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Christian Girl, Family in Pakistan Expelled over Misspelling

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An 8th grade student in Pakistan has been expelled from school and her family forced to relocate after the Christian girl misspelled an Urdu word, leading to accusations of “blasphemy,” sources said.
In the garrison city of Abbottabad, 13-year-old Faryal Bhatti, a student at the Sir Syed Girls High School in Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF) Colony Havelian, misspelled a word on an Urdu exam on Sept. 22 while answering a question on a poem in praise of the Muslim prophet Muhammad, according to area Christians.
Faryal wrote laanat, the transliteration of the Urdu word for “curse,” instead of naat, which means a poem written in praise of Islam’s prophet, they said. The school administration and local Islamists declared that the error was serious enough to violate Pakistan’s widely condemned laws against blaspheming Muhammad and Islam.
Conviction under Section 295-C of Pakistan’s blasphemy law for derogatory comments about Muhammad is punishable by death, though life imprisonment is also possible.
 
Faryal’s Urdu teacher was collecting the answer sheets from her students when she noticed the word on Faryal’s paper. The teacher, identified only as Fareeda, summoned the Christian girl, scolded her and beat her, area sources told Compass by telephone.
 
Fareeda then notified the principal, who in turn informed school officials as news of the error spread throughout the colony. The next day, male students at the school as well as some Muslim representatives staged a demonstration, demanding registration of a criminal case against the eighth-grader and her eviction from the area, sources said.
 
Prayer leaders within the Muslim community also condemned the incident in their Friday sermons, asking the colony’s administration to take action against Faryal as well as her family, sources said.
 
POF Colony Havelian Managing Director Asif Siddiki called a meeting of clerics and school teachers to discuss the conflict, according to reports, at which the girl and her mother were ordered to appear; they explained that it was a mere error caused by a resemblance between the two words.
 
The girl and her mother immediately apologized, contending that Faryal had no malicious intentions, but in a move apparently designed to pacify Muslim cries for punishment, the POF administration expelled her from the school on Saturday (Sept. 24).
 
School administrator Junaid Sarfraz said Faryal had confessed that she had inadvertently made the mistake and the school administration, after consulting local clerics, decided to expel her. Sarfraz claimed that Faryal’s teacher was certain that she had made the mistake intentionally and that the matter was referred to clerics because Faryal had previously aroused similar suspicions of blasphemy.
 
Maulana Alla Dita, head of the area’s prominent mosque, reportedly said the school administration had made the right decision in expelling Faryal from school. Dita claimed that he had met with Faryal, who had apologized for the mistaken use of the word. Dita said he wasn’t clear about Faryal’s intentions, but that “the word she had used was sacrilegious,” according to press reports.
 
Faryal’s mother, Sarafeen Bhatti, a staff nurse at the POF Hospital Havelian for several years, was immediately transferred to POF Wah Cantonment Hospital. Abbottabad District Commissioner Syed Imtiaz Hussain Shah said the 13-year-old had been expelled for using “derogatory words” and her mother had consequently been “moved to another place.”
 
A Christian lawyer in Havelian who was among the community members making efforts to defuse area tensions told Compass by phone that the military had acted swiftly to save the lives of Faryal and her mother.
 
“The military swung into action soon after protests broke out calling for a blasphemy case against the teenager,” said the attorney on condition of anonymity. “They bundled the family in an ambulance and took them away before the situation could turn violent.”
A text-message campaign also started on Saturday (Sept. 24) calling for action against the family, he said.
“Some Christian families living in the area panicked, but the situation has been under control so far,” he said.
 
An area Christian told Compass there were 13 or 14 Christian families in the colony who now have fears about security. He said that Faryal’s family had little contact with other Christians living in the area. The resident also praised the army for acting timely, “or else the mullahs would have punished all of us for the little girl’s error.”
The incident has instilled fear in Christian parents that an unintentional mistake by their children could cause them personal disaster. Shazia Imran, mother to three schoolchildren, told Compass that Faryal’s episode had left her distressed.
 
