Showing posts with label Christian missionaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian missionaries. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Pope's Moroccan Visit Confirmed


Catholics in Rabat and Casablanca are thrilled by news from the Vatican that the Pope's visit to both cities has been confirmed


The Pope will spend two days in Morocco on March 30-31 at the request of King Mohammed VI.

“At the request of His Majesty King Mohammed VI and bishops, his holiness Pope Francis will visit Morocco for an Apostolic trip from March 30-31 2019. He will visit Rabat and Casablanca,” says the Vatican’s statement.

The visit will be the second of its kind from a pope to Morocco after the visit of John Paul II in 1985. King Hassan II invited Pope John Paul II as an opportunity to build a bridge between Muslims and Christians.

In March, King Mohammed VI sent a congratulatory message to Pope Francis, on the fifth anniversary of his papacy.

The monarch expressed Morocco’s determination to continue to work with the pope on the consecration of the values of coexistence, communication, and dialogue between different people and civilizations. The King said that their mutual goal is to contribute to the construction of a better future to ensure the principles of harmony, peace, sustainability, and security.

SHARE THIS!

Friday, March 12, 2010

Christian aid workers expelled from Morocco



At least 20 Christian aid workers have been accused of proselytising and expelled from Morocco in recent weeks.

a Christian church in Morocco

In principle, Christian groups are allowed to do charitable work in Morocco so long as they don’t try converting Muslims, who make up 98 percent of the population. In practice, hundreds of foreign Christians have been quietly spreading their faith in Morocco for years, says Jean-Luc Blanc, head of the Casablanca-based Evangelical Church of Morocco.

In the past, Mr. Blanc said the government would typically deport one or two missionaries per year whom it judged to have crossed the line. But in his nine years here, Blanc says he hasn’t seen a mass expulsion like this.

“This is a change in policy from the top of the government,” says Jack Wald, who has spent 10 years as pastor of Rabat International Church, a protestant congregation in the capital. “It’s like going to sleep, waking up, and all of the sudden you’re in a different country.”

The largest incident took place at an orphanage for 33 abandoned children in the Middle Atlas mountains on Monday. Moroccan police showed up in the village of Ain Leuh, located 50 miles south of the ancient city of Fez, and separated orphans from their adoptive parents before telling the volunteers that they were accused of spreading Christianity – a crime in Morocco.

Moroccan authorities say there were responding to complaints by people who live near the orphanage who said Christians were targeting children under age 10, and according to the Interior Ministry "exploiting some families' poverty" to proselytize.

Morocco's Communication Minister Khalid Naciri says the deportations are about disrespecting Moroccan law, not about religion.

Naciri says this is not an act against Christians. It is an act against people who are breaking the law. Naciri says Moroccan law deals severely with anyone who violates rules protecting religious behavior, and the government is equally severe with Muslim extremists.

photo: Christian Science Monitor

Monday, March 30, 2009

Missionaries again cause trouble in Morocco


Over the last few years there appears to have been a push by some groups to break Moroccan law and engage in illegal proselytising activities. In some cases untrained missionaries have been targeting Morocco (see story here), while others have been using the teaching of English as a cover for missionary activity (see story here)  After the latest incident the official churches' in Morocco have spoken out.

Proselytising material from an earlier incident.

Representatives of the official churches in Morocco said on Monday that they are against any proselytising activities, insisting that the role of these churches is to guide Christians living in the kingdom in their "spiritual quest."

The reaction came from the Archbishop of Rabat, Mgr Vincent Landel, and chairman of the evangelist church in Morocco, Jean Luc blanc, is in response to the recent controversy on the so-called evangelist invasion in Morocco.

The catholic and protestant (evangelical) churches are operating in Morocco for more than a century, and "have learned over the years to live in harmony with the country and its people," the two religious authorities said in a joint press release.

The Catholic and Protestant churches in Morocco focus on promoting dialogue between Christians and Muslims, which "by definition, rules out proselytising activities," they said.

