Document shows black flag flying over Vatican
In an updated version of its propaganda booklet, “Dabiq,”
ISIS clearly identifies its No. 1 enemy – Christianity.
The cover photo shows a black ISIS
flag flying over the Vatican. The booklet describes the terrorist army’s
desires to conquer Rome and “break the cross,” according to Arutz
Sheva, an independent Israeli news
network.
According to some Islamic traditions, the Islamic prophet
Muhammad predicted that the occupation of Istanbul, Jerusalem and Rome would
pave the way for the Islamic messiah or mahdi.
The declaration surfaces amid growing concern over the
widespread persecution of Christians in the Middle East. ISIS has executed
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Christians throughout Iraq and forced many to
flee the country. Up to 100,000 Christians remain in the capital of Baghdad, as
ISIS is now within eight miles of the city.
A joint conference between the International Christian
Embassy in Jerusalem and the World Jewish Congress in Jerusalem was held
earlier this week to discuss the dire situation for Christians.
“Across the Middle East, in the last 10 years, 100,000
Christians have been murdered each year. That means every five minutes a
Christian is killed because of his faith,” Father Gabriel Nadaf, who has
campaigned for Christian Arab rights and for local Christians to support
Israel, told the United Nations Human Rights Council in September. “Those who
can escape persecution at the hands of Muslim extremists have fled. … Those who
remain, exist as second if not third class citizens to their Muslim rulers.”
An estimated 12 million Christians lived in the Middle East,
according to a July estimate in the London Guardian. But that number has been
thought to have decreased drastically since the ISIS summer takeover of nearly
half of Iraq, including the city of Mosul, which had been home to Christians
for 2,000 years.
As Islam jihadists have gained ground throughout the Middle
East over the past three years, the Christian community has faced persecution
in a number countries, including Egypt, Iraq, Libya and Syria.
In Egypt, Coptic Christians have been targeted by violence
from the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafi groups. There have been reports of
church burnings and killings of Christians.
In Syria, al-Qaida-linked rebels have threatened to kill
Christians who do not join the fight against President Bashar Al-Assad.
Iran has persecuted Christians relentlessly as well,
recently making headlines for burning the lips of a Christian man caught eating
during the Ramadan fast.
Source:http://www.wnd.com/2014/10/isis-document-ids-christians-as-enemy-no-1/
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/10/isis-document-ids-christians-as-enemy-no-1/#QawXuR0HLE8sHd6T.99
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/10/isis-document-ids-christians-as-enemy-no-1/#QawXuR0HLE8sHd6T.99
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