smyrna with its rich hinterlands, and they
placed the province under Greek control. This action
greatly angered the Turks. The Greek occupation was a
peaceful one but drew immediate fire from Turkish forces
in the outlying areas. When the Greek army farmed out to
protect its people, a full-fledged war broke out between
Greece and Turkey (the Greco-Turkish war).
The Treaty of Sevres, signed in 1920
to end WW1 and which provided for an independent
Armenia, was never ratified. The treaty's terms changed
not long after the ink dried as England, France and
Italy each began secretly bargaining with Mustafa Kemel
(Ataturk) in order to gain the right to exploit oil
fields in the Mozul (now Iraq). Betrayed by the Allied
Powers, the Greek military front, after 40 long months
of war, collapsed and retreated as the Turks began again
to occupy Asia Minor.
September 1922 signaled the end of
the Greek and Armenian presence in the city of Smyrna.
On 9 September 1922, the Turks entered Smyrna; and after
systematically murdering the Armenians in their own
homes, the forces of Ataturk turned on the Greeks whose
numbers had swelled, with the addition of refugees who
had fled their villages in Turkey's interior, to upwards
of 400,000 men, women and children.
The conquering Turks went from house
to house, looting, pillaging, raping and murdering the
population. Finally, when the wind had turned so that it
was blowing toward the sea so that the small Turkish
quarter at the rear of the city was not in danger,
Turkish forces, led by their officers, poured kerosene
on the buildings and homes of the Greek and Armenian
sectors and set them afire. Thus, any remaining live
inhabitants of the city were flushed out to be caught
between a wall of fire and the sea. The pier of Smyrna
became a scene of final desperation as the approaching
flames forced many thousands to jump to their death or
to be consumed by fire.
The Allied warships and shore patrol
of the French, British and American military were
eyewitnesses to the events. George Horton, the American
Consul in Smyrna, likened the finale at Smyrna to the
Roman destruction of Carthage. He is quoted in
Smyrna (1922, written by Marjorie Dobkin) as
saying: Yet there was not fleet of Christian
battleships at Carthage looking on a situation for which
their governments were responsible."This
horrible act unleashed the last phase of the genocide
against the Christians of Turkish Asia Minor.
On 9 September 1997, a series of
speakers and memorial services, honoring the memory of
the 3.5 million Christians who were murdered by Turkish
persecutions from 1894-1923, were held in the greater
Baltimore Washington area. The memorial service was
conducted by the choirs of St. Mary's Armenian Church,
St. Katherine's Greek Orthodox Church, Fr. George
Alexson of St. Katherine's, Fr. Vertanes Katayjian of
St. Mary's and other Orthodox clergy.
The 75th anniversary of the Christian Holocaust was
memorialized on9 September 1997, the date in 1922 of the
destruction of the city of Smyrna. This memorial honors
the memory of over 3.5 million Christians who were
murdered by Turkish persecutions from 1894-1923. Not
only was this the memorial of the Holocaust of Smyrna
(now Izmir) and the martyrdom of Smyrna's Metropolitan
Chrysostomos, but also of the 3.5 million Christians who
perished during the first Holocaust of this century. But
the events of 1922 are not an isolated incident. The
atrocities committed by Turkish forces against a
civilian population began before WW1 and have never
ended. This event seeks to expose the continuum of a
Turkish campaign of persecution, deportation, and murder
designed to rid Asia of its Christian populace.
GREEKS
1914
400,000
conscripts
perished in forced labor brigades
1922
100,000
massacred or
burned alive in Smyrna
1916-1922
350,000
Pontions
massacred or killed during forced deportations
1914-1922
900,000
perish from
maltreatment, starvation and massacres; total of
all other areas of Asia Minor
TOTAL:
1,750,000
Greek
Christians martyred 1914-1922
ARMENIANS
1894-1896
300,000
massacred
1915-1916
1,500,000
perish in
massacres and forced deportations (with
subsidiaries to 1923)
1922
30,000
massacred or
burned alive in Smyrna
TOTAL:
1,800,000
Armenian
Christians martyred 1894-1923
SYRIANS AND NESTORIANS
1915-1917
100,000
Christians
massacred
The native population of Asia Minor traces its Christian
roots to the early days of Christianity. the Armenians,
an ancient people, trace their origins back 2500 years.
