Random Thoughts

Sharing my thoughts with the world from a Particular Baptist perspective

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • My Web Sites
  • Other Blogs I Recommend

Tag Archives: observant

Jewish Christian in Israel Seeks Protection from Repeated Attacks

Posted on December 29, 2009 by particularkev

Police unresponsive to U.S.-born activist assaulted for his faith.

JERUSALEM, December 28 (CDN) — A Christian of Jewish origin who has been attacked on the streets here four times because of his faith in Christ is seeking police protection.

Jerusalem resident Yossi Yomtov said police have been slow to investigate hate crimes against him by youths wearing kippahs, cloth skullcaps typically worn by observant Jews. In two of the attacks a youth plied him with pepper spray and stun gun shocks, he said.

“This young man cursed me for my belief in Christ,” Yomtov told Compass. “He used ugly curses and spoke in highly abusive language.”

Yomtov, who founded social activist group Lemallah (“Upward”) after moving to Israel from the United States in 1999, said he was last attacked on Dec. 19. On that occasion his group was holding a demonstration in downtown Jerusalem, he said, when a man chanting anti-Christian slogans and using foul language approached him and begin striking him. Police never showed up in spite of many calls to the police station, he said.

Yomtov said he received Christ in 1984, while still living in the United States. He said he became a Christian after he “hit the bottom” – taking drugs and engaging in “in illegal activity.” He regards himself as a Jewish Christian belonging to no one church; he does not belong to the highly organized movement of Messianic Jews.

“I’m not secretive about my belief like some other people, and I often talk about it,” he told Compass. “That’s how many people are aware of me believing in Jesus Christ.”

In previous attacks in the last few months, the assailants appeared to be teenaged or young men of French origin, he said.

“When they approached, one of them started cursing me – I ignored him, as I figured he wasn’t about to attack me, but he did,” Yomtov said. “I received a punch in the face and had to defend myself.”

Police arrived and caught one of the attackers but refused his request to press charges, he said. Yomtov said he asked police why they didn’t secure any witnesses.

“I was told to shut up,” he said. “It was clear that they were not going to press any charges.”

A month later, he said, he was attacked again. The same teenaged youth approached him on King George street in downtown Jerusalem.

“He sprayed my eyes with a pepper spray, and I stood there, blind, for at least 15 minutes,” Yomtov said. “People at a nearby bus stop started calling the police, but they never showed up.”

Late at night on Oct. 12, the harrasment continued.

“I was walking in the city center, in close proximity to a very central Ben-Yehuda street sometime after midnight, and a group of youths with stun guns attacked me brutally,” he said. “I rushed to the police station, but the police officer again was reluctant to take up this complaint, and it took quite a few times and a lot of me convincing them to take this matter seriously.”

Yomtov said he managed to take a photo with his cell phone of the youth who seemed to be the gang leader.

“Finally they agreed to start investigating this issue, yet so far there is no progress in the investigation, and I have totally lost a sense of personal security,” he said. “I don’t know when they’ll come up to me next.”

Police in Jerusalem declined to comment on Yomtov’s case in spite of repeated requests by Compass.

On one street, Yomtov pointed to a morass of hatefull grafitti. Written with Hebrew characters, some of it employed foul language in referring to Christianity and Islam; other messages proclaimed threats such as, “Death to Arabs” and “Death to the left.”

“It seems as if they don’t want to stop the hate crimes, the hate graffities, until it’s too late,” Yomtov said. “If they were serious about enforcing laws against violence they would have at least identified the perpetrator and submitted that information in the complaint file for the prosecutor. Instead they threatened me with arrest, when all I wanted was to investigate the violent crime against me.”

He referred to the recent indictment of ultra-orthodox Jewish extremist Jacob Teitel, an immigrant from the United States charged with multiple hate crimes, including the murder of an Arab shepherd and taxi driver in 1997 and the planting of an explosive device at the front door of a family of Messianic Jews in Ariel that seriously injured 15-year-old Ami Ortiz.

