I have recently returned to the
United States from Egypt where I was on a fact-finding mission to see what life
is like for non-Muslims who live under Islam. What I saw was a dire situation of
oppression and discrimination that many in America and the West have all but
ignored.
I went to Egypt because I wanted to learn what life would be like if our enemies
and their allies succeeded in getting their way. What I saw was an example of
the harsh life in store for future American generations in Islamic-dominated
regions of the U.S. if we do not work to bring attention to Islamic oppression
now at this critical time in history.
My journey began on an EgyptAir flight out of JFK. I was a bit surprised,
to say the least, when the in-flight video came on prior to departure and
instead of the usual safety video, a picture of a mosque flickered on and a
deep-toned recorded voice came on reciting Islamic prayers out of the Koran.
I've flown on Israeli airline El Al a number of times as well as hundreds of
other global and U.S. airline companies, and I have never experienced a
Christian prayer or a Jewish prayer on a flight, and could only imagine the
reaction of Americans if an airline carrier were to try. Regardless of the
policies and logic of other airlines, apparently a Muslim-owned airline feels it
fit to assume that all its passengers desire to hear a Muslim prayer, regardless
of their faith. The safety video followed and my journey had begun.
I was on my way to Cairo and Alexandria to get a feeling of what life was like
there for non-Muslims.
The first day, I visited old Cairo. Walking through the alleyways, I visited the
many ancient churches there. As I rounded a corner I came upon an old synagogue.
Excited to find and learn the experiences of Jews who live there, I entered only
to be greatly disappointed and utterly disgusted when I saw the synagogue was
filled with hijab-clad Muslim women selling trinkets and postcards inside. It's
a museum that I can only assume the government uses to show its "tolerance." I
overheard the tour guides speaking of how there "were once Jews here," and I was
told that there is only one other synagogue in the city. It makes you
wonder if someday there will be regions of America with a museum of the last or
second to last synagogue or church. Irritatingly, the Egyptian police
refuse to allow anyone to take any photos or video at all of the synagogue
either inside or out, and they threatened to take my camera if I questioned
their rule.
As I continued through the streets, the afternoon call to prayer began to
broadcast from a local mosque, then another mosque, then a third, until the
deafening sound of thousands of loudspeakers from mosques all over the city
pierced through the air with the call of “Allah akbar” followed by Koranic
verses.
I recalled how in several American cities including Dearborn, Michigan,
sound ordinances have begun to be overturned to allow this to occur in America.
I made my way to meet with a friend who is an activist for human rights in
Egypt. He showed me the Egyptian constitution which in
article II states that Sharia (Islamic) law shall be “the principal source
of legislation”. This clause goes for everyone in the nation regardless of
faith. My friend told me the stories and showed me photos of young Christian
girls who had been kidnapped and forced to convert to Islam, and threatened with
death, and their families threatened if they ever convert back. After several
days in Cairo, my journey continued to Alexandria where I would visit several
churches which had been attacked in recent years.
On the train to Alexandria, we passed through rural villages where I noticed
vast amounts of hay on the roofs of many village homes. Our guide told us that
the livestock sleep in the house with the people at night. Jokingly I asked if
the women sleep out in the stable, but I didn’t receive a definitive answer on
that one. It was about this time that I realized the majority of the men
everywhere I went had a small round bruise on their forehead reminiscent of
something out of the book of Revelation. My guide told me that it was from
hitting their head on the floor when praying. He also told me that in Egypt
specifically, and perhaps elsewhere, some men heat up a metal spoon in a fire
and stick it on their forehead to accentuate the bruise. It seems you aren’t
cool unless you have the mark.
As we stepped off the train in Alexandria, a police officer approached and told
my Egyptian Coptic friend that he did not have a license to be my guide,
desiring a bribe before he would leave us alone. This had not been the first
time in the trip that a cop came up looking for money. It seemed every time I
took out my camera, a police officer would show up to tell me I couldn’t take
any pictures and I would have to pay him a nominal fine. Usually the officer
would not be looking for a bribe of more than ten or twenty dollars, and
thankfully our guide was able to talk officers out of it the majority of the
time.
We went to a local hotel where I turned on the television to see the Statue of
Liberty in flames. I changed the channel only to see a video clip of a small
child crying with her arms in the air, spliced in with images of U.S. soldiers.
The video cut to a bleeding boy lying on the ground -- an obvious piece of
anti-American propaganda. Interestingly enough, to the right of the boy in the
video you could see a U.S. medic helping the injured child, no doubt hurt by
Jihadist terrorists, but you certainly wouldn’t know that from the theme of the
video.
Our first stop in Alexandria was the Church of St. George, the site of a brutal
attack in 2005 where a Muslim in his early 20s entered as a prayer service was
finishing. He shouted "Allah akbar" and stabbed a nun in the chest with a knife.
Several days after the stabbing, an angry Muslim mob also attacked the church,
brandishing sticks and throwing rocks at the Christians. Numerous cars and
Christian-owned businesses in the area were torched, and in the end, three
people were dead from the violence, all of it being sparked by unsubstantiated
reports about a theatrical production that occurred at the church which was
rumored to have offended Islam.
I attended a prayer service there, and every 15 seconds over loudspeakers aimed
at the church from the mosque next door, the Muslims were yelling at the
Christians. “Allah akbar! Allah akbar!” they would yell among other things in an
attempt to disrupt the prayer. This was entirely outside of the five daily calls
to prayer which come over the same loudspeaker. It was intimidation designed
entirely to disrupt Christian prayer, and stopped as soon as everyone left after
the service was over. I took a short video of the incident,
and posted it on YouTube.
My next stop was the Church of All Saints. When I arrived, I saw a large mosque
directly across the street and another on the other block. This was the same
case with the previous church I had visited, and my guide explained that as soon
as they built the church, mosques went up all around it. Yet today it has become
nearly impossible to get a permit in the country to construct a new church
anywhere. The Church of All Saints was another site of an attack which occurred
in 2006 where a Jihadist entered and began stabbing church-goers while yelling
the familiar phrase "Allah akbar". In all, he attacked three churches that day,
critically wounding many and killing a 78-year-old man. Yet the government
dismissed him as only an isolated mentally ill madman.
I met with many people during my trip, and I learned a great deal about what it
is like to live as a minority under Islam. I spoke with a priest who told me how
he can see the younger generation of Christians there becoming more and more
Islamized. I spoke with a man who told me how his young Christian children are
taught in public schools there that they are going to hell if they do not become
Muslims. I saw brutal intimidation and oppression, and a life dictated by
Islamic law that many Americans don’t realize but are slowly beginning to see.
Before we left, our guide showed us his ID card which had a glaring number 2 in
the corner. He told me that Christians are required to have that number on their
IDs. I asked if Muslims were required to have a number as well. “Yes,” he
responded. “Number 1.”
In my visit to Egypt I saw a place rampant with police brutality and corruption,
where non-Muslims are second-class citizens at best, who are brutally victimized
on a daily basis. All this in a nation which is a
popular U.S. tourist
spot, and has been the recipient of American aid in excess of $28 billion in
the last three decades.
Jesse Petrilla is the founder of The United American Committee (UAC), a federation of concerned Americans promoting awareness of threats to Homeland Security, primarily focusing on Islamic extremism in America.