In 301 AD. the Armenian King Dftad declared Christianity
as the kingdom's official religion, making Armenia the
first Christian political state in the world. The
migration of Greek tribes to Asia Minor began just
before 2,000 BC and the Greeks built dozens of cities
such as Smyrna, Phocaea, Pergamon, Ephesus and Byzantium
(Constantinople). The native inhabitants of Asia Minor,
among the first to accept the message of Christianity,
were later to be persecuted and uprooted from their
lands because of that same faith. Turkish tribes plagued
the region. Later another tribe, the Oyuz Turks who
embraced Islam and ultimately produced the Ottoman
Turks, conquered Persia, the Caliphate of Baghdad, and
then the whole area presently occupied by Syria, Iraq
and Palestine.
Under the Ottoman Empire the
Christians suffered a steady decline. Forced conversions
to Islam, the abduction of children to serve in the
fanatical Janissary corps, persecutions and oppression
reduced the Christian population. Oppression
intensified, leading to Genocide. Christian clergy were
a constant target of Turkish persecution, particularly
once the 1894 policy of Armenian genocide had been
declared by sultan AbdulHamid.
Victims of horrible torture, many
Orthodox clergy were martyred for their faith. Among the
first was Metropolitan Chrysostomos who was martyred,
not just to kill a man but, to insult a sacred religion
and an ancient and honorable people. Chrysostomos was
enthroned as Metropolitan of Smyrna on 10 May 1910.
Metropolitan Chrysostomos courageously opposed the anti
Christian rage of the turks and sought to raise
international pressure against the persecution of
Turkish Christians. He wrote many letters to European
leaders and to the western press in an effort to expose
the genocide policies of the Turks. In 1922, in
unprotected Smyrna, Chrysostomos said to those begging
him to flee: "It is the tradition of the Greek Church
and the duty of the priest to stay with his
congregation."
On 9 September crowds were rushing
into the cathedral for shelter when Chrysostomos, pale
from fasting and lack of sleep, led his last prayer. The
Divine Liturgy ended as Turkish police came to the
church and led Chrysostomos away. The Turkish General
Noured in Pasha, known as the "butcher of Ionia", first
spat on the Metropolitan and informed him that a
tribunal in Angora (now Ankara) had already condemned
him to death. A mob fell upon Chrysostomos and tore out
his eyes. Bleeding profusely, he was dragged through the
streets by his beard. He was beaten and kicked and parts
of his body were cut off. All the while Chrysostomos,
his face covered with blood, prayed: "Holy Father,
forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing."
Every now and then, when he had the strength, he would
raise his hand and bless his persecutors; a Turk,
realizing what the Metropolitan was doing, cut off his
hand with a sword. Metropolitan Chrysostomos was then
hacked to pieced by the angry mob.
Among the hundreds of Armenian clergy
who were persecuted and murdered were Bishop Khosrov
Behrigian and Very Reverend Father Mgrdich' Chghladian.
Bishop Behrigian (1869-1915) was born
in Zara and became the primate for the Diocese of
Caesarea/Kayseri in 1915. He was arrested by Turkish
police upon his return from Etchmiadzin where he had
just been consecrated bishop. Informed of his fate, the
bishop asked for a bullet to the head. Deliberately
ignoring his request, the police tied him to a"yataghan"
where sheep were butchered an then proceeded to hack his
body apart while he was still alive.
Father Chghladian was born in Tatvan.
