الخميس، 11 يونيو 2015

مقال الحرب الصليبية الخفية على الاسلام وربطه فيما تقوم به عناصر داعش

عناصر عصابة داعش من الغربيين

١/قبل حوالي ١٢ سنة، نشرت مجلة موذر جونز الأمريكية تحقيقا جعلته لغلافها بعنوان "الحرب الصليبية المقنعة" عن جهود التنصير بين المسلمين

مجلة موذر جونز الأمريكية تحقيقا جعلته لغلافها بعنوان "الحرب الصليبية المقنعة" عن جهود  التنصير 

وأشار تحقيق المجلة الى حيل المنصرين في حربهم "الصليبية المقنعة" 

ولعل من بين الحيل التي ظهرت من بين من انتمى للقاعدة من الاجانب

 التظاهر باعتناق الاسلام للقيام بمهام تجسسية او  أن ينفر من يدعي اعتناقه من الغربيين قومه بغلوه وتشدده. قارن هذا بتزايد اعداد من هؤلاء في صفوف داعش اليوم

٤/ولدينا أمثلة حية على ذلك منها عميل المخابرات الدنماركية الذي تظاهر باعتناق الاسلام وتشدق بالجهاد واخترق صفوف القاعدة وخطط لاستدراج العولقي





العميل الدانمركي الذي التحق بالقاعدة في اليمن 
مورتن ستورم،

عميل مزدوج وشقراء كرواتية وقصة مقتل العولقي


ادعى الاسلام و في التسجيل المصور يقول انه ارتد  و جندته المخابرات للقيام بمهمة  قتل العولقي

'Agent Storm': How a militant Islamist became a CIA spy


http://www.france24.com/en/20150228-interview-morten-storm-al-qaeda-cia-agent-terrorism-yemen-aqap

نماذج من دعم بعض الانظمة القاعدة او استخدامها فزاعة تخدم اجندتهم

Some regimes are using al-Qaeda and Isis as scarecrow to serve their agenda



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عميل مزدوج وشقراء كرواتية وقصة مقتل العولقي

