The
Southern Baptist Convention, the U.S. largest Protestant denomination,
and the Franklin Graham's Samaritan's Purse said workers were on the
Iraqi-Jordanian borders ready to go in as soon as it is safe.
A
free lance translator told IslamOnline.net Friday, March 28, that he
was approached by “some organization” to forge up a team of
translators to carry out a translation job from English into Arabic,
adding that “extracts I saw from the project were of a missionary
nature, targeted to three countries; Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and
Iraq”.
The
45-year-old translator was forced to quit a translation project he was
working on after disclosing what he termed “alarming data”.
However,
he did not even know “who or what was behind the whole thing”.
“But,
having failed to get me to recruit translators, I believe they will go
ahead and make an ad on the net,” he said, adding that he “was
bent on disclosing their identity”.
Observers
believe such news consolidate the conviction shared by a large section
of public opinion in the Arab and Islamic worlds that the Iraq was is
a new “crusade” campaign.
They
underline that their opposition to the U.S.-led war on Iraq, which
they share with hundreds of millions of people across the globe of
different religious and political affiliations, is based on rejection
of injustice, respect of countries’ sovereignty and abidance by
international laws and conventions.
Both
Graham and the Southern Baptist Convention have been at the heart of
controversial evangelical denunciations of Islam.
The
Southern Baptist Convention and Graham’s Samaritan's Purse claimed
their priority will be to provide food, shelter and other needs to
war-ravaged Iraqis, but asserting that when convenient they will also
share their Christian faith with Iraqis, 98 of whom are Muslims.
Franklin
Graham, one of the U.S.’s most outspoken critics of Islam, told
Beliefnet.com Wednesday, March 25, in a telephone interview from
Samaritan’s Purse headquarters in Boone, N.C., “We realize we’re
in an Arab country and we just can’t go out and preach.”
“I
believe as we work, God will always give us opportunities to tell
others about his Son….We are there to reach out to love them and to
save them, and as a Christian I do this in the name of Jesus
Christ.”
In
his interview with Beliefnet.com, he renewed allegations that
"the Qur'an teaches violence, not peace..."
Two
months after the Sept. 11 attacks, Graham called Islam "a very
evil and wicked religion" during an interview on NBC television
network.
In
his book published last year, "The Name," Graham wrote that
"The God of Islam is not the God of the Christian faith." He
went on to say that "the two are different as lightness and
darkness."
He
admitted that his Samaritan’s Purse is in daily contact with Bush
Administration agencies in Amman, Jordan, about its plans.
Graham
didn’t seem concerned that the public presence in Iraq of
Samaritan’s Purse could prompt already-skeptical Muslims worldwide
to view the war as a crusade against Islam.
“We
don’t work for the U.S. Government, so we don’t get our permission
from them.”
"We
go where we have the opportunity to meet needs," said Ken Isaacs,
international director of projects for Samaritan's Purse, located in
Boone, N.C.
"We
do not deny the name of Christ. We believe in sharing him in deed and
in word. We'll be who we are."
Muslims
were outraged that Graham would be allowed to help with Iraq’s
humanitarian effort.
"Franklin
Graham obviously thinks it is a war against Islam,” said Ibrahim
Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
“This
is a guy who gave the invocation at President Bush’s inauguration
and believes Islam is a wicked faith. And he's going to go into Iraq
in the wake of an invading army and convert people to Christianity?
Nothing good is coming of that.”
A
spokeswoman for the U.S. Agency for International Development said
Wednesday night she could not comment.
Meanwhile,
officials from the Southern Baptist Convention are also planning a
large “relief” effort in Iraq once the war ends.
“This
is not just a great opportunity to do humanitarian work but to share
God's love,” said Sam Porter, state disaster relief director for the
Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma.
“We
understand that the individual people of Iraq have done nothing to
hurt us. We want to help them to have true freedom in Jesus Christ.”
"Conversations
about spiritual things will come about as people ask about our
faith," said Mark Kelly, a spokesman for the Southern Baptists'
International Mission Board Kelly, based in Richmond, Va.
"It's
not going to be like what you might see in other countries where
there's a preaching service held outside clinics and things like
that," he claimed.
"Evangelicals
need to be sensitive to the circumstances of this country and its
people," said Richard Cizik, vice president for governmental
affairs of the National Association of Evangelicals, based in
Washington, D.C.
"If
we are perceived as opportunists we only hurt our cause. If this is
seen as religious freedom for Iraq by way of gunboat diplomacy, is
that helpful? I don't think so. If that's the perception, we
lose."
On
the eve of the Southern Baptist Convention in St. Louis last year, the
Rev. Jerry Vines, a former denomination president, told several
thousand delegates that Islam's Allah is not the same as the God
worshipped by Christians.
"And
I will tell you Allah is not Jehovah, either. Jehovah's not going to
turn you into a terrorist," Vines claimed.
Widespread
condemnation of those comments followed from other Protestant leaders
as well as from Catholic and Jewish groups.
U.S.
President George Bush, an evangelical Christian himself, has close
ties to both Franklin Graham, who gave a prayer at his inauguration,
and Southern Baptists, who are among his most loyal political
supporters.