In May 1915, as part of the campaign of mass arrests,
deportations and murders, the priest was tortured and
displayed in a procession, led by sheiks and dervishes
while accompanied by drums, through the streets of
Dikranagerd. Once the procession returned to the mosque,
in the presence of government officials, the sheiks
poured oil over the priest and burned him alive.
Four of the martyred bishops who were
murdered between 1921-1922 are today elevated to
sainthood in the Greek Orthodox Church: They are, in
addition to Metropolitan Chrysostomos, Bishops Efthimios,
Gregorios and Ambrosios.
Bishop Efthimios of Amasia was
captured by the Turkish police and tortured daily for 41
days. In the last days of his life he chanted his own
funeral memorial until finally dying in his cell on 29
May 1921. Three days later a written order for his
execution arrived from Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk).
Metropolitan Gregorios of Kydonion
remained with his church until the end, helping 20,000
of his 35,000 parishioners escape to Mytilene and other
free parts of Greece. On 3 October 1922, the remaining
15,000 Orthodox Christians were executed; the
Metropolitan was saved in order to be buried alive.
Metropolitan Ambrosios of Moshonesion,
along with 12 priests and 6,000Christians, were sent by
the Turks on a forced deportation march to Central Asia
Minor. All of them perished on the road, some slain by
Turkish irregulars and civilians, the remainder left to
die of starvation. Bishop Ambrosios died on 15 September
1922 when Turkish police nailed horses hoes to his feet
and then cut his body into pieces.
"I was five or six years old in
1922, and I still remember the songs of Akrita and the
mourning of the Greek women who carried baskets full of
severed heads down from the mountains. I will never
forget the women who suddenly realized that one of the
heads in the basket she carried was that of her son."
- Constantine Koukides, refugee from Pontius
"I have given orders to my Death
Units to exterminate without mercy or pity, men, women,
and children belonging to the Polish speaking race. It
is only in this manner we can acquire the vital
territory which we need. After all, who remembers the
extermination of the Armenians?" - Adolf Hitler,
22 August 1939
THE UKRAINIAN HOLOCAUST OF 1932-33
Sixty-five years ago, between
seven and twelve million Ukrainians were
systematically and deliberately starved to death in
Ukraine, the "Bread Basket of Europe".
Long before there was a Russia,
Kyivan Rus' (Ukraine) was a free and fiercely
independent nation. Indeed, it was to Ukraine that
Christianity was first delivered by St. Andrew - the
First called Apostle - and only much later, from
Ukraine, on to Russia. In the 13th century Kvivan Rus'
was decimated by invasions from Asia; and by the time
the invaders were driven back, the base of power had
shifted North to Muscovy. For centuries thereafter,
Ukraine was subjugated to Tsarist Russia. Then in 1918,
following the murder of the Tsar and his family by the
Communists, the Ukrainians declared Ukraine a free and
independent country, just as it was centuries before
there even was a Russia.
Communist forces eventually
recaptured the land and once again, as in the time of
the Tsars, Ukraine would become little more than a part
ofa larger whole. But as never before in their long
history, Ukrainians would be forced to pay a dreadfully
high price in their survival as a people. Probably more
than other Bolsheviks, Stalin had an exceedingly low
opinion of peasants; for he considered them to be
incurably conservative and a major barrier to
revolutionary change. And because Ukrainians were an
overwhelmingly peasant people, among whom native
nationalism was on the rise, they were doubly vulnerable
to his designs. Ukraine continued to be a land of
innumerable villages of peasants working the land, with
the Orthodox Church and traditional values dominating
their lives. Perhaps most galling for the Bolshevik
revolutionaries was the fact that the peasant showed
little inclination for sharing their dreams of a
Communist utopia.