الثلاثاء، 16 تشرين الأول/أكتوبر 2012، 


جورجيا، الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية (CNN) -- قد تبدو هذه القصة إحدى حلقات مسلسلات الجاسوسية الأمريكية: عميل دنمركي مزدوج يتلقى 250 ألف دولار نقدا من وكالة الاستخبارات المركزية الأمريكية للمساعدة في القبض على أحد قادة لتنظيم القاعدة، من خلال إيجاد زوجة له.
القيادي المطلوب هو رجل الدين الأمريكي المولد أنور العولقي، الذي كان على وشك أن يصبح  الأكثر فعالية في الدعاية لتنظيم القاعدة، والعروس هي جميلة شقراء من كرواتيا، والعميل المزدوج هو مورتن ستورم، الذي خالط الأوساط الإسلامية المتطرفة، وحاز على ثقة العولقي عندما كان مقيما في اليمن في عام 2006.
ولكن دون علم رفاقه في السلاح، اتصل ستورم بالمخابرات الدنمركية في أواخر عام 2006 وعرض خدماته، وهؤلاء بدورهم أبلغوا وكالة الاستخبارات الأمريكية، وعندما فر العولقي إلى العاصمة اليمنية، صنعاء، للاختباء هناك، أصبح  ستورم نقطة اتصال للاستخبارات في محاولة لتحديد مكان العولقي وإخراجه.
بداية اللقاء بالعولقي
ووفقا لرواية ستورم، في سلسلة من المقابلات المطولة مع صحيفة يولاندس بوستن الدنمركية، حصل أحد لقاءاته العديدة مع العولقي في مخيم صحراوي في محافظة شبوة في سبتمبر/أيلول عام 2009.
وقال ستورم للصحيفة: "سألني إذا كنت أعرف امرأة غربية، يمكنه الزواج بها.. أعتقد أنه كان يفتقر لشخص يمكن أن يفهم عقليته الغربية."
وكان للعولقي، وفقا لستورم، زوجتين عربيتين، ولكن كانتا تعيشان في صنعاء، فأراد أن يتزوج من امرأة بيضاء مسلمة تكون له "رفيقة في المخبأ" في المناطق القبلية النائية.
ولم تعلق وكالة الاستخبارات الأمريكية أو الدنمركية علنا على رواية  ستورم، والقصة قد تبدو غير قابلة للتصديق لولا أدلة وفيرة أظهرها ستورم لصحيفة يولاندس بوستن، تتضمن تسجيلات فيديو تبادلها العولقي وعروسه، وإيصالات السفر وصورة لحقيبة محشوة بمبلغ 250 ألف دولار قال ستورم إنه تلقاها من الاستخبارات الأمريكية.
وقال ستورم إنه بعد شهرين من عودته من اليمن، عثر على مجموعة على موقع فيسبوك داعمة للعولقي، وعمد إلى كتابة تعليق على الصفحة، يطلب فيه المساعدة، وبعد عدة أيام ردت عليه امرأة كرواتية وسألته عن حاجته.
الحسناء الكرواتية
والمرأة هي أمينة، تبلغ من العمر 33 عاما، وهي جميلة لها شعر أشقر طويل وتعمل مع ذوي الاحتياجات الخاصة الصغار في زاغرب، وكانت اعتنقت الإسلام مؤخرا، وأصبحت من مناصري العولقي بعد سلسلة من المحادثات مع ستورم من خلال فيسبوك، وقالت إنها ستكون فخورة للزواج من العولقي، وفقا لستورم.
ومرة أخرى أرسل ستورم ردا إلى العولقي في اليمن، بتاريخ 11 ديسمبر/كانون أول عام 2009، بشأن المرأة، ورد عليه العولقي يطلب المزيد من المعلومات.
وفي رسالة بعد ثلاثة أيام، وفقا لستورم، بعث العولقي للمرأة برسالة هذا نصها: "دعيني أوضح بعض الأمور: أولا، أنا لا أعيش في مكان ثابت، وبالتالي تتنوع ظروف معيشتي، وأحيانا أعيش في خيمة. ثانيا، في بعض الأحيان أعيش بمعزل عن الآخرين، ما يعني أني وعائلتي لا يمكننا التعرف على الناس.. فإذا كنت تستطيعين العيش في هذه الظروف الصعبة، ولا مانع لديك من العزلة والقيود على الاتصالات الخاصة مع العالم الخارجي، فهذا سيكون أمرا رائعا."
وقد يكون من المتوقع أن يعيش العولقي في ظروف صعبة، فبعد بضعة أيام، أي في يوم عيد الميلاد عام 2009، حاول طالب نيجيري تم تجنيده من قبل العولقي في اليمن، تفجير طائرة ركاب فوق مدينة ديترويت مع عبوة ناسفة مخبأة في ملابسه الداخلية، ما أدى إلى جهود حثيثة لتعقب العولقي.
وفي مرحلة ما، أبلغ ستورم المخابرات الدنمركية بأنه كان على اتصال مع امرأة مستعدة للزواج العولقي، وقال إن الدنمركيين اتصلوا بوكالة الاستخبارات المركزية الأمريكية، والتي وجدت في ذلك فرصة للعثور على رجل الدين المتشدد.
وكانت خطة وكالة الاستخبارات الأمريكية ونظيرتها الدنمركية هي زرع جهاز تتبع في حقيبة أمينة، وفقا لما أكده ستورم في حديثه لصحيفة يولاندس بوستن الدنمركية.
وأضاف ستورم: "كان القصد من ذلك أنها يمكن أن تقودنا إلى أنور.. المخابرات الدنمركية كانت على علم طوال الوقت، وتعلم العواقب إذا نجحت الخطة، وهي أن العولقي من المرجح أن يقتل، وكانت تعرف أن هناك خطر من أن أمينة ستقتل أيضا."
وفي 17 فبراير/شباط عام 2010، اتصل العولقي مباشرة مع ستورم مقترحا لقاء أمينة، وقال: "إذا قمتَ بزيارتها، فيمكنني تحميل تسجيل فيديو لنفسي عبر ملف مشفر، ويمكنك أن تريها إياه، حتى تكون على يقين بأن المتحدث هو أنا."
رسائل العولقي لأمينة
وفي رسالة للمتابعة بعد عدة أيام، قال العولقي لستورم بأن يبلغ أمينة بأن ظروف معيشته قد تحسنت، وأضاف: "أنا حاليا لا أعيش في خيمة، ولكن في بيت يعود لأحد الأصدقاء.. لا أغادر المنزل، وزوجتي ستكون معي في كل وقت.. أفضل هذا المنزل على خيمة في الجبال، لأنه يمنحني القدرة على القراءة والكتابة والبحث."