For Landel and Blanc "this dialogue has an intellectual and theological dimension and copes with the social and cultural realms. Thus, Christians are engaged in various activities alongside Muslims, share the same values and goals and are not afraid of showing their differences."

"Today, we believe in the richness of interaction between religions (…) which have everything to gain from better knowing and understanding one another. The Catholic and the Evangelical Churches in Morocco believe that dialogue is part of their responsibility," the two men insisted.

On Sunday, Morocco announced it had expelled five Christian missionaries who were trying to convert Muslims to Christianity.

The missionaries were arrested on Saturday during a proselytising meeting involving Moroccan citizens, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. It added that numerous pieces of evangelical propaganda material including books and video-cassettes in Arabic were seized in the meeting venue.

A senior Interior Ministry official said the missionaries were four Spaniards and a German woman. He insisted Morocco has nothing against the Christian faith, but that authorities felt the missionaries had gone too far. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with Interior Ministry rules, said the missionaries were expelled without being officially arrested or charged. He could not specify the Christian denomination to which they belonged.

Several Evangelical Christians have been charged or detained in recent months in neighboring Algeria, and authorities throughout North Africa have become increasingly wary of an apparent push by some Protestant churches in this overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim region.

Christianity and Judaism are freely practiced in dozens of churches, temples and synagogues throughout Morocco, but proselytizing to convert Muslims is considered illegal.


Tags:

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

"Untrained" Christian Missionaries target Morocco


The website IslamOnline - has an interest ing report in which it claims a new breed of Christian missionaries is turning to the North African Muslim kingdom of Morocco in search for new ground to spread their faith.
"The goal is to give a clear presentation of the Gospel," claims Tyler, a member of an Ohio Baptist church who set up Project North Africa in Morocco. Tyler knows that what he is doing is unlawful and says his work could be disrupted if he gave his surname. He moved into to Morocco some three years ago.

"If you had the cure to the AIDS virus, would you not want to take it to the people? Three years ago I began praying about parts of the world that had not taken up the Gospel."

Since then, he has been preparing the ground for colleagues, mostly from South America, who would learn Morocco's dialect and seek to set up small businesses fronts to fund the group's evangelical work.

Christian proselytizers like Tyler say their clandestine status allows them to set up businesses or language schools at which converts are sometimes employed.

Like across the Arab Maghreb, missionary groups in Morocco currently range from broad alliances such as Partners International and Cooperative Baptist Fellowship to small Baptist and Pentecostal churches based in the Americas and Europe.

There are some 800 active European proselytizers in Morocco who claim that some 1,000 people converted to Christianity in 2004.

New Breed

Experts affirm that missionaries in Morocco reflect the rise of a new "untrained" breed of Christian proselytizers.

"With the internet and the increase in travel, you have a democratization of missions where anyone who feels like it can go anywhere they want," Dana Robert, world Christianity professor at Boston University, told Reuters.

This new generation, Robert says, lacks the training and knowledge of old ones.

"The new breed of missionary doesn't have the same historical training as the older established denominations, nor necessarily the cultural training," she stressed.

"So there's a bull-in-a-china-shop effect."

Western and Arab reports have repeatedly spoken about increasing proselytizing activities in the Arab Maghreb.

Proselytizers traditionally eye troubled and disaster-stricken Muslim areas like Iraq, Sudan's Darfur and Indonesia's Ache.

The vigorous proselytizing in developing countries has led to kidnapping of missionaries as well as anti-conversion laws in some countries.

Mohammed Yssef, general secretary of the Superior Council of Ulemas, Morocco's highest religious authority, complains that missionaries typically target the poor and the sick.

"When people respond positively (to missionaries), it is when they don't have their full freedom," he recently told Reuters. "Once they recover their normal health and situation, they recover their ability to decide."

Yssef noted that missionaries also try to win over communities like North Africa's Berbers by telling them Islam was imposed on them by Arabs.

"These are unethical methods."

Tags:

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Teaching English or evangelising in Morocco?


Guest Opinion from Mourad D, in Fez, Morocco.

