World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Challenging our assumptions

African Men

Greetings!

Have you ever observed someone and wondered why they act that way? Or assumed that someone was part of a certain group because of the way they behave? I find it refreshing when my own assumptions are challenged, and sometimes it helps me laugh at myself. The video How Do You Distinguish Americans? provided such an opportunity. See also African Men, Hollywood Stereotypes, in which some young Africans were able to laugh at themselves, too.

The young, who haven’t yet learned how they are “supposed” to behave, are sometimes more ready, willing vessels for God because of it. For example, read a New York Times piece about the Child Preachers of Brazil.

Ramadan begins this evening. I find it a great time to face my stereotypes head on and devoting time to learning about and praying for the Muslim world. The reading and viewing list I hope to tackle this Ramadan will take me into the world of extremists. See a few links from my collection below, as well as another piece we shared this time last year, a report from St. Francis Magazine on Ramadan’s effects on spiritual openness.

This Saturday, June 20, is World Refugee Day. This year’s theme is “Get to Know a Refugee.” Download the UNHCR’s toolkit on this topic.

Getting to know the “other” (and myself),

Pat

ISLAMIC WORLD: Thought-provoking Presentations

Various sources, via Pat Noble

A semi-annual Conference on Religion, Politics, and Public Life was held last month in Florida and included insightful presentations on the topic The Islamic State: Understanding its Ideology and Theology. You can listen to the audio recordings or read the transcripts.

Earlier this month, Brookings Institution convened a US-Islamic World Forum in Qatar. Watch nine videos from that event. First on my list is one on Pluralism in the Islamic World.

My list would not be complete without some TED talks; this time, a playlist on terrorism.

I saved the best for last: Lausanne’s 2014 Global Consultation on Islam includes informative presentations on Progressive and Liberative Islam.

TURKEY: Yazidi People Ask Jesus to Help Them Find a Permanent Home

Source: CryOut prayer email, June 8, 2015

A coordinated plan is underway among several Yazidi refugee camps throughout Turkey to leave their camps [and] migrate to the northwest border of Turkey. Their intent is to bring attention to their plight so that the international community might agree to relocate them to a permanent home in non-Muslim countries, which is their desire.

After nine months in makeshift tent camps where temperatures can reach 120-degrees, where baby formula and diapers are in short supply for mothers unable to produce milk due to PTSD and where very few educational resources are available to children/youth, staying put is no longer an option. Many have come to a point that they would rather risk their lives than waste away, forgotten about, with no promise of relocation.

As a marginalized people they are asking the Christian community for help, and based on what they know of Christians and previous interactions with them, they believe Christians will help them.

Leaders in a local church near one of the camps in southeast Turkey have been studying the Gospels with a Kurd from a nearby local church and have indicated that they believe Jesus will help them in their plight and have begun to call out to him in prayer.

» Read full article, browse CryOut archives, or subscribe to updates.

» Also see Christians Among 88 Eritrean Refugees Kidnapped by ISIS (The Christian Post).

WORLD: Migration and the Future of Faith

Source: INcontext, June 2015

Editor’s Note: This is from a larger analysis of the recent Pew Forum report on religion, but it’s from the section on migration, something not always factored into population studies.

International migration will influence the projected size of religious groups in various regions and countries. Numbers are, however, difficult to determine because migration is often linked to government policies and international events that can change quickly. For this reason, many population projections do not include migration in their models. But the Pew Research Center has developed an innovative way of using data on past migration patterns to estimate the religious composition of migrant flows in the decades ahead.

In Europe, the Muslim share of the population is expected to increase from 5.9% in 2010 to 10.2% in 2050 when migration is taken into account. Without migration, the Muslim share of Europe’s population in 2050 is projected to be nearly two percentage points lower (8.4%).

In North America, the Hindu share of the population is expected to nearly double in the decades ahead, from 0.7% in 2010 to 1.3% in 2050, when migration is included in the projection models. Without migration, the Hindu share of the region’s population would remain about the same (0.8%).

In the Middle East and North Africa, the continued migration of Christians into the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries is expected to offset the exodus of Christians from other countries in the region. With migration factored in, the estimated Christian share of the population is expected to be just above 3% (down from nearly 4% in 2010).

» Read full story.

» See also these three finds: State of the World / The Task Reminaing (a short video from Global Frontier Missions), The Top 20 Countries Where Christianity Is Growing the Fastest (Movements.net), and Are Hindus Being Undercounted in Religion Surveys? (Worldwide Religious News).

PHILIPPINES: Congressional Committee Approves Bill Creating Islamic Region

Source: Christian Aid Mission, June 4, 2015

A congressional committee in the Philippines approved a bill last month that would create an independent Islamic state in five provinces on the island of Mindanao, where Christians have long faced hostilities from Islamic militants and Muslim family members.

The Philippines’ second-largest island would thus harbor an independent state under rule of Islamic law (sharia) on its western flank in provinces with sizeable non-Muslim populations. Currently the area already has a measure of autonomy as the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), and the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) would give it even greater independence.

President Benigno Aquino III submitted the bill to Congress last September as a means of ending violence in the region.

» Read full story, which includes the comments of a ministry leader concerned about how this move could affect Christians in the area. Note that the Congress has yet to pass the proposed bill and will not reconvene until July 20 (GMA News).

MEXICO: Treasure in the Sierra Madre

Source: Pioneers-USA, June 2, 2015

The Tarahumara [are] a people group scattered throughout the canyons and mountains of the state of Chihuahua in northern Mexico—within 150 miles of the US border.

Displaced from the verdant valleys of northern Mexico by Spanish conquistadors, the Tarahumara fled into the canyons and mountains of the Sierra Madre. Like the buried treasure in Jesus’ parable, a people group of 120,000 has remained hidden from the outside world for centuries.

Reaching the tiny settlements connected by a spider web of footpaths, learning the language, and finding culturally understandable inroads for the gospel have proven daunting for Christian workers.

“I can count on one hand in the last 500 years the number of missionaries who have learned the Tarahumara language,” notes [a Christian worker].

But that is all changing…

» See full story with pictures and watch a related video.