ويقول ستورم إنه بعد تلقي هذه الرسالة، التقى بالمخابرات الدنمركية والأمريكية في بلدة هيلسينغور بالدنمرك، مشيرا إلى أن عميلا أمريكيا مقيما في الدنمرك يدعى جيد، وآخر جاء من واشنطن يدعى أليكس، حضرا الاجتماع.
وقال ستورم لصحيفة يولاندس بوستن إنه سافر إلى فيينا في النمسا، يوم 8 مارس/آذار عام 2010، والتقى أمينة خارج محطة الحافلات الدولية في وسط المدينة، بينما كان عملاء الاستخبارات يراقبونه.
وقال ستورم إنه شعر بالشك بشأن حب أمينة وإخلاصها للعولقي، وسألها قائلا: "هل تعرفين العواقب؟ (للزواج من العولقي)، لكنها ردت بالقول: "نعم، أنا مستعدة."
وقال ستورم إنه بناء على طلب العولقي، فقد درب أمينة على كيفية إرسال البريد الإلكتروني المشفر عن طريق تحميل برنامج تشفير من مواقع جهادية.
وفي الاجتماع الثاني في فيينا، أعطى ستورم لأمينة تسجيل فيديو قصير أدلى به العولقي، الذي كان يرتدي الثوب الأبيض أمام خلفية باللون الوردي عليها بعض الأزهار.
طلب الزواج
وقال العولقي في التسجيل: "تم عمل هذا التسجيل خصيصا من أجل الأخت أمينة وبناء على طلبها... أدعو الله أن يهديك لما هو خير لك في الحياة الدنيا والآخرة.. ويرشدك لاختيار ما هو خير لك بشان هذا الاقتراح (الزواج)."
وقال ستورم إن أمينة أجهشت بالبكاء عندما سمعت تلك الكلمات، مشيرا إلى أنها سجلت بعد ذلك مقطعي فيديو للعولقي.
وفي أحد المقطعين، ارتدت الحجاب الكامل وكشفت وجهها فقط، وتحدثت بالانجليزية التي تشوبها لكنة، وقالت: "سأقبل كل ما هو مطلوب القيام به الآن بهذه الطريقة التي اخترتها.. وكان الله في عوننا."
وفي الفيديو الثاني، خلعت أمينة حجابها وقالت: "يا أخي.. هذه أنا دون غطاء الرأس.. كي ترى شعري.. أتمنى أن تكون سعيدا معي، إن شاء الله،" وفي الجلسة نفسها، سلم ستورم أمينة حقيبة تم تزويدها بجهاز التعقب.
وفي 18 مايو/أيار عام 2010، سافر ستورم إلى فيينا مرة الثالثة لشراء تذكرة الطائرة لأمينة إلى اليمن وسلمها ثلاثة آلاف دولار نقدا نيابة عن العولقي، وفقا لصحيفة "يولاندس بوستن،" التي قالت إن أمينة وصلت تحمل حقيبتها إلى صنعاء في بداية يونيو/حزيران من ذات العام.
وبعد ذلك بيومين، تلقى ستورم رسالة نصية من أحد عملاء المخابرات الدنمركية تقول: "تهانينا..  لقد أصبحت غنيا.. غنيا جدا."
وقال ستورم إنه في يوم 9 يونيو/حزيران عام 2010، سلمه عميل من الاستخبارات الأمريكية حقيبة في فندق كراون بلازا بالقرب من كوبنهاغن، وسأله ستورم "ما هو رمز الحقيبة؟" فأجاب العميل: "حاول 007". كان داخل 250 ألف دولار وفقا لستورم.
فشل الخطة التجسسية
لكن الخطة تلك لم تنجح، إذ أمضت أمينة عدة أسابيع في صنعاء، ثم وصلها مرسال لترتيب سفرها للقاء العولقي، ولأسباب أمنية، ومن بينها المخاوف بشأن أجهزة تعقب، قيل لها أن تترك حقيبتها.
وتزوجت أمينة من العولقي، بعد فترة وجيزة، وأرسل العولقي رسالة شكر لستورم على ترتيب الزواج، وكتب له إن أمينة "لم تكن فقط مثلما توقعتها، ولكنها كانت أفضل بكثير."
وفي العام الماضي عندما عاد ستورم إلى اليمن في ما قال إنه مهمة أخرى لصالح المخابرات الدنمركية، تبادل هو والعولقي عدة رسائل، إحداها حصلت عليها صحيفة "يولاندس بوستن،" وفيها يطلب العولقي من ستورم إرسال منتجات من صنعاء لزوجته الجديدة، بما في ذلك بلسم للشعر.
نهاية العولقي
وقد جرى تعقب العولقي في نهاية المطاف وقتل في غارة طائرة بدون طيار في نهاية شهر سبتمبر/أيلول من العام الماضي، وهي نهاية يصر ستورم على أنها كانت نتيجة لعمله في تعقب العولقي، باستخدام مرسال يحمل عصا الذاكرة USB شملت جهاز التعقب.
ولكن في محادثة مسجلة من قبل ستورم في فندق هيلسينغور أواخر العام الماضي، أصر أمريكي يدعى مايكل على أن مهمة منفصلة للمخابرات هي التي أدت إلى العثور على العولقي.
لكن ستورم لا يصدقه، ويقول: "أنا مقتنع بأن وكالة الاستخبارات المركزية أوقفت المرسال... ولكن الأمريكيين على ما يبدو لن يعترفوا بأن عميلا للمخابرات الدنمركية.. هذا البلد الصغير، قاد إلى الكشف عن أنور."
وبعد وفاة العولقي، استمرت أمينة بالتواصل مع ستورم من خلال رسائل مشفرة، غير مدركة بأنه كان يعمل مع الاستخبارات الغربية. وقبل بضعة أشهر، قالت إنها كانت تعمل على مجلة "إنسباير" على شبكة الإنترنت التي أطلقها العولقي لتنطق باسم تنظيم القاعدة في شبه الجزيرة العربية.
واقترحت أيضا بأنها ترغب في أن تشارك في هجوم، وفقا لصحيفة يولاندس بوستن، وقالت: "أود أن أنفذ عملية استشهادية.. ولكن الشيخ بصير (الوحيشي، أمير القاعدة في جزيرة العرب،) قال إن الأخوات حتى الآن لا يمكنهن تنفذ عمليات لأنهن سيعانين الكثير من المشاكل... لذلك لا يمكنني تنفيذ عملية... أريد أن أقتل بنفس الطريقة التي قتل بها زوجي.. إن شاء الله."
ولا يزال مكان أمينة غير معروف حتى اليوم.
يشار إلى أن شبكة CNN كانت على اتصال بستورم، الذي هو في مخبأ الآن بعد عدة تهديدات بالقتل من متشددين إسلاميين كانوا رفاقه.