Stalin's plans for industrial
expansion were based on the state purchasing cheap
grain, from the peasants, which would be sold abroad at
a profit; the proceeds would then be used to finance the
industrialization of the nation. But the prices that the
state offered, often at one eighth of the market price,
were so low that the peasants refused to sell their
grain. Infuriated by what he called "sabotage". Stalin
ordered an all-out drive for total collectivization. All
land and all property, including livestock, were to be
taken away from private ownership and given over to the
state. Small farms were to be incorporated into huge
Collectives. The plan was accompanied by such brutality
and horror that it can only be described as war waged by
the regime against the peasantry. It was to be one of
the most traumatic events in Ukraine history.
Those who resisted most stubbornly
were shot. Others were deported to forced labor camps in
the Arctic and Siberia. The rest were deprived of all
their property - including their homes and personal
belongings -barred from the collective farms, and told
to fend for themselves. In the winter of 1929-30
hundreds of thousands of peasants and their families
were dragged from their homes, packed into freight
trains, and shipped thousands of miles to the north
where they were dumped amidst Arctic wastes, often
without food or shelter. In this way a large part of
Ukraine's most industrious and efficient farmers ceased
to exist.
When even these severe measures
failed to have the desired effect, the government
dispatched thousands of urban workers to implement its
policies in the villages. Their efforts produced
pandemonium and outrage; often officials were beaten or
shot. The most common form of protest, however, was the
slaughter of farm animals. Determined not to let the
government have their livestock, peasants preferred to
kill their animals instead. Between 1928 and 1932
Ukraine lost about 50% of its livestock. Because of poor
transportation facilities, much of the grain which was
produced either spoiled or was eaten by rats. Even more
serious was the lack of draught animals, many of which
had been slaughtered earlier. Government officials were
confident, however, that they could provide enough new
tractors to replace the missing horses and oxen. But the
production of tractors fell badly behind schedule, and a
very high percentage of those which were delivered broke
down almost immediately. As a result, in 1931 almost one
third of the grain yield was lost during the harvest. To
make matters worse, a drought hit southern Ukraine in
1931.
The Ukraine continued to resist and to dream of a free
and independent nation; and since Joseph Stalin could
not kill that dream, he first decided to deport all
Ukrainians to other parts of the Soviet Union.
Discovering that there were too many of them to move,
Stalin decided to kill the dreamers instead; and his
weapon of choice was a man-made, artificial famine which
was designed to eliminate the troublemakers and force
the survivors into total, complete submission. The
famine which occurred in 1932-33was to be for Ukrainians
what the Holocaust was to the Jews, and what the
Massacres of 1915 were for the Armenians. A tragedy of
unfathomable proportions, it traumatized the nation,
leaving it with deep social, psychological, political,
and demographic scars that it still carries to this very
day. The central fact about the famine is that is did
not have to happen. Food was available; but the state
confiscated most of it for its own use. All crops were
requisitioned by the Soviet government and shipped
elsewhere. This confiscation of food included seed which
was intended for spring planting. Any man, woman or
child caught taking even a handful of grain from a
government silo could be, and often was, executed. In
Moscow a law was enacted stipulating that no grain could
be given to the peasants until the government's full
quota had been met. Gangs of party activists conducted
brutal house-to-house searches, tearing up floors and
delving into wells in search of any grain which
remained. In fact, if a person did not appear to be
starving, he was suspected of hoarding food.
Famine, which had been spreading throughout 1932, hit
full force early in 1933. Lacking bread, peasants ate
pets, rats, bark, leaves, and the garbage from the well
provisioned kitchens of Communist Party members. Whole
villages were erased and people were dying by the tens
of thousands. Cannibalism existed. At first cannibals
were shot on the spot, but later were thrown into
concentration camps. The most terrifying sights were the
little children with skeleton limbs dangling from
balloon like abdomens. Cordons of troops prevented
peasants from entering cities; those who managed to
break through wandered about until they fell in the
streets. Such people were loaded onto trucks, together
with the corpses, and dumped into pits outside of the
city.