“Ever since I came to know about the young girl’s story, I have been unable to sleep properly,” she said. “We have been continuously telling our children not to discuss their faith with anyone in school and to avoid getting into religious discussions with their Muslim class fellows, but this was beyond my imagination.”
She added that she and her husband were now “very disturbed and fearful” about their children’s future in Pakistan.
 
Azra George, a Christian mother to a college student, said the incident had shocked her and the congregation at her Presbyterian church.
“Everyone at church was discussing this sorry incident on Sunday,” she said. “Parents of school-going children were particularly perturbed. This blasphemy thing will always remain hanging on our heads like a sword, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it.”
 
Compass’s repeated attempts to reach the Bhatti family were unsuccessful as they had moved to an undisclosed location due to security concerns.
Asif Aqeel, executive director of the Community Development Initiative, an affiliate of the European Centre for Law and Justice, said the incident showed how Pakistani society was getting sensitized over the issue of blasphemy.
 
“Only a small number of people are formally accused of blasphemy – we do not know the number of people who, like Faryal and her family, are harassed without a legal charge,” he said. “Members of Pakistan’s minority communities are afraid of moving around and expressing themselves freely due to the fear of being accused of blasphemy.”
 
Christians make up only 2.45 percent of Pakistan’s population, which is more than 95 percent Muslim, according to Operation World. Section 295-B of Pakistan’s blasphemy law makes willful desecration of the Quran or use of an extract in a derogatory manner punishable with life imprisonment. Section 295-A prohibits injuring or defiling places of worship and “acts intended to outrage religious feelings.” It is punishable by life imprisonment, which in Pakistan is 25 years.
 
Aqeel said a Christian boy was recently implicated in a criminal case of harassment by the family of a Muslim girl who was in love with him. Aqeel said the boy’s family urged the police investigating officer to free the boy, whose name was withheld for security reasons, as the charges were baseless.
“The family was taken aback when the police official told them that their son had mocked the Sunnah [sayings and teachings] of prophet Muhammad by keeping a French beard,” Aqeel said. Thus, although the harassment case had nothing to do with the blasphemy law, the mere mention of the law forced the family to keep silent, he said.
 
Similarly, Christian teachers avoid lessons that mention Islamic history or anything related to the religion out of fear that any misstep could bring criminal charges. Likewise, Urdu language and social studies textbooks include several lessons on Islamic religious thought, so Christian teachers avoid nearly half of these books to avoid being charged with blasphemy, he said.
Napolean Qayyum, a leader of the Minorities Wing of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party, condemned the incident, saying it was unfortunate that a 13-year-old had to suffer this ordeal over a miniscule error.
 
“The army’s timely intervention saved the Christians’ lives, but most people are not so fortunate,” he said, adding that the incident showed how intolerance towards minorities was taking root in Pakistani society.
“Would the teacher have highlighted the same mistake if it was made by a Muslim student?” he said. “I would guess not.”
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Second high profile kidnapping in Pakistan targets son of slain governor Salman Taseer

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The son of a slain governor in Pakistan — who was killed for opposing the country’s notorious blasphemy law — was kidnapped recently in an upscale neighborhood in Lahore.

Shahbaz Taseer, 28, was on his way to work when he was abducted. He is the son of the late governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer, who was murdered on Jan. 4, by his own bodyguard.

Shahbaz was riding in his car in Gulberg, an upscale area in Lahore, when four gun-wielding men who were riding motorcycles intercepted his silver Mercedes car.

The gunmen forced Shahbaz out of his vehicle, then shoved him into a waiting SUV car which sped away. To date, there have been no ransom demands, and there are no firm suspects yet.

Although Shahbaz had government-assigned security, at the time of the abduction none of his guards were present. His father, the elder Taseer, was killed by his own bodyguard, Malik Mumtaz Qadri, who later told officials he did this because Taseer opposed the blasphemy law.