Evangelising via English

Morocco has had a long history of religious tolerance and is unique in the Islamic world for its protection of religious minorities including its Jewish citizens. However there are laws in place protecting Moroccans from Christian evangelists hell-bent on converting (saving?) Muslims.

Over the years evangelists have tried all kinds of ways of getting into Morocco to "spread the word". Some methods have been plain stupid (smuggling bibles in the door panels of cars) and others, like setting up business fronts, quite sophisticated. In Fez, we have even seen houses purchased in order to set up prayer meetings.

Recently I came across the story of Jennifer Beck who spent five weeks in Morocco this summer traveling and teaching high school English. Now had this been all she was doing it would have been fine. And if she talked to people about her faith in her own time it would not be a problem. However, Jennifer returned home and talked to the University website; Whitworthian and what emerges is a disturbing picture

According to Ms Beck, she chose a Christian organisation called TeachOverseas as her program because it offered her an opportunity to teach in Africa during the summer months.

“I wanted to go through a Christian organization, but not one that was all about door-to-door evangelism. I liked that they chose to go out and represent Christ through teaching,” Beck said. “The organization works with countries that are ‘unreached’ groups where Christianity isn’t a part of the culture.”

Before leaving for Morocco, Beck met up with her three other female teaching teammates in Pasadena, Calif. There, they were taught cultural norms, taught how to teach English and make lesson plans. Even over a week of training, Beck said she was unsure of what Moroccan culture would be like.

One thing that continually surprised and confused Beck was how to interact with people of the opposite sex in Morocco’s predominantly male-dominated culture. The differences were compounded with the problem of combating the widely held belief in Morocco that U.S. women were promiscuous.

“In public, if a man says anything to a woman, a woman cannot reply or else it is seen as a sexual advance and for us, it was really odd to adjust to this,” Beck said. “We would be followed or stared at for very long periods of time.”As a resident of the Open Door theme house, Beck is no stranger to the concept of hospitality.

The members of the Open Door theme house make it their goal to keep their home available as a refuge for Whitworth students. At any time, students are encouraged to come over for a place to relax, do homework and fellowship together.

The theme house has a prayer room, where anyone can come and pray in a quiet location out of residence halls. Additionally, three nights a week, students can sign up to come over for free home-cooked meals.

The Moroccan locals also used food as a means of ministering to Beck and her fellow U.S. teachers. The school maids often invited the teaching team to their homes to learn how to prepare Moroccan food.

So what is this English Language teaching organisation?



According to their website:

TeachOverseas is a unique interdenominational ministry that offers you the wisdom of experience with a cutting edge sensibility. Since 1981, we have transformed lives in a dozen different countries through hundreds of summer and year-long programs teaching conversational English.

Each year, we train and send hundreds of Christians to teach English, Business and other subjects in: China, Czech Republic, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine and Vietnam. To date, over 100,000 students around the world have benefited from our teachers' commitment to excellent teaching and Christ-like service. We are an openly Christian organization and have developed an excellent reputation with national governments and local school administrations.

Teaching English is perhaps the best overseas opportunity for Christians. It deals with people face to face; leads to discussions that point to truth; and is needed everywhere in the world. — Ralph Winter

Teaching English as community service is a very worthwhile vocation, but using teaching of English as a way of evangelising is at best dubious, at worst subversive. It is hard to find anyone in the Moroccan Government who is aware of this program's Christian purpose. Christians are very welcome in Morocco - Evangelists not.


Here is a list of earlier stories on evangelical work in Morocco;

German Evangelist Flees

Evangelists Target Morocco

Smuggling Bibles

New Christian Crusade in Morocco


Saturday, January 06, 2007

2007 stupidity awards - Smuggling bibles into Morocco.


One thing you don't do (unless you are truly stupid) is smuggle bibles into Islamic countries. Then again, if you are that stupid, you shouldn't brag about it on the internet. Last of all don't tell people what car you are driving and then (just to make certain you are caught) - post a picture of yourself.

Gareth- "I fancy some grilled fish, Jesus and disciples style down by the sea!"

