ARTICLE

Protestant Missionaries Labeled As "Security Threat" In Turkey

News Image By Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute October 25, 2016
Share this article:

Over the past several years Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pressured Greece to construct a mosque in Athens. He has criticized the country which boasts the only European capital without a mosque. He does not hide his passion for mosques worldwide.

In 2015 Erdogan proposed the construction of a mosque in secular, Communist-ruled Cuba. Also in 2015, he went to Moscow for the inauguration of the biggest mosque in the Russian capital.

Earlier this year Erdogan pleasantly announced his presence at the opening of the biggest mosque in Amsterdam. The mosque is called "Hagia Sophia," named after a Greek Orthodox Christian basilica built in 537 AD in Constantinople, reflecting the typical Muslim extremist obsession with "conquest." Recently Erdogan has also been eyeing Iraq.


As recently as April, Erdogan attended the opening ceremony of a culture center and mosque in Maryland, United States. The complex, the only one in the United States to feature two minarets, was constructed in the style of 16th century Ottoman architecture, with a central dome, half domes and cupolas, echoing Istanbul's Suleymaniye Mosque. 

At the ceremony, Erdogan said: "Unfortunately, we are going through a rough time all around the world. Intolerance towards Muslims is on the rise not only here in the United States but also around the globe." Intolerance toward Muslims?

Back in Turkey, an article published in the monthly magazine of the country's powerful (and wealthy) Islamic Directorate for Religious Affairs (Diyanet in Turkish) warned of the spreading new "religion" of Jediism -- the religion of the Jedi knights from the Star Wars film series. But not all "religious tolerance" stories in Turkey are equally off the wall.

Synagogues in Turkey have quietly tightened security. Scholar Rifat Bali, who has written several books on Turkey's Jews, says that Christians and Jews are being targeted.

Indeed, threats against Christians and churches on social media by Islamists in Turkey have intensified. "Some people have sent death threats to the mobile phones of 15 pastors," says Umut Sahin, the secretary-general of the Union of Protestant Churches, an umbrella organization for Protestant denominations in Turkey.

Andrew Craig Brunson, pastor at a protestant church in Izmir, on Turkey's Aegean coast, survived an armed attack on April 11, 2011. The attacker, Mehmet Ali Eren, shouted: "Traitors! We'll bomb your church!" Eren had just been acquitted in a trial on charges of being a member of al-Qaeda.

Brunson and his wife, Norine Lyn, have been living in Turkey for 20 years. On October 7, the couple was summoned to a police station. The police told them that they would be deported from Turkey because they "posed a national security threat" to the country. 


A two-member terror organization? Bombings and killings? Not exactly that, the police explained. The pastor and his wife were being expelled on grounds of posing a security threat because they had carried out "missionary activity and received money from sources abroad."

There must be merely a few thousand Protestants in Turkey, a country of nearly 80 million people, where politicians often boast that 99% of the population is Muslim. 

Why do nearly 80 million people view a few thousand people as threats to their national security just because the few thousand belong to a different faith? This question probably falls not into the scope of theological discipline, nor political science, but social psychiatry.

But there is a more serious aspect of this limitless Islamic hypocrisy. Erdogan should explain why he persistently demands more and more tolerance for Muslims living in non-Muslim lands, including the building of mosques in every capital, while his government can deport two Protestants on the spurious grounds that they pose a security threat to his country. 

The Islamophobia that Erdogan never ceases to claim exists in the Western world may or may not be a real social malady, but non-Muslimphobia in Turkey is increasingly a contagious malady. 

Erdogan's determined denials do not make him right; instead he further proves his religious-ideological incompatibility with Western democracies.

Originally published at Gatestone Institute - reposted with permission.




Other News

March 14, 2026Peter Thiel Brings Antichrist Lectures To Rome - Where Is The Church?

One of the most talked-about events in Rome's intellectual circles this month is the arrival of Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel, de...

March 14, 2026Progressives Vying For Votes Claim God Is On Their Side

It's election season, which means candidates across the country are once again competing not just for votes but for divine endorsement....

March 14, 2026Beaming Defense: Israel’s Laser Weapon Redefines Air Defense Economics

In a conflict increasingly defined by missile salvos, drone swarms, and relentless asymmetric aerial assaults, Israel has quietly fielded ...

March 14, 2026Scientific Shift Toward God: Why Some Scientists Now See Design In The Universe

Instead of pushing God out of the picture, some modern discoveries in physics, cosmology, and biology are prompting scientists to ask ques...

March 13, 2026Prepared, Vigilant, Unafraid: The Lesson From America's Latest Terror Attacks

When evil strikes close to home, the question every society must answer is simple but profound: will we stand, or will we surrender to fea...

March 13, 2026The US Stands Alone At The UN: One Vote Against A Global Push To Redefine Women

The United Nations Commission on the Status of Women kicked off its 70th session in New York, drawing delegates from around the globe in w...

March 13, 2026One In Twenty Deaths: Canada's Assisted Suicide Program Reaches Stunning Levels

As Canada approaches the 10th anniversary of legalizing assisted suicide, the country is rapidly nearing a grim milestone: 100,000 deaths ...

Get Breaking News