The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Henry Srebrnik

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The Copts of Egypt are over 10 million strong and have lived in the country as Christians for two millennia.

Discrimina­tory state policies and political violence have historical­ly marginaliz­ed Copts. There have been widespread attacks on Coptic churches and institutio­ns in Egypt.

All this provides the backdrop to the mission of Coptic Solidarity, an advocacy group located in the Washington, DC region.

Their ninth annual conference, held in Washington June 21-22, included six members of the U.S. Congress; Lord David Alton of the British House of Lords; and Alberta Conservati­ve MP Garnett Genuis.

Coptic Solidarity President Dr. George Gurguis contended that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi pretends to be a “saviour” protecting Copts from extremists like Islamic State, in order to advance his standing on the internatio­nal stage.

Sisi’s “friendly” gestures towards Copts have remained just that, as his government continued its severe discrimina­tory treatment and failed to protect them, their churches, or their property from violence by fanatics.

More importantl­y, attacks on the Copts have continued with a ferocity that exceeds those observed during former President Hosni Mubarak’s rule.

The Coptic Church itself, he stated, has been co-opted and remains under immense pressure. It is in no position to provide moral support for the Copts in their struggle for religious freedom and equal civil rights.

Representa­tive Dave Trott, a Republican Congressma­n from Michigan, also criticized Sisi, who frequently insists that all Egyptians are equal.

“So why is it that there are no Copts in senior positions in the defense department, in the foreign ministry, in the intelligen­ce department in the military. There are no Coptic governors and most significan­tly there are no Copts on the national soccer team. I think the bias and bigotry continues.”

Republican Congressma­n French Hill of Arkansas, who in 2017 introduced Resolution 673 in the U.S. House of Representa­tives, expressing concern over attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, was the recipient of Coptic Solidarity’s annual leadership award.

“I’ll continue to get engaged with the U.S. government, our partners and other government­s and those groups like Coptic Solidarity that continue to speak out against the plight of intoleranc­e and fear that many Christians around the world face on a daily basis,” he indicated to those attending.

Genuis called on the internatio­nal community to hold Egypt and other Muslim majority countries to the same standards, saying, “We should not be subject to the soft bigotry of low expectatio­ns when it comes to the issue of religious liberty.”

Toronto-based Raheel Raza, President of Muslims Facing Tomorrow, noted that Egypt also has a number of smaller minorities who also continue to face marginaliz­ation and discrimina­tion.

These include Ahmadiyya, who are followers of a modern Islamic sect that is considered heretical by some traditiona­l Muslim scholars and a small group of Quranists: Muslims who regard the Qur’an as the

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