Skip to content

An Egyptian Jew’s Message To Threatened Middle East Christians

April 4, 2014 | Africa
April 4, 2014
AfricaEgypt

ICC Note: One of just 14 Jews remaining in Egypt, Magda Haroun had a message for Coptic Pope Tawadros, and the leaders of Middle Eastern churches facing persecution. “Don’t let your people leave. Do all that you can so that you do not become as we are,” she told the leader of the largest Christian minority in the Middle East. The intense violence is driving many to leave, but there are many working to help the church continue on.
By Paul Marshall
04/03/2014 Egypt (Fox News) – If you walk down bustling Adly Street in downtown Cairo, it is easy to miss the large gray building. But if you trace the address and stop there, you’ll notice the Stars of David carved on the walls. And then you’ll see the security checkpoint and the guards.
If you want to go into the Adly Street Synagogue and its offices, you must surrender your passport or other identity documents.
Certainly, the plainclothes security men are there to protect the synagogue and those close by — but they are also able to keep a detailed record of all those who visit.
My colleague Sam Tadros and I visited there in February to meet Magda Haroun, the leader of Egypt’s tiny remaining Jewish community. In living memory there were nearly 100,000 Jews in Egypt. Just weeks ago there were 15 left in all the country: 12 in Cairo, three in Alexandria. All were aged, and only one was a man.
Last month, after the death of Magda’s sister, Nadia, there are only 14.
There is no rabbi, so there are no Jewish marriages, even if there were any Jews of marriageable age and prospect.

Magda was also the first leader of the Jewish community to be invited to the installation of Pope Tawadros, chosen in 2013 to head the Coptic Orthodox church, home to over 90 percent of Egypt’s Christians. The term “Copt” is simply a brief form of “Egypt,” and this church traces its origins back to St. Mark, the author of Mark’s Gospel.
Egypt’s Christians, some 10 percent of the population, are by far the largest non-Muslim minority in the Middle East, and they are now also under threat.
On Aug. 14 last year, in one single day, 41 churches in Egypt were razed in a matter of hours. This was probably the largest single pogrom against Egypt’s Christians in the last 700 years.

Knowing this, and knowing the history of her own people, Magda felt compelled to give a message when she met with Pope Tawadros. She knew, of course, that he already shared her fear, and in any case, no member of the clergy wants his flock to flee.
But in the contemporary Middle East, the message is so immediate and stark, and the histories so parallel, that Magda knew it must still be said. From a remaining Jew to threatened Christians: “Do not let your people leave. Do all that you can so that you do not become as we are…”

[Full Story]

To read more news stories, visit the ICC Newsroom
For interviews, please email [email protected]

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

Give Today
Back To Top
Search