Excerpt:
A 17-year-old runaway who claims she fled her Muslim family’s home in Ohio because she feared becoming the victim of an “honor killing” will stay in Florida — temporarily — a judge ruled Friday.
Rifqa Bary, a Christian convert whose parents are Muslim immigrants from Sri Lanka, will remain in foster care in Florida until another hearing is held Sept. 3.
Rifqa fled to Florida after her parents, Mohamed and Aysha Bary, learned that she was baptized earlier this year without their knowledge. The parents reported her missing to Columbus, Ohio, Police on July 19. Weeks later, using cell phone and computer records, police tracked the girl to the Rev. Blake Lorenz, pastor of the Orlando-based Global Revolution Church.
This part of the article is scary:
Dr. Phyllis Chesler, an author and professor of psychology at the Richmond College of the City University of New York, said she believes Bary will be in danger if she is sent back to her parents.
“Anyone who converts from Islam is considered an apostate, and apostasy is a capital crime,” Chesler wrote FOXNews.com. “If she is returned to her family, if she is lucky, they will isolate her, beat her, threaten her, and if she is not ‘persuaded’ to return to Islam, they will kill her. They have no choice.”
Chesler, who wrote “Are Honor Killings Simply Domestic Violence?” for Middle East Quarterly, said the tradition of such slayings is not fully understood by most Americans, including those in law enforcement.
“She escaped from her family’s brutal tyranny and shamed her family further through public exposure,” Chesler said. “Muslim girls and women are killed for far less.”
I have been praying for Rifqa and the two Iranian Christian women now being help in an Iranian prison. I hope you have been praying, too!
“Anyone who converts from Islam is considered an apostate, and apostasy is a capital crime,” Chesler wrote FOXNews.com. “If she is returned to her family, if she is lucky, they will isolate her, beat her, threaten her, and if she is not ‘persuaded’ to return to Islam, they will kill her. They have no choice.”
This brings to mind Dennis Prager’s 2005 column on “Five questions non-Muslims would like answered” (http://articles.latimes.com/2005/nov/13/opinion/op-prager13). The article was in response to the rioting in France, but I can’t help thinking of it when I read accounts like this one (e.g., Prager’s questions 1, 4 and 5):
“(1) Why are you so quiet? …
(2) Why are none of the Palestinian terrorists Christian? …
(3) Why is only one of the 47 Muslim-majority countries a free country? …
(4) Why are so many atrocities committed and threatened by Muslims in the name of Islam? …
(5) Why do countries governed by religious Muslims persecute other religions? …”
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Here’s a very interesting read, if you’d like to dive into it:
http://www.jihadwatch.org/articles/bloggingtheq.php
The first post is at the bottom.
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“I hope you have been praying, too!”
Indeed!
http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/198554.php
It looks like we’ve got some good news, at least for the time being, that the judge is willing to move with some caution.
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