Skip to content

Somali Christian Women Pay High Price to Follow Christ

November 16, 2011 | Africa
November 16, 2011
AfricaSomalia

ICC Note:
Jeff M. Sellers tells the stories of Somali Christian women living in Nairobi who lost everything to follow Christ in the National Review Online.
By Jeff M. Sellers
11/11/2011 Somalia (National Review) – Last year, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, an avowed atheist from Somalia, challenged Christians to redouble their efforts to evangelize Muslims. But for Somali women I recently met in Kenya, quietly clinging to their faith may be the only way they can respond to Ali’s challenge.
The women, who had fled to Nairobi from war in Somalia, are Christians who have paid the price for their faith not because they were bold in proclaiming it, but because they were unable to hide it. Before our translator showed up, I found myself waiting with some of them in silence, wondering if I should break the language/culture/gender barrier by showing them photos of my wife and baby.
I was glad I didn’t. There was Amina, a 28-year-old refugee from Mogadishu whose husband divorced her after kicking her and their four-year-old son out of the house when she converted to Christianity; he’s now threatening to take the boy away from her. There was Shukri, whose husband was killed by Islamic extremists from the al Shabaab rebels fighting the transitional government in Somalia; her late husband’s mother took her twin girls, born 2006, to keep them from being raised Christian.
There was Kamila, who lost her truck-driver husband to an accident and who still bears the knife scars on her mouth and chin from her fellow Somali women; the brother of her late husband had sent them to attack her as part of his attempt to snatch her then five-month-old baby from her. According to custom, the brother should attain all of her late husband’s property, including her son, in order to keep him from being raised a Christian. A court ruled that the baby should stay with Kamila until he is weaned, and she took that opportunity to escape with him to another area near Nairobi; he is now five.
There was Sahra, who wears a full-body burqa in her Somali neighborhood in Nairobi to keep from being recognized and abused. Her husband was killed in fighting in Mogadishu in 2006. Her relatives have cut her off because of her Christian faith, and she said she can feel the same shunning from her fellow expatriates. “When they see you are low-income and have left your religion, they see you as sick in the head,” said the mother of two young daughters who survives by working odd jobs.

[Full Story]

To read more news stories, visit the ICC Newsroom
For interviews, please email press@persecution.org

Help raise $500,000 to meet the urgent needs of Christians in Syria!

Give Today
Back To Top
Search