Well, congratulations to Pete, Jonathan and Gareth from Team Sanddodger's blogspot you are an early winner in this year's stupidity awards with this entry:

Safely on the African side we waited in 20c heat with cameras forbidden while a series of police and government officials checked our details, but the elaborate hiding of the Arabic Bibles in the roof panels was not tested as da Saab escaped searching! An hour, a bribe of 5 Euros and an orange later and we were into Tangier onto some of the best and emptiest motorways of all. Maybe London drivers in their 4 by 4’s have a point…it seems that you only need an off roader in England not Africa!




Note from our editor:

Here is a list of other stories on evangelical work in Morocco;

Teaching English or Evangelising?

German Evangelist Flees

Evangelists Target Morocco

Smuggling Bibles

New Christian Crusade in Morocco



Tags:

Saturday, December 09, 2006

Disgraced German evangelist flees Morocco to escape jail.


A German tourist who was sentenced by a Moroccan court to six months in prison for converting Muslims to Christianity, has fled the country according to a Christian group close to the case.

A Moroccan court jailed a German tourist for six months for attempting to convert Muslims in the southern resort of Agadir. The court in Agadir, Morocco’s main tourist destination, found the 64-year-old man guilty of trying to “shake the faith of a Muslim,” they added.

The court also fined him 500 dirhams ($60).

Court officials named the German of Egyptian origin as Sadek Noshi Yassa, who was arrested as he was distributing books and CDs about the Christian faith to young Muslim Moroccans in the street.

Under Moroccan law “anyone who employs incitements to shake the faith of a Muslim or to convert him to another religion” can be jailed for up to six months and fined.

The verdict came after local media reports that some Christians had launched a clandestine campaign to convert thousands of Muslim Moroccans to Christianity.

There are about 20,000 expatriate Christians in Morocco, most of them living in Rabat and Casablanca, according to estimates by European diplomats.

Islamists Jailed.


A court in Morocco today jailed 14 Islamists between three and four years for threatening national security. The main suspect, Abdelhamid Jaafar, and two others were given four year jail term while 11 others got three years.

The 14 members of the Islamic Liberation Party, Hizb Attahrir al-Islam, who were arrested in October this year, were accused of having links with a Jordanian group suspected of having set up terrorist cells in five towns of Morocco - Casablanca, Temara, Meknes, Tangiers and Tetouan.

The prosecutor asked the court not to exercise mercy on the Islamists who limp with the philosophy of the banned party, holding meetings as well as favouring the Islamic caliphate. The Islamists were also accused of receiving foreign funds to bankroll anti-institutional propaganda.

All the accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges because according to them, their meetings had only been discussing problems of the Muslim world.

The Islamists' defence counsel, Mustapha Ramid, argued that his clients were being tried on the basis of presumption and intention instead of facts.

Morocco has been known to go hard on Islamist tendencies in the politically unstable kingdom. Islamist parties have been banned from presenting candidates at elections and several pro-Islamist newspapers have been banned. Rabat authorities fear any well-organised Islamist group quickly could gather widespread support among the Moroccan population, which is unhappy with lack of progress and reform.

Note from our editor:

Here is a list of other stories on evangelical work in Morocco;

Teaching English or Evangelising?

German Evangelist Flees

Evangelists Target Morocco

Smuggling Bibles

New Christian Crusade in Morocco


Tags:

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Evangelists target Morocco - again.


According to the 2004 International Religious Freedom report, the Moroccan Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and while the Government generally respects this right in practice, there are some restrictions. For example, proselytizing is forbidden in Morocco with the result that any attempt to induce a Muslim to convert is illegal.

According to Article 220 of the Moroccan Penal Code, any attempt to stop one or more persons from the exercise of their religious beliefs or from attendance at religious services is unlawful and may be punished by 3-6 months' imprisonment and a fine of $10 to $50 (115 to 575 dirhams).

The article applies the same penalty to "anyone who employs incitements to shake the faith of a Muslim or to convert him to another religion."