With the climbing death rate during
the famine, the publication of death statistics was
forbidden by the Soviet government. When deaths due to
famine took on major proportions in Ukraine in 1932-33,
physicians certifying the cause of death were forbidden
to name the killer - starvation. The word "holod"
(hunger) was decreed as counter-revolutionary, and no
one valuing his own life and those of his relatives
dared use it publicly. When the results of the census of
1937, for example, revealed shockingly high mortality
rates, Stalin had the leading census takers shot.
Elsewhere there was no famine - much
of Russia proper barely experienced it - but the borders
of Ukraine had been sealed by the secret police; there
was no escape. The Ukrainians had been sentenced to
death. And thus, the greatest genocide in history was
systematically accomplished. A noteworthy aspect of the
famine was the attempt to erase it from public
consciousness; the Soviet position was to deny that it
had occurred at all. To curry Stalin's favor, for
example, Walter Duranty - the Moscow based reporter of
the New York Times, repeatedly denied the
existence of a famine in his articles (while privately
estimating that about ten million people may have
starved to death). For the "profundity, impartiality,
sound judgment and exceptional clarity" of his
dispatches from the USSR, Duranty received the Pulitzer
Prize in 1932.
Yet, even to this very day, there are
those who deny or minimize the Ukrainian Holocaust to
such a degree that it is being referred to as "the
hidden holocaust of the twentieth century". In 1984, for
example, a documentary film entitled HARVEST OF DESPAIR
was shown on Canadian television. This film won numerous
prizes at World Film Festivals and a 1986 Academy award
nomination; yet all three top commercial networks in
America refused to show it. As recently as 1994, the New
Jersey state legislators were being pressured to exclude
the Ukrainian Holocaust from ResolutionA-589 (The
Holocaust Education Bill). Media coverage has been just
as one-sided about the Greek, Armenian, Syrian and
Nestorians Holocausts of 1984-1923 and, more recently,
the Serbian Holocaust. The atrocities against Christians
- especially Orthodox Christians - continue to this day!
ORTHODOX PERSECUTIONS TODAY
Of all the Christian confessions, it
has been the Eastern Orthodox Church which has suffered
the brunt of persecutions in the 20th century.
In the first two decades, there were
massacres of Orthodox Greeks, Slavs, and Armenians in
the Ottoman empire, culminating in the 1915 genocide of
the Armenians in Anatolia and the near destruction of
the ancient Assyrian community in Iraq. In 1923, the
entire Orthodox population of Asia Minor was forced to
leave their homes, bringing to a close a 2000 year
Christian presence.
During the Second World War, two
groups of Orthodox Christians were especially targeted
for genocide by the Nazis and their allies - the Gypsies
and the Orthodox Serbs of Bosnia and Croatia, while the
population of Greece, Serbia, European Russia, and
Ukraine were designated by the Nazis to serve as slave
labor for the Third Reich. By special order of Heinrich
Himmler (21 April 1942), clergyman from the East (as
opposed to their counter parts from Western Europe) were
to be used for hard labor.
At the same time the Orthodox
suffered in greater proportion to any other Christian
group at the hands of the Communists, who sought to
completely eliminate religion.
First in Russia and Ukraine, then in
Eastern Europe, in Greece during its civil war
(1945-49), and in Ethiopia, the Orthodox Church was the
principle target for attach, subversion, or destruction.
Finally, the Orthodox of the Middle
East have found themselves caught in the crossfire of
the conflicts between Muslim and Jew in Israel and the
West Bank, and the civil war between Maronites, Muslims,
and Palestinians in Lebanon.
Between the tolls exacted from
prisons, concentration camps, forced marches and exiles,
warfare, famine, and brutal military occupation, it is
reasonable to conclude that up to 50 million
Orthodox Christians have perished in the first
eight decades of the twentieth century.
Even in the United States, where so
many Orthodox have found refuge, the Orthodox Native
Americans of the Aleutian Islands were forcibly interned
during World War II and many of their churches
deliberately destroyed by the U.S. Army.