“I wonder whether the Israeli police could prevent the crimes Jacob Teitel performed, had they been taking him seriously from the beginning,” said Yomtov. “It seems that the Israeli police only care to investigate hate crimes when someone is killed or seriously injured.”

Report from Compass Direct News 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pocket
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email
  • Print

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in Christianity, France, Islam, Israel, Jews, USA | Tagged 1984, 1997, 1999, abusive, activist, activity, against, agreed, Ami Ortiz, anti-Christian, appeared, approached, Arabs, Ariel, arrest, assailants, assaulted, attacked, attackers, attacks, aware, beginning, belief, believing, belong, belonging, Ben-Yehuda Street, blind, born, bottom, brutally, bus stop, calling, calls, care, cell, center, chanting, characters, charged, charges, Christ, Christian, Christianity, Christians, church, city, clear, close, cloth, comment, complaint, continued, convincing, crimes, cursed, curses, death, declined, defend, demonstration, device, door, downtown, driver, drugs, employed, enforcing, engaging, explosive, extremist, eyes, face, faith, family, figured, file, foul, founded, French, front, gang, graffiti, group, gun, harassment, hate, hateful, Hebrew, highly, hit, holding, identified, ignored, illegal, immigrant, indictment, information, injured, investigate, investigating, investigation, Islam, Israel, Israeli, issue, Jacob Teitel, Jerusalem, Jesus, Jew, Jewish, Jews, killed, King George Street, kippahs, language, laws, leader, left, Lemallah, living, lost, man, managed, matter, men, messages, Messianic, midnight, morass, movement, moving, multiple, murder, Muslim, muslims, nearby, never, observant, officer, often, organized, origin, people, pepper, performed, perpetrator, personal, phone, photo, planting, plied, pointed, police, police station, press, prevent, previous, proclaimed, progress, prosecutor, protection, proximity, punch, received, recent, referring, reffered, refused, regards, reluctant, repeated, request, resident, rushed, secretive, secure, security, seeking, seeks, sense, serious, seriously, shepherd, shocks, showed, shut up, skullcaps, slogans, slow, social, spite, spoke, spray, sprayed, start, started, stood, stop, street, streets, striking, stun, submitted, taking, talk, taxi, teenaged, threatened, threats, totally, typically, ugly, ultra-orthodox, unresponsive, upward, USA, used, violence, violent, walking, wearing, witnesses, worn, written, Yossi Yomtov, young, youth, youths | Leave a comment

More than Half in Turkey Oppose Non-Muslim Religious Meetings

Posted on December 5, 2009 by particularkev

Survey finds nearly 40 percent of population has negative view of Christians.

ISTANBUL, December 4 (CDN) — More than half of the population of Muslim-majority Turkey opposes members of other religions holding meetings or publishing materials to explain their faith, according to a recently issued survey.

Fully 59 percent of those surveyed said non-Muslims either “should not” or “absolutely should not” be allowed to hold open meetings where they can discuss their ideas. Fifty-four percent said non-Muslims either “should not” or “absolutely should not” be allowed to publish literature that describes their faith.

The survey also found that almost 40 percent of the population of Turkey said they had “very negative” or “negative” views of Christians. In the random survey, 60 percent of those polled said there is one true religion; over 90 percent of the population of Turkey is Sunni Muslim.

Ali Çarkoglu, one of two professors at Sabanci University who conducted the study, said no non-Muslim religious gathering in Turkey is completely “risk free.”

“Even in Istanbul, it can’t be easy to be an observant non-Muslim,” Çarkoglu said.

The report, issued last month, was part of a study commissioned by the International Social Survey Program, a 45-nation academic group that conducts polls and research about social and political issues. The survey quantified how religious the population is in each of its 43-member countries.

