The Copts joined with the Muslims in Tahrir Square to overthrow Hosni Mubarak, but the unity forged in that popular uprising has not lasted. A peaceful march protesting the destruction of a church in Upper Egypt was broken up by the police and army troops in central Cairo. Twenty-seven people were killed, some of them run over by military vehicles and more than 300 people were injured.
Copts have long faced discrimination, but today, with the tide of political Islam on the rise, they fear that religious bias and violence against them may increase. Copts are increasingly showing up at Western embassies enquiring about emigration opportunities.
In truth, Christians have been leaving the Middle East for decades. Not long ago in Israel, Bethlehem was nearly 100 per cent Christian. Today, it is 30 per cent — many Christians having fled to North and South America.
The name of Egypt is supposed to have come from Egyptian hieroglyphic Ha(t)-ka-ptah, ‘temple of the soul of Ptah the god’. When the Greeks landed there, they found the word difficult to pronounce, so they coined a variant: ‘Aigyptos’.
The Arabs who invaded Egypt, like the Greeks, had problems pronouncing the term, ‘Aigypti’, which means ‘Egyptian citizen’. (In Greek, ‘gypt’ is pronounced as ‘gupt’.) They changed the word to ‘Copti’ which they pronounced as ‘Qibti’. Of course, at that time, Egypt was a Christian nation, so the term became limited to actual Egyptian Christians as the country became more and more Muslim. In Urdu, the word for Copt has come from Arabic, and we pronounce it ‘Qibti’. The Qibti of Egypt were among the first non-Muslims to accept Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) as the true Prophet of God.
The Qibtis of Egypt were Monophysites who believed in the ‘one nature’ of Christ. In October 451 AD, Pope Leo and Byzantine Emperor Marcian, convened the Council of Chalcedon on the eastern bank of the Bosphorus, in present-day Istanbul, to settle a dispute over the meaning of Christ between the eastern and western church. To the western church (based in Rome and Constantinople), the Chalcedonian definition of faith held that Christ existed ‘in two natures’— that he was both divine and human.
The Qibtis belonged to the Eastern Church and did not agree. As a result, they were ousted from Christianity as ‘Monophysites’ (from the Greek words for ‘single’ and ‘nature’). Their belief in Christ was closer to the Judaic and Islamic tradition. That could be one reason why they accepted Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) as the true Prophet of God.
There are ironies in the Egyptian situation today. The Copts are the original people, their name derived from the name of the country. Muslims of Egypt are called Egyptians but the word unites them with Copts whether they like it or not.
The other name for Egypt is ‘Misr’, which means ‘coast’ and is often applied to Cairo, too. Pakistanis are often shocked to find that Egyptian Arabs pronounce it as ‘Masr’, too. So when an al Qaeda terrorist is captured as al Masri, we tend not to connect him to Egypt. It is tragic that intolerance has crept into the movement that began against dictatorship and had Copts in its ranks.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 4th, 2012.
COMMENTS (21)
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@Harihermani I understand what u means and also what zalim singh means i have to say one thing for minority M F Hussain was a great indian artist and he painted some pictures of Hindu gods shiva and got exiled and dies in qatar this is small example of how reliegen is importent and second example is muslim minority in spain got expelled by forced and even converted and killed many by our christian broothers and east europe yogoslavia example is also not too old to tell u guys and kashmir and palestine forget it ok mr khalid dont wanna see those its all right i guss its a routin work and little shame for librals and seculars peoples to see em.
@Cynical: There is nothing minority can do in muslim majority nations.What can they do?Hindus and other unfortunate people can go where?India is over populated,has its own communal problem,Usa is very strigent requirement,that knocks out lot of minorties,Europe,is small and has problems with Islam already,situation looks bad.Muslims when they come to west,very rarely flount their fanatic behavior,and suddenly give up superiority complex and in brief,put their between legs and do not rock the boat,they have best of the world both at home as well in West,they need no reason to feel bad for minority at home. No one can save minority.
@Zalim singh: He is not aware of many things,lost count of it,it 's speak less of us,if we try to enlighten,pl,give up.What is this Zalim,it is true ,torture,you get my drift?
It's not only in Egypt, in every Muslim majority country there is a systematic ethnic cleansing of non-muslims.The methods employed differ from country to country.While in Pakistan it can be extortion,abduction,murder etc. in Malyasia it can be discriminatory laws that puts minorities at obvious disadvantage. What is outright hypocritical is that at the same time the Muslims of various denominations shout loudest for minority rights when they end up in minority.On theory I have no problem with that.I am only pointing at the intellectual dishonesty in it.
Khalid saheb ! You touched dialectics in an exquisite way. You are a guru !
@Tanoli, the United States has been--and is--one of the few places where people of every religion can find refuge from persecution in their own countries. Muslims are proud citizens of the U.S. and many more want to become. Isolated cases of discrimination cannot be generalized.
Khaled sb- you are a guru and a mentor. Thanks for this excellent article and please continue to educate us. Warm regards
@American: Dear, all Americans, save Red Indians, are immigrants.
and these egyptian muslims want to fight for right of palestinian people while themselvs forcing coptics out of egypt, what a joke!
We need more people like Khalid Sahib, please keep writing thanks
Ali Tanolistrong text
What are you talking about?
What 'thousands' of Muslims left American? There's still thousands trying to get into the US, not many feeling they have to leave.
And there have been a number of articles of what it is like being a Muslim in post 9/11 America.
90,000 Copts left Egypt last year.
The ethnic cleansing of minorties from Muslim majority countries continues.
Khalid Saheb,
very informative article. Hope intolerence and bigotry will be extinguished in this very new year of 2012.
@ Ali Tanoli,
There has been very less persucition of brown skin people in USA. Even to this day Pakistanis will give up one arm to get American citizen ship.
Pakistanis make the fastest growing ethinic group in USA, ahead of Indians and Chinese.I am sure you are not aware of it.
@ali. muslims chose to come to USA and they must behave as such and if they commit any terror attack there will be a backlash.. copts are not migrants or commit any terror attacks in Egypt. they are not "Afrikaners".
As far as I know modern Coptics do not consider themselves as monophysites. There belief is a little more complex about nature of Christ and want themselves to be more aligned with the Eastern Orthodox church.
thank u khalid saab. and mr. Tanoli, I live in USA and do not know of a single muslim who left and went back to Pakistan. Please stop fabricating thhings.
Mr Ahmed, I am Coptic living in the USA. I read your article with great interest. You have accurately described the plight of copts in Egypt and I truly thank you for that.
Khalid sahab no body want to write about what happend to pakistani particular and all others brown skin people after 9/11 and what kind of discrimination we been gone through and is there any data available for that and how many thousand peoples left the u.s.a and how the patriotic act affect minorities and dentention inidentified time what u gonna called that.