News report of illegal evangelism

Back in January we wrote an article about the uncovering of a secret evangelical cell in Marrakech (Evangelical missionaries in Morocco). And according to an interesting post by Liosliath in Morocco Time, the evangelicals are rallying again for a "year of prayer for Morocco".

The website "Arise Shine Morocco" has some disturbing contents including the highly provocative "Ramadan Prayer Guide" in which their followers are exposed to some whimsical views of Ramadan and the Moroccan attitude to it. The prayer guide dates from 2004 so presumably they have been using it for the last couple of years.

The site is aligned with another called "Harvest North Africa Website" where they don't even bother to be discrete about sending missionaries, which they describe as "field based prayer initiatives" - HNA exists to facilitate a tidal wave of new intercessors from around the globe to engage in effective prayer for the nations of North Africa. HNA will become a clearinghouse of information about North Africa relevant to all interested Christians. HNA seeks to mobilize human and other kingdom resources for the region.

To realize these goals, Harvest North Africa will work to facilitate effective field-based prayer initiatives for each nation. HNA will produce and distribute vital relevant generic media designed for easy use by any Christian individual, church or organization with an interest in the region. Via a growing email network and a website, HNA will sound a trumpet call to active prayer on behalf of North Africa."


A tidal wave... harvesting? The mixed metaphor would be just silly if these fanatics weren't for real. Fortunately they are a small and reasonably ineffectual group as far as Morocco is concerned. Others, less overt, are more dangerous.

In contravention of Article 220 of the Moroccan Penal Code, there are still evangelicals active in cities such as Marrakech. In one instance they are believed to be operating behind the front of a language school and in another a property company. There have been reports of people working with these companies having pressure put on them to convert. This is a serious situation from a security point of view and should be stopped. There is a danger that evangelical organisations such as Arise Shine Morocco, 10/40 Window and Harvest North Africa will convince gullible young people or naive older ones to come to Morocco as missionaries. Such actions are not only illegal but put those involved at risk.

Synagogue in Fez

Morocco is a very tolerant society and Jews, Christians, Buddhists, Hindus and Pagans all live here with no problem. The problem is not religion - but evangelism. North Africa does not need harvesting.

Liosliath also posts about the so-called 10/40 window website. Her article is worth a read. You can read it here: Missionaries are perfect nuisances and leave every place worse than they found it.

Note from our editor:

Here is a list of other stories on evangelical work in Morocco;

Teaching English or Evangelising?

German Evangelist Flees

Evangelists Target Morocco

Smuggling Bibles

New Christian Crusade in Morocco


Tags:

Saturday, February 11, 2006

The Evangelists are coming - again.


Many Moroccans are concerned about a three-night festival intended to use the universal language of music to bridge cultures and make friends, will be making its way to Morocco this spring for the second year in a row.

While hardly in the same league as the prestigeous Fez Sacred Music Festival, Friendship Fest 2006, is a free event to be held May 5-7 in Marrekech, which will bring a host of little-known Christian artists together with local musicians in an effort to show that people of different cultures and faith traditions can be friends and live in harmony with one another,according to the event's organisers, Creation Fest co-founders Harry Thomas and Tim Landis.

Marrekech Regional President Abdelali Doumou called last year's festival, which drew a crowd of around 85,000 people, an historic opportunity for Americans and Moroccans to celebrate together, through music, in friendship and peace.

At the festival's close, Doumou extended an official invitation for Thomas to return to Morocco.

According to Christianity Today, Thomas, whose initial efforts to run Friendship Fest were opposed by some Moroccans who objected against the religious content of the music, was able to quell tensions by assuring officials that none of the musicians would be proselytizing during the event something that didn't seem to bother the artists at 2005's festival. However many local muslims viewed the event with some concern as there have been several attempts to secretly convert Moslems in the Marrakech area in recent years. See our earlier story here: Evangelicals in Morocco.

"We're not allowed to evangelize but we were allowed to make connections, make friends, and share Christ that way," Friendship 2005 performer Joy Williams told Christianity Today.

While anything that decreases the rift between faiths is important, one wonders how the friendly Americans would welcome a tour from a group of Islamic performers using music to share the teachings of Islam. And will the visiting performers and organisers be seeking out information on Islam while in Morocco?

Musical acts scheduled to perform at this year's festival include a southern gospel group The Crabb Family, pop singer Jaci Velasquez, rapper KJ-52, American Idol finalist George Huff, Canadian rock quartet Downhere, and a group called Audio Adrenaline.

Tags:

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Evangelical stumble?

Liosliath in the blog Morocco Time has an update on the evangelist who was heading out to Morocco to harvest a few souls. The update is here: Update on the Evangelist

If you missed the fascinating saga, then maybe start here and follow the links: Evangelical Missionaries in Morocco.

Tags:

Blogger on the warpath.

You have to love the ripple effect of a good post or article.

When we read Karima Rhanem's report: Evangelical missionaries in Morocco back in the limelight, we followed up with our own response: Evangelical missionaries in Morocco, and now the ripples have flowed on to Morocco Time blog, where our intrepid blogger went a step further and hunted down an evangelist before he even arrived in Morocco!

In a great post she links us to The Warrior's Code where Sam proclaims "I'm looking change my small, Springfield, Ohio outlook to a larger, world perspective". Unfortunately part of that outlook includes heading to Morocco and converting the faithful.

Morocco Time responds: Normally I try to live and let live - if I happen upon a missionary or evangelizer here, I wouldn't turn them in. However, this jerk insulted Scotland in the same scintillating blog entry, "Scotland has never had a king worth bowing to - it's up to us to show them what a great King is like. Amen?" At this, gritting my teeth and muttering bits of "Scotland the Brave" (since part of my family once inhabited Dunbar Castle), I vowed to expose these wack jobs whenever and wherever they're found.

We await further developments. Let us hope Sam the Warrior does not end up as a 'news brief' item.

Go to source: Morocco Time : Love the Lord but Burn Evangelists at the Stake.

UPDATE:

And now Sam enters the fray and Morocco Time responds:

“Do not argue with the followers of earlier revelation other than in a most kindly manner – except those of them who did wrong and are oppressors – and say ‘we believe in that which has been sent down to us and that which has been sent down to you; for our God and your God is one and the same, and it is unto Him that we surrender ourselves.’” Quran 29:46

Read more: Morocco Time:1 Peter 3:9 and Quran 22:67-68, 29:46


Tags:

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Evangelical missionaries in Morocco

The general disquiet in Moroccan society about American evangelism appears to be justified. It is time the evangelists realised that respecting each others religious beliefs is important - as is respecting the laws of the country you are living in.

Photo: Morocco Times

Last week the Moroccan daily al-Ittihad al-Ichtiraki reported that police in Marrakech had recently seized documents which confirm the existence of a secret evangelical group operating in the city. The documents were seized in the apartment in Yacoub al-Mansour neighbourhood where an alleged foreign missionary lived with his wife and two daughters. The report claims that the missionary vanished when he learned that police were coming to interview him. Sources say that the seized documents reveal the existence of secret spiritual schools in Gu�liz, and al-Inara (central Marrakech) set up to teach Moroccans the concepts of Christianity.

According to the 2004 International Religious Freedom report, the Moroccan Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government generally respects this right in practice, there are some restrictions. For example, proselytizing is forbidden in Morocco with the result that any attempt to induce a Muslim to convert is illegal.

According to Article 220 of the Moroccan Penal Code, any attempt to stop one or more persons from the exercise of their religious beliefs or from attendance at religious services is unlawful and may be punished by 3-6 months' imprisonment and a fine of $10 to $50 (115 to 575 dirhams). The article applies the same penalty to "anyone who employs incitements to shake the faith of a Muslim or to convert him to another religion."

In today's Morocco Times, Karima Rhanem has a detailed article looking at the recent developments and also events last year when the debate on Moroccan Christians reached its peak when the Moroccan authorities deported a South African pastor.

Read Karima Rhanem's report here: Evangelical missionaries in Morocco back in the limelight.

See the flow on from this post: Blogger on the warpath.

Love the Lord but Burn Evangelists at the Stake.