Qadri was hailed by some public sectors as a hero for his deed. Under the blasphemy law, it is a crime to insult prophet Muhammad, the Qur’an and the Islamic faith. Oftentimes the law has been used to settle personal scores.

Taseer made the bold gesture of visiting Asia Bibi, a Christian woman with four young children, who was handed the death sentence for the crime of blasphemy. Bibi’s case drew international attention to the infamous blasphemy law. (See http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2011/01/muslim-pakistani-governor-assassinated-for-slamming-blasphemy-law-14988/).

Shahbaz, who is primarily a businessman, is a director of a number of companies that were founded by his father, such as Media Times Ltd., First Capital Securities Corp. Ltd., Pace Pakistan Ltd., and First Capital Equities Ltd.

However, it was also Shahbaz who filed criminal charges against Qadri for the murder of his father.

Punjab’s law minister, Rana Sanaullah, suggested Islamic militants may be behind the kidnapping of Shahbaz. He told reporters, “This is a very distressing incident. Involvement of terrorist organizations in abduction incidents is getting grave across the country,” LA Times reported.

The incident has raised concerns that extremist elements may be targeting the Taseer family, some members of whom still continue to slam intolerance in Pakistani society.

Shehryar Taseer, brother of the kidnap victim, told Reuters, “Our family has been receiving threats from the Taliban and extremist groups.”

Second high profile kidnapping in one month

This is the second time within one month that a high-profile kidnapping occurred in Lahore. Two weeks before, on Aug. 13, American aid expert Warren Weinstein, 70, was abducted from his home by eight gunmen just before dawn.

Weinstein, who is country director of J.E. Austin Associates Inc., was involved in a project in the country’s northwestern tribal areas where Islamic insurgents have been fighting government troops for years.

The American victim had been working in Pakistan for seven years. He was kidnapped just two days before he was supposed to go back to the U.S. Last Thursday, police raided a home in Khushab town thinking he might be there, but the kidnappers had already fled with Weinstein before the police arrived.

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Evangelist says Muslims’ view of Quran Burning is akin to crucifying Christ

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An evangelical pastor and book author from Minnesota said recently that Muslims value the Quran in the same way as Christians value Jesus Christ.

John Piper, pastor of Preaching at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, wrote in his blog Desiring God that it is wrong to say that the bible is the Christian equivalent of the Quran, and that Jesus is the Christian equivalent to Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Piper wrote in his blog, “The parallel between Christianity and Islam is not that Christ parallels Mohammed and the Quran parallels the Bible. The parallel is that the Qur’an parallels Christ (itals his). The giving of the Quran is in Islam what the incarnation of Christ is to Christianity.”

Piper referred to the writings of Andrew Walls, a foremost interpreter of Christianity and the role it played in missions today. Walls, who founded The Center for the Study of Christianity in the Non-Western World, is a renowned author, Catalyst Resources said.

The books of Walls’ tend to cross many disciplines including history, mission studies, theology, biblical exegesis and church life, according to Catalyst Resources.

Piper quotes generously from Walls’ book, The Cross-Cultural Process in Christian History, which points out one main difference between Christianity and Islam—the fact that the bible can be translated into many languages, but the Quran cannot.

Walls wrote, (which Piper reproduced in his blog), “Christian faith must go on being translated, must continuously enter into vernacular culture and interact with it, or it withers and fades.

“Islamic absolutes are fixed in a particular language, and in the conditions of a particular period of human history. The divine Word is the Quran, fixed in heaven forever in Arabic, the language of original revelation.”

Piper further explained the implications of this difference—the words of Jesus can, for Christians, be translated and have been translated from the earliest times. This, Piper said, is reflective of a quality of a faith where Jesus became human himself, to reach out to man, Piper wrote in his blog.

Piper then further quoted Walls who wrote, “Much misunderstanding between Christians and Muslims has arisen from the assumption that the Quran is for Muslims what the Bible is for Christians. It would be truer to say that the Quran is for
Muslims what Christ (itals his) is for Christians.”

Piper said in his blog that in no way does this justify killing human beings, because someone burned a Quran. He calls it “outrageous” that the deaths in Afghanistan and elsewhere were retribution for this, and described it more as “sheer fear”
on their part.

While acknowledging that “[his conviction] stems from a certain view of the world that is not shared by Muslims,” Piper also pointed out that the difference in how Christians would respond as opposed to Muslims is compelling.

When the head of a fringe church burned a Quran, in retaliation some 24 were killed, among them seven employees of the United Nations center in Afghanistan, The Christian Post said.

By contrast, Piper wrote, “In the process of being crucified, Jesus rebuked the use of the sword (Matthew 26:52) healed his enemy’s amputated ear (Luke 22:51), prayed for the forgiveness of his murderers (Luke 23:34), and sent his followers out to love their enemies and do good to those who hate them (Luke 6:27).”

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Pakistan evangelist set on fire by Muslim extremists

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An evangelical pastor in Pakistan is recovering slowly from wounds he received after Muslim extremists set him on fire in Punjab last month, because they were angry at him for preaching the gospel.

Pastor Wilson Augustine, 26, was going from door to door in his neighborhood on the outskirts of Saraghoda handing out pamphlets, BosNewsLife said. Six Muslim brothers from Village 96-NB read the pamphlet and became enraged at a portion that spoke of Jesus’ resurrection.

They told Augustine that the pamphlet insulted the prophet Muhammad and ordered him to leave the village, threatening “dire consequences” if he continued to preach in the area, BosNewsLife reported.

Augustine left, but went to neighboring villages to evangelize, then preached in a small church. That night, as he waited at the bus stop to go home, men on three motorcycles flashed their headlights into his eyes and roared their engines, BosNewsLife said.

Augustine recognized their voices as the six brothers who threatened him earlier that day. They assaulted him with belts and clubs, doused him in liquid, lit a match and set him aflame, BosNewsLife reported.

Augustine’s body was found by Christians the next day among the bushes, where he fell unconscious. He was swathed in dried blood and his clothes were shred. They took him to the burn unit of a hospital, BosNewsLife reported. He was released after four days and continues to recover.

Police hesitate to file a report

When Augustine’s father reported the attack to the police, they hesitated to file a report saying the father of the six attackers was a powerful and wealthy man, BosNewsLife said.

The police only filed the case after local church leaders and a politician exerted pressure on the registrar, BosNewsLife reported. However, they would not place the names of the six men on the report, saying Augustine may have mistaken their identities as it was dark.

Similar attacks have occurred in Punjab in the past against Christians. Earlier this year Arshed Masih was burned to death by Muslim extremists in front of a police station. Afterwards, the police raped Masih’s wife, Martha, BosNewsLife reported.

The attacks drew international condemnation, even as rights groups continue to call on the Pakistani government to protect the rights of Christians in the country, BosNewsLife said.

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Children’s activity center owner threatened, cut off for using the word “God” on website

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The owner of the Be With Me, The Children’s Playseum in Bethesda, Md. was told recently that no Montgomery public school would send children to her facility because her website mentioned the words “God,” “life,” and “family,” according to The Washington Post.

From her website:

“We Value

LIFE-Every child is God’s gift to this earth.

FAMILY-The most vital part of our community. We treasure the opportunity to offer you a place to create family moments and memories while using our proceeds to help a family far away.

GOD-Giver of breathe and we endeavor to honor Him in all of our affairs.”

Be With Me, The Children’s Playseum is an indoor space that mixes creative play and education.

Geina Seebachan, owner of the children’s activity center, was told however that if she edited her website, schools would send children to the playseum.

Sean Bulson, an acting community superintendent for the county system, said he was “not aware” of any countywide decision about the playseum.  He did say that many parents expressed discomfort with their children going to the facility, The Washington Post reported.

The issue came to Seebachan’s attention when Westbrook Elementary School canceled a scheduled trip to the center.

All four of Seebachan’s children had attended Westbrook Elementary School.