Çarkoglu, along with Professor Ersin Kalaycıoğlu, carried out the research in 2008. The completed study with the results of all 43 countries will be released in 2010. The study has been conducted previously three times at roughly 10-year intervals.

This year marked the first time study data has been collected in Turkey. Turkey was the only Muslim-majority population in the study.

The survey includes significant nuance. While 42 percent of the population agreed with the statement that religious people should be tolerant, 49 percent of those surveyed said they would either “absolutely” or “most likely” not support a political party that accepted people from another religion. But 20 percent of those surveyed said they had “very positive” or “positive” views of Christians – 13 percent “very positive,” and 7 percent “positive.”

Çarkoglu said the results of study could be attributed to the Turkish educational system, which mandates religious studies for both junior high school and high school students – classes in which Christians and Jews “are not even mentioned” or are portrayed as “the others,” Çarkoglu said.

“That instills in these students a severe point of view of intolerance,” he added.

Dual Threat

The Rev. Dositheos Anagnostopoulos, speaking on behalf of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul, said that Greek Orthodox Christians are treated like second-class citizens in Turkey. He said that members of his church feel “pressured” but things have improved slowly over the years. Earlier this year, two Greek Orthodox cemeteries in Istanbul and one in Izmir were severely vandalized.

“There’s still vandalism, but there haven’t been any problems with physical threats lately,” he said.

In Turkey, Christians face dual threats from a self-declared “secular” state and from members of the public who, according to the study, have become more observant in their Islamic faith. Christians are often seen as enemies of the state, enemies of Islam or traitors to Turkish culture.

A 2009 report on international religious freedom by the U.S. Department of State said that in Turkey, “No law explicitly prohibits religious speech or religious conversions; nevertheless, many prosecutors and police regarded religious speech and religious activism with suspicion. Christians engaged in religious advocacy were occasionally threatened or pressured by government and state officials. … Threats against non-Muslims created an atmosphere of pressure and diminished freedom for some non-Muslim communities.”

At times in Turkey’s history, the government has “manipulated public opinion” by putting forth the message that Turkish Christians are aligned with powers outside of the country that want to divide the nation, said Zekai Tanyar, a Turkish national who has been a Christian for more than 30 years. He is chairman of the Association of Protestant Churches (in Turkey).

“There are some who view that Christians are out to undermine the country, especially missionaries,” he said.

In January 2007, Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of the Armenian weekly Agos, was shot dead in Istanbul. Dink was a member of the Armenian Christian community in Turkey. Three months later, two Turkish Christians and a German Christian were murdered in Malatya. The accused killers in all four slayings have alleged links to Turkish nationalists. Two other Christians, converts from Islam, are standing trial charged with, among other things, “insulting Turkishness” and inciting hatred against Islam.

According to the U.S state department report, by law religious services in Turkey can only take place at worship sites approved by the government. And while the Sunni majority receives generous support from the government for its mosques, “[Non-Muslim groups] reported difficulties opening, maintaining, and operating houses of worship.”

Tanyar of the Protestant association said that the anti-Christian persecution situation in Turkey has improved in some ways but gotten worse in others.

“People have gotten used to the idea that we exist, and certain laws have changed to accommodate us,” he said. “On the other hand, acts of disinformation and violence have increased.”

Report from Compass Direct News

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pocket
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email
  • Print

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in Armenia, Christianity, Germany, Islam, Orthodox, Turkey, USA | Tagged 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, Academic, accepted, accommodate, accused, activism, Acts, advocacy, Agos, agreed, Ali Carkoglu, aligned, alleged, allowed, anti-Christian, approved, Armenian, association, Association of Protestant Churches, atmosphere, attributed, behalf, carried, cemeteries, certain, chairman, charged, Christian, Christianity, Christians, citizens, classes, collected, commissioned, communities, community, completed, completely, conducted, conversions, converts, countries, country, created, culture, data, dead, difficulties, diminished, discuss, disinformation, divide, Dositheos Anagnostopoulos, dual, easy, Ecumenical Patriarchate, editor-in-chief, educational, enemies, engaged, Ersin Kalaycioglu, exist, explain, explicitly, faith, feel, finds, free, freedom, generous, German, government, Greek Orthodox, group, hatred, high school, History, hold, holding, houses, Hrant Dink, ideas, improved, inciting, increased, instills, insulting, international, International Social Survey Program, intervals, intolerance, Islam, Islamic, issued, issues, Istanbul, Izmir, Jews, junior, killers, law, laws, Links, literature, maintaining, majority, Malatya, mandates, manipulated, materials, meetings, members, mentioned, message, missionaries, mosques, murdered, Muslim, muslims, nation, national, negative, non-Muslim, nuance, observant, officials, one, only, open, opening, operating, opinion, oppose, opposes, party, people, Persecution, physical, police, political, polled, polls, portrayed, positive, powers, pressured, problems, professors, prohibits, Protestant, public, publishing, quantified, random, recently, released, religion, religions, religious, religious freedom, report, research, results, Rev, risk, Sabanci University, second-class, secular, self-declared, severe, severely, shot, significant, sites, slayings, slowly, social, speaking, speech, standing, statement, students, study, Sunni, support, survey, surveyed, suspicion, system, threat, tolerant, traitors, treated, trial, true, Turkey, Turkish, Turkishness, U.S. Separtment of State, undermine, USA, vandalism, vandalized, view, violence, weekly, worse, Zekai Tanyar | Leave a comment

IMPORTANT NOTE

News reports of persecution and other information posted here does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the 'Blog Author-Master.'

ADMINISTRATION LINKS

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,446 other subscribers

Random Thoughts

  • 341,276 visitors

Search Random Thoughts

Categories

ALP Australia Bill Shorten Boko Haram bushfires China Christianity Communism crime disaster Donald Trump economy Egypt Health and Fitness Hinduism India Indonesia Iran Iraq ISIL - Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant Islam Liberal Party Malcolm Turnbull National Party news New South Wales Nigeria Pakistan Politics Queensland Roman Catholicism Russia Scott Morrison Syria United Kingdom USA Victoria video War War on Terror

Tags

ALP arrested article attack Australia authorities children China Christian Christianity Christians church churches Coalition Communism communist communists community coronavirus country district Donald Trump economy election faith family fitness government group health Hindu Hinduism Hindus India Iran Islam Islamic killed Labor Party law leaders Liberal Party local media members Muslim muslims National Party new news New South Wales NSW officials Pakistan Pastor people Persecution police Politics President religion religious Scott Morrison security state Syria United Kingdom USA vaccine Victoria video violence War women worship

Archives

Blogs

  • At The BookShelf
  • Kevin's Wilderness and Travels
  • Kevin's Daily Photo, Video, Quote or Link
  • Kevin’s Walk on the Wildside
  • Tea Gardens Particular Baptist Church
  • The particularbaptist.com Blog
  • Tracing our History

Links

  • Kevin's Portal
  • Kevin’s Family – History Site
  • Kevin’s Wilderness Journeys
  • particularbaptist.com
  • Tea Gardens Particular Baptist Church
  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Categories

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,446 other subscribers

Tweeting Thoughts!!!

  • Marked as to-read: Hell Island by Matthew Reilly goodreads.com/review/show?id… 3 weeks ago
  • Marked as to-read: Flight of the Nighthawks by Raymond E. Feist goodreads.com/review/show?id… 3 weeks ago
  • Marked as to-read: Resilient by Mitchell Johnson goodreads.com/review/show?id… 3 weeks ago
  • 4 of 5 stars to Battle for Rome by Ian James Ross goodreads.com/review/show?id… 3 weeks ago
  • I read Mayday! by Clive Cussler goodreads.com/review/show?id… 3 weeks ago
Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • Random Thoughts
    • Join 1,446 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Random Thoughts
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d bloggers like this: