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Deep Solidarity
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The Church Is Other People
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Black Lives Matter and the Church
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Traveling Inside
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The Solidarity of Grief
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Dinotopian Visions
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Solidarity Means Giving Yourself
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Acts 2 in Bolivia
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Two Poems
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Two Sonnets
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The Prayers of the Chinese Nature Painters
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Chaim Potok’s Wandering Jews
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How to Read Dickens
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A Communal Publishing House
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Plough at One Hundred Years
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Saint Macrina
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Another Life Is Possible: Four Stories from 100 Years of Life Together
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Covering the Cover: Solidarity
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Solidarity in Forgiveness
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Readers Respond: Issue 25
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Family and Friends: Francis Schaeffer and L’Abri
We Must Not Stand By
On the Persecution of China’s Uighur Muslims
By Jonathan Sacks
July 31, 2020
Available languages: Français
Concentrated in the Xinjiang region of China, the Uighurs are an ethnic group distinct from China’s majority Han population. Muslims in a state that is militantly atheistic, they have in recent years suffered from increasing persecution. Today, of the approximately 13 million Uighurs, an estimated one million are imprisoned in concentration camps, where they are used as slave labor, starved and otherwise mistreated, and subjected to “reeducation,” hours of propaganda each day in which they are required to renounce their beliefs. The crimes for which one can be sent to such camps include wearing a hijab, growing a long beard, being a member of a family that is religiously observant, and having too many children.
China’s laws against women having more than two children – three in rural areas – are enforced ruthlessly against Uighur women, who are in many cases forced to undergo abortions and sterilization; as a result, reports the Associated Press, birth rates in the mostly Uighur regions of Hotan and Kashgar fell by more than 60 percent between 2016 and 2018. And recently, drone video has surfaced showing Uighurs, bound and heavily guarded, apparently being herded into trains bound for these concentration camps. Confronted with the video on July 19 by BBC journalist Andrew Marr, Chinese Ambassador to the United Kingdom Liu Xiaoming could not explain away what he was seeing. —The Editors
As a human being who believes in the sanctity of human life, I am deeply troubled by what is happening to the Uighur Muslim population in China. As a Jew, knowing our history, the sight of people shaven-headed, lined up, boarded onto trains, and sent to concentration camps is particularly harrowing. That people in the twenty-first century are being murdered, terrorized, victimized, intimidated, and robbed of their liberties because of the way they worship God is a moral outrage, a political scandal, and a desecration of faith itself.
In 1948, in response to the horrors of the Nazi regime, the nascent United Nations proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. China – the Republic of China; the People’s Republic (PRC) would not be established until the following year – was a signatory. In 1971, the PRC reaffirmed that commitment, signing the Declaration. Everyone, Article 18 declares,
has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.
The worldwide implementation of Article 18 remains one of the great challenges of our time. This right is too often lost when one group within a society, usually the dominant group, sees another group as a threat to its freedom and its own dominance, or when there is a struggle between the will to power and the will to life. Threat becomes fear, fear becomes hate, and hate becomes dehumanization. The Nazis called Jews vermin and lice. The Hutus of Rwanda called the Tutsis inyenzi, or cockroaches. When the world allows the dehumanization of the Other, evil follows, as night follows day.
In both these cases – in the 1930s and in the 1990s – much of the world stood by and watched, paralyzed or indifferent. Yet in both cases, there were also voices of protest with many individuals putting their own lives in danger to protect the lives of others.
Today, that dehumanization is happening to the Uighur population in China. It must be challenged by the global community in the strongest possible terms. Inspired by the courage and actions of men and women who spoke up in the past, we must reaffirm a fundamental truth: that our common humanity precedes our religious differences. Lose this and we lose ourselves and our humanity. We must not allow this to happen. We must not stand by.
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Enslin Enslin
Reply to Robert Roberts: Surely you do not imply we ought to define Rabbi Sacks, or any other person, to every word written in their Scriptures or tradition of interpretations? If you are Christian, do you keep the sabbath or the dietary laws? I guess not, yet you ought to be aware that that is a definite moving away or transcending of the revelation in the Hebrew Scriptures. If you are able to transcend these foundational laws, is it not conceivable that Rabbi Sacks, who is an inspiration to many people of faith (Christians included) and a light in today's darkening world, can transcend interprtative statements written by people oppressed? Our humanity should seek to work together rather than first seek to find reasons to distrust, divide and foster hatred.
Robert Roberts
Is Rabbi Jonathan Sacks a Talmudist? The Babylonian Talmud regards all Gentiles as cattle for slaughter. I daren't repeat what the Talmud says about our Lord Jesus Christ.