The National - News

How ‘Faithkeepe­rs’ betrays those it seeks to help

- James Zogby

The recent horrific massacre of 29 Egyptian Coptic Christian pilgrims served as a tragic reminder of the vulnerabil­ity of minority faith communitie­s in many parts of the Middle East.

As a Maronite Catholic with family and friends in the Middle East, a doctorate in comparativ­e religion and more than 40 years of work experience throughout the Arab world, this issue is a deeply personal one for me. I know that in many parts of the world there are religious communitie­s that are facing threats to their very survival or dealing with serious problems of discrimina­tion and dispossess­ion. The challenge we face is how we can help and not harm these vulnerable communitie­s.

Three years ago, this issue was directly addressed by eight Patriarchs of the Eastern Christian churches – representi­ng the majority of the Middle East’s Christians – appearing together before a conference in Washington DC. Their message was poignant and direct: we need your help, but the help we need is not for you to vilify Muslims. Demonising Islam may generate applause in some circles in Washington, but it does not help Christians in the Middle East.

That simple message was clearly not heard by the makers of the film Faithkeepe­rs, which is currently being screened across the United States. While purporting to be in defence of Christians in the Middle East, Faithkeepe­rs is a not so subtle attack on Islam. The film mixes real stories of Christians and others who have suffered at the hands of ISIL with the insidious insinuatio­n that such persecutio­n is at the heart of the Muslim faith.

Adding insult to injury, the film falsely conflates disparate historical events – the Armenian genocide as referred to by some, the Jewish exodus from Iraq and other Arab countries, and the atrocities committed by ISIL – as if they were all the result of Islam’s “inherent” desire to purge all non-Muslims from the region. What Faithkeepe­rs ignores is the fact that the Armenian genocide was perpetrate­d by a secular movement in Turkey that attacked all non-Turks, including Muslim Kurds; and the horrific anti- Jewish pogroms in Arab countries that followed the 1948 war were in reaction to Israel’s horrific “ethnic cleansing” of hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­n Christians and Muslims from what became the “Jewish State.” When Faithkeepe­rs looks at the situation of Christians in Iraq and Syria, it fails to mention that, historical­ly, Christians fared well in both countries. It was the civil war in Syria, the US invasion of Iraq and the resulting disruption of life and the empowering of extremist sectarian movements in both countries that put Christians and the entire population of both countries at risk. And when speaking of the Christian exodus from Arab countries over the past century, Faithkeepe­rs fails to understand that it was not Islam, but several other factors that led Christians and other elites to leave the Middle East, namely that Christians had connection­s, through their churches, with the West and, when seeking opportunit­y, the US and western Europe were obvious desirable destinatio­ns (note: many Muslims left as well for similar reasons, but they found the Arab Gulf countries or Africa to be more promising and hospitable destinatio­ns).

But none of this matters for the makers of Faithkeepe­rs, since its central purpose is to demonise Islam. It is not a stretch to make such a claim when we look more closely at the production team that made the film, its funders, and those who are promoting it, most of whom have a disturbing record of disseminat­ing and supporting a number of anti-Muslim propaganda films and organisati­ons.

A look at the line- up of individual­s and organisati­ons behind Faithkeepe­rs reveals a “who’s who” collection of the Southern Poverty Law Centre’s list of Islamophob­ic “hate groups.”

The film itself is a product of the Clarion Project which has been involved in the production, direction, and distributi­on of other films including: Obsession and The Third Jihad, both of which have been discredite­d as works of notorious anti-Muslim propaganda. According to NPR, Clarion was founded by employees of Aish HaTorah – a pro- Israel group with offices in Israel and the US – and shared offices with that group. Clarion’s funding also comes from the same sources that have funded anti- Muslim campaigner­s such as Pamela Gellar, David Horowitz, Robert Spencer, and Brigitte Gabriel.

Finally, if there were any question as to the intent of Faithkeepe­rs, that matter is resolved in the film’s credits which note that the film itself was based on an article written by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, an anti- Muslim activist who has described Islam in the most offensive terms.

The bottom line is that vulnerable Christian communitie­s do need protection and support. What they do not need is to be exploited as pawns in a disgracefu­l effort to demonise another religion. By using the plight of Christians for no other purpose than to further an anti- Muslim agenda, Faithkeepe­rs has broken faith with those it claims to be helping.

Dr James Zogby is president of the Arab American Institute

On Twitter: @aaiusa

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