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تقرير مثير

عضو داعش السابق ابوصفية اليمني يكشف حقيقة امنيين عصابة داعش




عصابة داعش البعثية الاجرامية صنيعة المخابرات الاميركية والاسرائيلية بدليل انها تقاتل السوريين وتترك بشار واسرائيل


صحفي اميركي يكشف قرائن جديدة تربط داعش بالمخابرات الاميركية http://aljazeeraalarabiamodwana.blogspot.com/2015/05/blog-post_663.html



الحرب الثقافية الغربية حين يصبح الجمال قبحا

http://aljazeeraalarabiamodwana.blogspot.com/2015/05/blog-post_153.html



Some regimes are using al-Qaeda and Isis as scarecrow to serve their agenda

http://aljazeeraalarabiamodwana.blogspot.com/2015/06/some-regimes-are-using-al-qaeda-and.html


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كيف تعيش بين المسلمين وتبث التبشير بينهم بدون اثارتهم 


Mother Jones

The Stealth Crusade

Inside one Southern university, Christian missionaries are being trained to go undercover in the Muslim world and win converts for Jesus. Their stated goal: to wipe out Islam.
By Barry Yeoman | Wed May. 1, 2002 

At 8 o'clock on a warm Monday morning in January, 20 students file into Rick Love's classroom at Columbia International University in South Carolina. Eyes glassy from writing papers all weekend, they clutch Styrofoam cups of Folgers as they settle into their seats. In front, an overhead projector hums; it is hooked up to the instructor's laptop, ready for a morning full of PowerPoint presentations.
Outside, CIU's piney campus is quiet. Most of the student body has not yet returned from Christmas break. But these students, all evangelical Christians, have arrived two weeks early for an intensive course on how to win converts in Islamic countries. They're learning from the master: Love is the international director of Frontiers, the largest Christian group in the world that focuses exclusively on proselytizing to Muslims. With 800 missionaries in 50 countries, Frontiers' reach extends from the South Pacific to North Africa, with every major Islamic region in between.
Love is 49, a black-leather-jacket-wearing whirlwind of a man with a salt-and-pepper beard and a quick sense of humor. He's a chronic multitasker, routinely praying aloud while drinking coffee and simultaneously reviewing his lecture notes. Little known outside the missionary world, he's an icon within it-an evangelistic entrepreneur who wins admirers with what he calls his "middle linebacker" personality. His seminars are usually closed to the media and the public.
This morning's lesson is about going undercover. Many of Love's students are missionaries themselves, temporarily home from assignments in places ranging from Kazakhstan to Kenya. They know firsthand that evangelism is illegal in many Islamic nations, and they face expulsion if their true intentions become known. Love's lesson for today is how to mask one's identity while secretly working to convert Muslims. Evangelists, he explains, should always have a ready, nonreligious explanation for their presence in hostile areas.
Love fixes his gaze on a studious, spiky-haired missionary dressed in Patagonia clothing. "If people ask you, 'Why are you here?'" he asks, "what do you say?" The young man, on leave from Southeast Asia, squirms in his chair. His jaw opens but nothing comes out. "Bingo!" Love says with a smile. "You bite your fingernails, and people go, 'Of course he's not hiding anything.'" Love notes that before he went to western Indonesia to proselytize among Sundanese Muslims, he went back to school and earned his credentials to become an English instructor. That way, he says, he had an excuse to be in the country. "I could look someone in the eye and say, 'I am an English teacher,'" he explains. "'I have a degree and I'm here to teach.'"
That, he says, is the model for winning converts in the Islamic world: Find another pretext to be in the country. Build friendships with the locals. Once you've developed trust, then it's time to try to gain new believers. But don't reveal your true purpose too early. "How did Jesus explain why he was there?" Love asks the class. "Indirectly," volunteers a veteran missionary. "He'd say, 'Why do you think I'm here?'"
"Did Jesus ever lie?" In unison, the class says, "No."
"But did Jesus raise his hand and say, 'I swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?'" Again, 20 voices call out, "No!"
There are lots of ways to camouflage yourself, Love tells the students. In Indonesia, evangelists ran a quilt-making business to provide cover for Western missionaries, allowing them to employ-and proselytize-scores of Muslims.
The students nod thoughtfully; they agree that Muslims must be reached by whatever means possible. Their zeal is helping to fuel the biggest evangelical foray into the Muslim world since missionary pioneer Samuel Zwemer declared Islam a "dying religion" in 1916 and predicted that "when the crescent wanes, the Cross will prove dominant." Over the past decade, evangelical leaders say, the number of missionaries trying to convert Muslims has jumped fourfold, from several hundred in the early 1990s to more than 3,000 today. Many are sent by the Southern Baptist Convention, with the rest coming from a network of church-supported groups with names like Christar and Arab World Ministries.
Missionaries work in remote villages in Afghanistan and Pakistan; former Soviet republics like Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan; Middle Eastern hot spots like Iraq, Syria, and Yemen; and African countries like Somalia and Algeria.
"We see Islam as the final frontier," says David Cashin, a professor of Intercultural Studies at CIU who used to don Muslim clothing and pursue converts in the tea shops of Kaliakoir, Bangladesh. Like many of his fellow evangelicals, Cashin regards the Islamic world as a hinterland that must be penetrated before the Messiah can return. "History is coming to an end," he says. "If you believe Christ is coming back, why has he delayed 2,000 years? We haven't finished the task he set out to do." That task, he says, is to win converts among all the world's ethnic groups.
The growing movement to hunt souls in Muslim lands-by missionaries who often pass as aid workers, teachers, or business owners-has raised hackles outside the evangelical world. Missionaries themselves acknowledge that their work endangers the lives of converts, and critics charge that it disrupts the delivery of humanitarian aid and fuels resentment of Westerners during one of the most dangerous moments in recent history. But to those at the heart of the movement, including Rick Love's students, any damage done by their work is outweighed by the importance of their mission: to wipe out Islam. "I believe it's a false religion, and I'd like to see it be gone," says Kim McHugh, a 36-year-old CIU student who is training to convert Iranian refugees in Turkey. Her husband Brent agrees. "If they don't have a chance to experience Jesus," he says, "they're going to hell."
For most Americans, the first glimpse into Muslim-world evangelism came last November, when the Taliban created heroes out of two fresh-faced missionaries named Dayna Curry and Heather Mercer. Incarcerated for three months on charges of spreading Christianity, the women made headlines after U.S. Special Forces helicopters whisked them away from a prison outside Ghazni, Afghanistan. "They had a calling to serve the poorest of the poor," President Bush said at a White House ceremony shortly after the Hollywood-style rescue. "Their faith was a source of hope that kept them from being discouraged." But Curry and Mercer were doing more than relief work: Once home, they admitted to violating Afghan law by showing "part of a Jesus film" and giving a Christian storybook to a Muslim family. Another missionary from their organization, John Weaver, also garnered wide-spread media attention for his refusal to leave Afghanistan despite the growing anti-American tensions.
Like many missionaries in Islamic countries, Weaver trained at CIU, one of three schools in the United States with a degree program specifically devoted to converting Muslims. A campus of boxy brick buildings located at the end of a wooded boulevard in Columbia, South Carolina, CIU has the look of a second-tier state college. But rather than publicizing frat parties and rock concerts, the colorful posters on its walls and bulletin boards announce prayer services and opportunities for overseas missions. In the student center, next to a wide-screen TV, a book provides Christian reviews of Hollywood movies. (Harry Potter? Amistad? Billy Elliot? All rated "very offensive.") Faculty and some 1,000 students eat together in the cafeteria, praying over smothered chicken and talking spiritedly about lessons from the New Testament.
During this two-week "winterim" session, it's hard to find anyone of traditional college age. Many of the students are from the front lines of missionary work, men and women who have spent years in Muslim countries. Christian Dedrick is squeezing in some additional schooling before returning to the field next year. A lanky 33-year-old with thick blond sideburns, a pageboy haircut, and oval, horn-rimmed glasses, he has an easygoing style and an enthusiasm for challenging conversation. Pass him on the street, and the first impression would be tweedy intellectual.
For two years, Dedrick worked in a small port city in Kazakhstan, teaching English and living with a local family, sleeping on a cotton bedroll in a sparsely furnished room he shared with his host's two sons. Although the family were devout Muslims-the father considered it a sin to leave the faith-Dedrick spent much of his time trying to persuade them to convert to Christianity. He read them the Bible and showed them a Kazakh translation of the "Jesus film," a Campus Crusade for Christ movie that graphically depicts the crucifixion of a blue-eyed Jesus. "We wrestled over that a few times," he remembers. "I'd say, 'I have to tell you what changed my life. You don't have to accept it, but I have to tell it.'" While the family didn't convert, neither did it evict the American, whose $50 in rent represented a sizable chunk of the monthly household income.
Like the other missionaries who have come to CIU, Dedrick is constantly reevaluating his evangelical technique. He rejects his old attitude as "pretty paternalistic," saying he'll ask more questions before making judgments about what he sees when he returns to Central Asia next year. But he still believes Islam is the work of the devil. "People cheer at baseball games," Dedrick says. "I cheer at worship services. And when I go to a culture 10,000 miles away and don't see that righteousness, that holiness, reflected in that culture, I get sad. Satan has deceived them away from a relationship with their creator God."
For all their work, Dedrick and his fellow missionaries win few new believers. That doesn't seem to faze them. "My goal is not to convert a Muslim," says Al Dobra, a 45-year-old with a gravelly voice and military haircut who befriends Muslim businessmen in Nairobi, Kenya, and then tries to convince them of Islam's fallacies. "My goal is to plant a tiny seed that will fester and gnaw and grow, so that eventually they will begin to question their religion. My prayer is that they will become restless sleepers and troubled by what they hear. That's a horrible thing to wish on someone."
That absolute certainty that Christianity is the only truth-and that other religions are satanically inspired-runs throughout the two weeks of Rick Love's course. One morning Tom Seckler, a dark-haired missionary with a bland face and thick black mustache, tacks the Cambodian flag to the classroom bulletin board and lays a map of the country on the overhead projector. Seckler's mission agency, World Team, has targeted the Western Cham, an impoverished Muslim minority group in Cambodia that was massacred by the thousands by the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. Despite World Team's efforts, Seckler estimates there are only about 25 Christian converts, some of whom meet Tuesday nights in Phnom Penh. "Please pray for the Cham people," he asks his classmates. "There's a degree of self-righteousness among the Cham. They think they're okay. We don't see a big spiritual hunger among them."
The class begins to worship, eyes closed, each person offering a spontaneous request. "Lord, we come into your presence and we ask that you would give us a fresh sense of your burden and your love for Muslim people, especially the Cham," says Love. He falls silent, and then Brent McHugh takes over: "I pray, Lord, that the Cham people do hunger, and realize what they're missing in Christ."
The anti-Islam prayers reflect CIU's official attitude toward what it considers a competitor religion. Prominent on the university's Web site is an essay posted shortly after September 11. "To claim that 'Islam' means 'peace' is just one more attempt to mislead the public," it reads. "Muslim leaders have spoken of their goal to spread Islam in the West until Islam becomes a dominant, global power." The essay was written by Warren Larson, who directs the university's Muslim Studies program and served as a mentor to John Weaver, the Afghanistan missionary. A former missionary himself, Larson fears that Christianity might be losing the race for world domination. "Islam is biologically taking over the world," he says. "They're having babies faster than we are."
Before coming to CIU, Larson worked for 23 years in Dera Ghazi Khan, Pakistan, trying to convert Muslims to Christianity. He and his wife hosted prayer meetings, Bible studies, and informal gatherings where Muslims came for tea and Coke. Many of their neighbors showed up-some to learn about their religion, but most for more practical reasons. "People had the idea that foreigners have money," Larson says. "A lot of them would come because you might be able to help them get to America. Or they would come asking for help: 'My father, he's sick. Can you write a letter of introduction to the hospital?' Some of them would be willing to talk about Christianity. Most would not."
Larson was indeed rich by local standards. Not only did he hire Muslims for domestic help, but he also owned household luxuries like a refrigerator. And while the Larsons often engaged in community service-visiting widows, taking people to the doctor-they were still seen by some neighbors as the embodiment of the West. One morning, 200 armed Muslims stormed Larson's home, throwing bricks at his ministry's two Land Rovers, kicking down his door, and setting fire to religious literature. After that, Larson says, "whenever we would hear something that sounded like a riot, it would scare us."
The attack on Larson's home came in the midst of fierce anti-U.S. sentiment in the Muslim world, which culminated in the takeover of the American embassy in Iran in 1979. Now, in the wake of September 11, some critics say evangelists are again fueling distrust and resentment toward Westerners. Last October, Islamic militants opened fire on a church built by missionaries in Pakistan, killing 16 Christians, and Muslim rebels threatened to execute two missionaries kidnapped in the Philippines.
"The issue is the disproportional power relationship," says Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Washington, D.C.-based organization that works to promote a positive image of Muslims. "They use their resources to coerce people to do what they want them to do." Hooper remembers reviewing a proposal by a Christian agency to send veterinarians to help impoverished Fulani cattle herders in West Africa. But the plan had a caveat: "You don't get the veterinarian unless you take the missionary," he says. "When people are in desperate circumstances, they'll do things they otherwise wouldn't do."
Robert Macpherson, security director for the aid group care, remembers serving as a U.S. Marine in Somalia during the early 1990s, when some 200 organizations were working to stave off famine in the war-ravaged country. "It was dangerous, dangerous, dangerous," he recalls. Evangelicals only made matters worse, he says, by showing up at food-distribution sites and handing out Christian literature, giving the impression that food aid was contingent on conversion to Christianity. "The next thing we know, they got themselves in the middle of a riot," Macpherson recalls. Angered by the missionaries, Somalis climbed over one another to steal food and set trucks on fire. "They were desperate," he says. "They were dying. This was an emergency."
At CIU, missionaries-in-training learn to try to avoid such hostility by blending into the cultures they visit. In class one morning, Rick Love opens his Bible to the book of Acts, in which the apostle Paul takes on a disciple named Timothy. Before the two men go out to proselytize among the Jews, Paul takes Timothy to have his foreskin cut. "He says, 'Yo, Tim, you wanna join my team? You gotta get circumcised,'" Love tells his students. "How's that for high standards? Wow!"
Love is hardly suggesting that his male students undergo the knife. He's making a bigger point: To win converts in a foreign culture, you must take on the behaviors of that culture, even adopting the rituals of another religion. The practice is called "contextualization," and it's one of the hottest topics among missionaries. The idea is to get away from the old-fashioned practice of importing American-style Christianity, complete with wooden pews and Western hymns. Instead, missionaries today are more likely to take on Muslim names, dress in veils and other local clothing, prostrate themselves during prayer, and even fast during Ramadan. "We must become Muslims to reach Muslims," says Cashin, the CIU professor.
If a first-century evangelist can undergo circumcision to win converts, how far can a 21st-century missionary go? At lunch, Christian Dedrick takes a spoonful of his wife's homemade broccoli soup and ponders the question aloud. "Should we call ourselves Muslims?" he asks. "The old meaning of the word is 'one who submits.' In Jordan, the missionaries had 'Jesus mosques.' They called themselves 'Muslims of the Messiah.' We wrestled with that. We wanted to call God 'Allah' so we could be on that relational level with Muslims."
Dedrick drew the line at appearing too Muslim-but others haven't. "One team in the Middle East has a policy of not allowing missionaries to identify themselves as Christians," reports the journal Evangelical Missions Quarterly. Another team "called themselves Jesus-ists" and presented themselves as "one of many Sufi or dervish mystical orders." The journal Missiology says that missionaries urge Palestinian students to adopt Christian beliefs-but to still call themselves Muslim.
When pressed, evangelicals acknowledge that they often blur the distinctions between the two religions and fail to disclose their intentions. "The line between guile and withholding information is very, very thin," says one missionary at CIU who asked not to be identified for security reasons. He admits that he rarely tells his Muslim neighbors why he's living among them-demurely calling himself a "language student"-and that he's been forced to terminate friendships with those who ask too many questions. "To have integrity in that is a challenge," he says.
Many Islamic and Christian leaders alike believe that evangelical groups often fail the integrity challenge. "Once you have this kind of sneaky way, the respect for the holy is gone," says Sayyid Syeed, secretary general of the Islamic Society of North America. Sacred rituals, such as prostration and the Ramadan fast, are used to lure people away from their own religion. "The missionary," says Syeed, "is seen as someone who is stabbing you in the back."
For Donna Derr, the honesty issue is not an abstract one. She's the associate director of international emergency response for Church World Service, which provides aid in more than 80 countries while barring outright proselytizing. From her perspective, Christian evangelizing-particularly by missionaries who masquerade as humanitarian workers-makes it harder for legitimate aid organizations to relieve poverty, malnutrition, and disease. "Groups that have the need to proselytize color us all with the same brush," says Derr. As a result, she says, it's harder to win the trust of those communities her group is trying to serve. She recalls one Southeast Asian nation where rural families suffer from debilitating diseases. "It was difficult to get the local governments to allow us to come in," Derr says, "because they had somebody in the past who tried to start a Christian church. They'd say, 'Oh, your name is Church World Service. You're going to do the same thing.'" In other cases, she adds, evangelicals provoked so much resentment "that the other groups doing aid had to pull out, simply because it was too dangerous."
Derr and others note that there is another model for missionary work, one followed by many mainline Christians: serving those in need without actively recruiting new believers. For example, Catholic Relief Services delivers food and blankets to Afghanistan, builds drinking-water systems in Morocco, and promotes small-business development among Egyptian women-all without trying to recruit Muslims to Catholicism. "We reflect our beliefs in our actions, in our relations, in our respect for people," says Ken Hackett, the agency's director. "We don't ask even our own staff to convert. If you're a good Muslim, you're a good Muslim."
Rick Love admits that some evangelical groups "are unwise in how they share their faith." But even if it takes some stretching of the truth, he adds, it would be wrong to ignore the call to share the Word. "That is what the Bible teaches," he says, "so I could never be part of an organization that focuses on deed only." As Love sees it, the lack of religious freedom in many Islamic countries forces missionaries to conceal their intentions. "I want the freedom to share my faith with you and not be persecuted," he says, "and I want you to have the same with me. It should be a matter of persuasion, and not political power."
On the last day of the "winterim" session, things turn decidedly somber in Love's classroom. It's the lesson in which the instructor reminds his students that their work can have dire-even deadly-consequences for the people they try to convert. He refers to Curry and Mercer, the two Americans who were airlifted from a Taliban prison two months earlier. "What happened with Dayna and Heather is not typical," he says. "We do have people imprisoned, but usually you're asked to leave. We get a ticket out of the country-but the new believers, what do they face? Loss of job, children taken away, imprisonment, torture, even martyrdom."

Of all the criticisms launched at Christian evangelists, this is the one that's least disputed: Missionary work often puts local believers in serious danger. "It is common for mission agencies to be expelled from countries awash with persecution," reports an internal study by the Southern Baptist Convention based on 300 interviews in 45 countries. "Virtually overnight, local believers are left destitute and exposed." The study cites Indonesia, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, and Pakistan as particularly repressive. In one East African community, it reports, converts were "systematically hunted down and martyred by adherents to Islam. Other believers are displaced; they live in refugee camps; they reside in adjacent countries, or in the West." The common thread among the victims? "All those martyred had a relationship to expatriate Christians that contributed to their deaths." In another country unnamed in the report, "significant numbers of Muslim-background believers were arrested and tortured due to their relationship to the expatriate missionary."

Tahir Lavi converted to Christianity during secret midnight Bible-study sessions at a madrassah in Kashmir where he was studying the Koran. His parents disowned him, and he was forced to flee after a group of men threatened to kill him. For the past 13 years, he has lived in exile in a small house at the end of a narrow lane in a north Delhi slum. But despite the risks, he continues to preach to other Muslims, exhorting them in the words of Jesus: "Take up your cross and follow me."
Indeed, evangelical leaders encourage missionaries to continue proselytizing, even though converts might be tortured or killed. "Missionaries need maturity and spiritual toughness so that when the fruits of their witness are required to walk through the fire, the missionary does not automatically attempt to rescue them," the Southern Baptist study urges. "Persecution is Biblically and historically normative for the emerging church; it cannot be avoided or eliminated.... To avoid persecution is to hamper the growth of the kingdom of God."
In the end, say evangelicals, the earthly suffering of Christians pales before the eternal hell to which Muslims are sentenced. "It's hard for me to say, 'I have a passport out of here if things get out of hand, but you have to stay here and take it,'" says Raymond Weiss, a former missionary in Bahrain. "But that's what Jesus says: Sometimes it will be fathers and mothers against each other for his sake. If Jesus is cosmically, ultimately true, then whatever cost in this world is nothing."
With that shared assumption, Rick Love's students are returning to the field, to share the New Testament in the places they're least wanted. The class at CIU has inspired them to renew their efforts to save Muslims from what they consider a false religion. "Some Christians have said to us, 'They have their own faith; why do you need to reach them?'" says Brent McHugh, the evangelist bound for Turkey. "But if you lean your ladder against the wrong wall and you spend your life climbing up that ladder, when you get to the top, you'll find there's nothing there."

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2002/05/stealth-crusade

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