Unfortunately, the depth and range of
the Orthodox suffering throughout the world in this
century, remains largely unknown and unappreciated in
the West.
1987 - 1997
Harassment of the Orthodox Church in
the former Soviet Union continued through the Gorbachev
era. Many of the churches supposedly returned to the
Orthodox between 1988 and 1990 were in Western Ukraine.
This was part of an attempt by the KGB to sow open
discord between Orthodox and Catholics - only 100
churches were returned in Russia itself. The KGB
continued to target Orthodox clergymen involved in the
struggle for religious freedom and democratization; in
1990 several prominent priests, among them Fr. Alexander
Men, were murdered. It was only under President Boris
Yeltsin that full freedom was restored to the Orthodox
and other Russian based confessions. In other parts of
the former Soviet Union, notably in Uzbekistan and
Tadjikistan, the governments have continued to limit the
rights of the religious and ethnic minorities.
The triumph of democracy in Poland has not led to full
religious freedom for members of its 1 million strong
Orthodox minority. Although the height of anti Orthodox
activity seems to have peaked in 1991 after several
Orthodox churches and an historic monastery were
vandalized, Orthodox continue to be viewed as
second-class citizens in Poland; where they are
described in a secret Foreign Ministry report as an
"alien body in Poland's state organism." Laws on
religious education in the schools have virtually
established the Roman Catholic Church to the detriment
of both the Orthodox and the Lutherans; and Orthodox
believers continue to complain of petty harassment
endured at the local level.
In Slovakia, the government in 1991
announced its intention to review ownership of the
country's 125 Orthodox parishes. Since that time, over
90 church buildings have been taken away from the
Orthodox and given to the Catholics; and the Orthodox
have been blocked by local officials from constructing
new edifices, opening schools, or holding services. Even
the official policy of the Vatican announced 16 July
1990, which counseled Slovak Catholics to share disputed
properties with the Orthodox, has been ignored.
The wars in the former Yugoslavia
have been disastrous for the Orthodox. The Croatian
government has all but liquidated the Orthodox Church in
its territory, beginning with the dynamiting of the
residence and library of the Orthodox Metropolitan of
Zagreb on 11 April 1992. Following the Croatian
offensive of fall 1995 and the departure of over 200,000
Orthodox Serbs in Diocese in Krajina. (which brought a
total of over 800,000displaced Orthodox Christians),
four dioceses of the Serbian Orthodox Church ceased to
exist. In Croat controlled territory in Bosnia, the
Orthodox Bishop of Mostar was driven from his see, and
most of the Orthodox population was expelled. Estimates
are that over 154 Orthodox churches in the territory of
Bosnia and Croatia were deliberately destroyed. On
March25, 1999 NATO began bombing of Kosovo in Serbia. It
is one of the tragic ironies of History that Western
"Christian" nations have joined forces to eradicate
Serbs in Kosovo who are accused of "Ethnic cleansing".
History repeats itself ----Kosovo was the site 500 years
ago of the Christian Resistance to the Turks.
In Turkey and Turkish occupied Cyprus
the position of the Orthodox continues to deteriorate.
Despite international guarantees contained within the
1923 Treaty of Lausanne, the Turkish government
continues to enforce the closure of the famous Halki
Orthodox Theological Academy in Istanbul. Families of
those Orthodox illegally expelled in the 1950's and
1960'shave never been allowed to return to their homes,
again in contravention of the 1923 treaty guaranteeing
their right to do so. On Cyprus,450 Orthodox Churches on
the northern part of the island have been desecrated;
some have become night clubs while others have been
turned into public toilets. Other churches and
historical monuments, some dating back to the 5th
century, have been looted and left to rot away. There is
a sustained campaign to remove entirely the last traces
of the 2000year old Orthodox presence from occupied
Cyprus.
In Egypt, the Orthodox continue to
suffer from the many restrictions placed on their
ability to function in the economic and political life
of the country. There are many rules hindering their
ability to build and repair churches, and they are
increasingly becoming targets for armed attacks by
Muslim extremists. In the past two years, dozens of
Orthodox villagers in Upper Egypt have been murdered by
Islamic gunmen.
In India Orthodox Christians report
increased harassment on the part of both Hindu and
Muslim extremists, with isolated attacks and vehement
rhetoric demanding their removal from the Indian
landscape.
THE CURRENT ATTITUDE OF THE
AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
The government of the United States
prides itself on its commitment to defending religious
liberty. In the Middle East and Eastern Europe, however,
the United States is seen as supporting only those
churches who possess sufficient "influence" in
Washington, while ignoring the plight of the Orthodox.
Events over the last ten years have tended to confirm
that assessment.
During the 1980's, the Immigration
and Naturalization Service gave refugee status to any
Soviet citizen who applied on religious grounds - except
for members of the Orthodox Church. The very church
which had suffered the most under Soviet rule, whose
churches continued to be closed and her clergy arrested
until 1988, was not considered to be a "persecuted"
church by the American government.
After 1989, Orthodox Christians in
both Poland and Slovakia warned the United States
government that they were "at risk" as religious
minorities. In 1991 the Congress of Russian Americans
prepared two reports for the Commission of security and
Co-operation in Europe (CSCE: July & september1991)
warning of the dangers and asking that guarantees be
obtained for the rights of the Orthodox in those
nations. No action was taken, and at this time there is
no indication that the US has pressed to secure the
rights of these minorities in either Poland or Slovakia.
There is also no indication that the US has ever linked
economic assistance to either country or entry into the
NATO alliance with improvements in the situation of
their religious minorities.
Despite the large amount of economic
and military assistance received by Turkey, there is no
indication that the US has ever been prepared to use
this leverage to secure the rights of the Orthodox
minority, even though Turkey is bound by its own
constitution and its international obligations to allow
the Orthodox to maintain schools and other institutions.
In contrast, US senators have often publicly and vocally
called for American assistance to Russia to be made
conditional on Russia's acceptance of American
Protestant missionaries.
Persecution and harassment of the
Orthodox continues because of a belief that the United
States is not interested in their fate, and that America
will not undertake any effort (other than occasional lip
service) to secure religious freedom for the Orthodox. I
turn, Orthodox leaders around the world are watching
closely to see whether or not future initiatives on
religious freedom which emanate from the US are truly
based on principle, or whether American policy will be
selective in terms of who is faulted and who is
exonerated.
The One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
Orthodox Church has suffered greatly in this century,
and continues to be a martyr church in many parts of the
world. If the US chooses to ignore this fact for
political gain, then the cause of religious freedom -
for all - will be gravely compromised.
This information was borrowed from:
The Library of the Ukrainian
Orthodox Church USA - Ukraine, A History
Ukrainian Orthodox League of the
USA - Ukrainian Affairs Committee
3. The Canadian Institute of
Ukrainian Studies - University of Toronto
4. Ukrainian Orthodox League
Bulletin - October 1998
5. Greek Orthodox Diocese of
Denver Diocesan News: Dr. Nicholas Gvosdev - August
1998
6. Federation of Hellenic
Societies of the Greater Baltimore Washington
Region: Heritage Publications - 1997
(Editors Notes: We cannot even well
imagine but "50 Million Victims Of The Orthodox
Christian Holocaust" is not the correct number, as we
have learned from Alexander Solzhenitsyn that more then
66.5 million Orthodox Christians also perished from 1917
and onward during the times of the Soviet Union.
Secondly the New Martyrs of Serbia are increasing, the
killing of innocent people, the destruction of Churches,
Monasteries, Cemeteries, and homes, as well as a massive
killings of Serbian Orthodox Christians, and countless
missing people.)