Tags:

Saturday, December 03, 2005

New Christian Crusade in Morocco?


In Australia on Sunday there was a report on the ABC that there is much disquiet in Morocco over what some Islamic leaders are calling it the new Christian crusade – the campaign by hundreds of western evangelicals to convert Morocco's Muslim population to Christianity.

Morocco is officially 99 per cent Muslim, and the Government has strict penalties for those convicted of trying to shake people's faith.

Those Moroccan Muslims who do convert to Christianity face ostracism and even jail.

The ABC’s Middle East Correspondent Mark Willacy compiled this report in the cities of Rabat and Casablanca.

MARK WILLACY: It's a drizzly Sunday morning in Rabat, but inside Jean Luc Blanc's church the congregation is radiant. But there's something missing. Singing out from the pews the faces are all black – Christians from sub-Saharan Africa passing through Morocco on their way to Europe. Among them there is not a single Moroccan.

Protestant Pastor Protestant, JEAN LUC BLANC says : Well, because all Moroccans are Muslims, or a few of them are Jews. They're not allowed to go to church.

MARK WILLACY: Jean Luc Blanc is well aware of Morocco's strict laws preventing Muslims converting to Christianity. And he knows that if a Moroccan was to attend his Sunday service it would lead to trouble.

JEAN LUC BLANC: There is no religious freedom in Morocco. That's a fact. The Moroccan individual is not allowed to change from one community to the other one. Well, it's a kind of apartheid in a way, religious apartheid.

MARK WILLACY: Despite the law and the threat of prison some Moroccans have changed faiths.

YOUNES: I was reading my Bible, I find peace. I've never regretted that I choose this way.

MARK WILLACY: 29-year old Younes converted to Christianity along with his parents.
He says the punishment for abandoning Islam isn't confined to the law.

YOUNES: I know one guy, he came into my home at four o'clock in the morning, knocking on my door. When I opened the door to him, he said my father threw my clothes outside the house and he told me never come back. Another guy I know, also, he was, his father, he swear to not eat with him, talk to him, until he quit the house. I think this is what's painful for the people to change. It's mainly the pressure from the families.


MARK WILLACY: Morocco is proud of its Islamic faith. Along Casablanca's Cornish towers the Hassan II Mosque, its minaret soaring more than 200 metres into the sky. The Vatican's Saint Peter's Basilica could fit inside the mosque's central prayer hall. Here Islam doesn't just impose itself on the skyline, but also on the national psyche.

Morocco’s Secretary of State. ABBAS EL FASSI: Islam gives freedom to other religions to practice. But we do not accept other religions coming here to try to convert Muslims.

MARK WILLACY: Some Muslim Imams have openly called for Moroccans who accept Christianity to be killed. Convert Younes says he's already been warned that he must re-embrace Islam.

YOUNES: Some guys with the beard, they came to me, they tried to convince me and tell me you need to go back to Islam.

MARK WILLACY: There is a real fear here that the evangelicals will only serve to unleash a wave of Islamic extremism – a backlash against Western outsiders seeking to convert the faithful.

Morocco’s Secretary of State. ABBAS EL FASSI: This is not a question of evangelicals or Islamic extremists. Put simply, having evangelism in a Muslim country is against Islam, because the Christians target the weak and vulnerable.

MARK WILLACY: Even Christian pastors like Jean Luc Blanc fear that evangelical crusaders could provoke a reaction from guardians of the Muslim faith.

JEAN LUC BLANC: Well I am a bit afraid of really the consequence of that kind of action in Morocco, because I am afraid that Moroccan authorities… well just Islamists can react in a bad way because of that.

MARK WILLACY: For now an uneasy calm exists between Morocco's Muslim guardians and the new Christian crusaders. But the future of this calm rests on just how successful the evangelical campaign of conversion manages to be.

Note from our editor:

Here is a list of other stories on evangelical work in Morocco;

Teaching English or Evangelising?

German Evangelist Flees

Evangelists Target Morocco

Smuggling Bibles

New Christian Crusade in Morocco


Tags: