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Arabia
An inside look at the native Christian community of Kuwait
2017-01-01
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Kuwait’s first Christian pastor Amanuel Benjamin Ghareeb remembers sitting down for a test on an Islamic subject during his secondary school years and being surprised that he outperformed his young Moslem peers.

That was more than 50 years ago and now the 66-year-old Ghareeb says times have changed.

Kuwait is the only GCC country besides Bahrain to have a local Christian population who hold citizenship. They number around 200 citizens in Kuwait while Bahrain has nearly 1,000.

"Most of the Christian families in Kuwait and Bahrain have their roots from southeastern The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire....
while some came from either Iraq or Paleostine. The numbers decreased since there was a change in Kuwait’s citizenship law in 1982 after they excluded Christians from naturalization," Ghareeb told Al Arabiya English.

By some estimates, there are 12 families who identify as Christian-born Kuwaitis and are believed to have had equal rights compared to their Moslem countrymen.

Christian-Gulf social, political representation
Still, it is rare for there to be talk about the trials and tribulations of non-Moslem minorities who are citizens of the Arab Gulf states as the widely-portrayed image of Gulf citizens is usually as either Sunni or Shiite Moslems.

A landmark event in Kuwait’s Christian community took place on January 8, 1999 when Ghareeb himself was ordained as priest and pastor of the country’s National Evangelical Church, making him the first and only Gulf-Arab Christian with that title.

"We all feel proud of being Kuwaitis," he said at the time. "We were among those who stayed here during the Iraqi occupation [in 1990]."

But for Christian representation in Kuwait’s political scene, the same cannot be said. No Christian has ever been elected to the country’s National Assembly, which recently saw the return of the country’s Moslem Brüderbund group after years of boycott.

Still, Ghareeb said Kuwaiti Christians deny that their community is barred from enjoying certain civil and political rights.

When asked whether the idea of implementing a quota of Christian representation should be allowed in parliament, similar to Leb, Ghareeb replied with a resounding rejection.

"Our constitution clearly states that any Kuwaiti Christian is free to nominate him or herself and run for local elections. And if one day the general population accepts to elect one of us, then great. But we do not want an enforced representation without an election," Ghareeb said.

Do Kuwaiti Christians feel safe?
Moslem-Christian relationships have been tested in recent years given the rise of Islamophobia
...the irrational fear that Moslems will act the way they usually do...
in the west amid krazed killer attacks by groups such as ISIS targeting Christians in the east.

Earlier this month, a bombing at Cairo’s largest Coptic cathedral killed at least 25 people and maimed 49, many of them women and kiddies attending Sunday mass, in the deadliest attack on Egypt’s Christian minority in years.

This event has caused some concerns for Kuwaiti Christians, the pastor said.

"With the latest developments in the region in regards to the religious polarization, some of us have been affected obviously. But we thank God that we have wise leadership that understands and protects the internal situation in Kuwait. We’ve seen our ministry of interior increase protection around our churches during Christmas and soon for New Year’s as well."

Under educational laws in Kuwait, non-Moslem students at both government and private schools in Kuwait are exempt from attending Islamic classes.

Should Kuwaiti Christians have equal opportunities to study their religion as part of education?

Ghareeb doesn’t think so: "Under the current situation, both in Kuwait and in the region, the answer is ’no.’ This is unfavorable at the moment."
Posted by:Fred

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