However, according to Seebachan, Jeff Ewald, principle, told her that parents expressed concern that the Playseum was overtly or covertly religious, The Washington Post said.

Seebachan, an evangelical Christian, has among her teaching staff one from Peru, one from Sri Lanka, one vegan, one kosher Jew, a fellow from Trinidad and a woman from Congo, according to The Washington Post.

According to the play calendar on their website, there will be activities to celebrate Jerusalem Day, Waisak Day in Indonesia, Corpus Christi in Chile, and Memorial Day in the United States.

Seebachan, who studied international relations in college, also has activities at Pthe activity center that celebrate Thai and Shinto holidays, the prophet Muhammad’s birthday, Chinese New Year and Jewish holidays.

But on her Web site, she also advertises a Christian youth group she runs, according to the Washington Post.

Seebachan had experience in leading after school clubs and daycamps, has taught in China, and lived and visited over 22 nations.  The playseum’s on-hands activities are diverse, sensitive in spirit and reflect what she has gained from her travels, according to their website.

However now the Be With Me Playseum is being sabotaged through a whisper campaign and Seebachan has been receiving threats.

Anonymous Web postings saying Seebachan handed out antiabortion literature at the Playseum, accepts support from right-wing Christian groups and plays Christian rock music at the play space, according to The Washington Post.

One anonymous post from someone who claimed to be Jewish said that Seebachan told her that unless she accepted Jesus as her personal savior, the client and her children would go to hell, The Washington Post reported.

Seebachan said she has no literature about abortion, her sponsors are all secular, including Safeway and Strosniders hardware store, and if she knew anyone of her staff who told a client that she and her family might go to hell, she would fire them on the spot, according to The Washington Post.

“I’m not marketing to Christians,” Seebachan says.  “I imagined this place like a big, refreshing swimming pool for anybody to come to and be together with their children in a different way, without computers, TVs or cellphones,”  Seebachan told The Washington Post.

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Comedy Central’s “JC” to Depict Cartoon Jesus

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Animated depiction of Jesus in Comedy Central's "South Park." Photo copyright: Comedy Central & Braniff Productions.

A new animated series currently under development for Comedy Central’s 2010-2011 production slate will feature the adventures of a cartoon Jesus Christ as he tries to escape the shadow of his “powerful but apathetic father,” according to “The Washington Post.”

After stirring controversy earlier this year with their depiction of the prophet Muhammad, Comedy Central writers are describing “JC” as, “a playful take on religion and society with a sprinkle of dumb.”

The storyline will follow the animated Jesus as he travels to New York in an attempt to become “a regular guy.”

While depictions of Jesus continue to surface in episodes of the increasingly popular and controversial animated series “South Park,” “JC” will mark the first time the character has received his own show.

The project’s writers and producers hail from Reveille, the production company behind several popular comedy sitcoms, including “The Office” and “Ugly Betty.” According to the original thumbnail sketch, “JC” will depict God as a lazy man who spends his days playing video games and ignoring his son Jesus.

Last Thursday, Catholic League President William Donohue issued a statement concerning the new cartoon and even went so far as to refer to the show’s producers as “deceivers.”

“These are the same executives who delight in bashing Christians while continuing to censor any depiction of Muhammad on ‘South Park,”

Kent Alterman, head of original programming and production at Comedy Central, says the show is just a normal part of producing quality comedy and that “in its purest form [comedy] always makes some people feel uncomfortable.”

Donohue disagrees. “Besides the fact that there is no end to the number of comedians who have made a huge name for themselves without ever offending anyone, what is even more relevant is the fact that Comedy Central has absolutely no interest in making Muslims feel uncomfortable.”

“South Park” producers continue to feature their Muhammad character, but often cover him with a black box, as Muslims believe that any representation of their prophet is blasphemous.

Network spokesman Tony Fox refused several requests from reporters seeking comments both on Donohue’s statements and further details on “JC,” according to “The Huffington Post.”

According to several reports, “JC” is only a few steps into the preproduction process and network executives will have to okay the script and storyline pitch before the show gets the green light.

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