Showing posts with label missions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missions. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 September 2015

Conversion of a Muslim mufti to Jesus Christ

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"'I have come to realize that Christ is the truth! And that you, the Orthodox Church, hold true faith 100%. So please, go to my village, teach my fellow villagers about your faith and baptize them!'... We realized that if a Muslim who holds an important position dared to change his religion, this conversion would not leave indifferent the fanatics of his faith, all those who ruthlessly take people�s lives without the fear of the God of love�"

The names and location of this true account have been withheld to protect the faithful and the missionaries.

Confession of a Muslim mufti; true story
Orthodox Missionary Fraternity via Pravoslavie � October 2014

In the years that we have been working here we have repeatedly had great difficulties trying to find suitable land in densely populated areas in order to build centers and churches, where the newly illuminated natives would be able to be catechized, assemble, worship God, get to know and experience the living Orthodox faith.

All the central spots in busy districts are already occupied by various heretical doctrines, which are, incidentally, housed in prestigious buildings. This hurts us deeply. We feel that the Orthodox Church deserves the best, not for human glory but for the glory of real God. However, over time there have been several occasions when we have had the chance to see that God Himself provides and finds various solutions His own way.

So, a few years ago, it was thought a great blessing for us to be able to buy at a very reasonable price � which made everyone wonder � a central building plot in a region where an Orthodox core of fervent natives had been formed many years before.

The initial joy of finding that beautiful piece of land did not last long as it was soon replaced by problems and temptations coming from everywhere. Christian and Muslim groups began to resent the unexpected �growth� of an Orthodox church among them!


Photo by Brian Eager

From then on a great spiritual struggle started off. The zeal of the faithful natives led them to go to that place every day and pray in faith and pain. �How could we possibly avoid temptations and how could we not expect to have help from above?� they said.

We repeatedly received anonymous threatening telephone calls and not only. Slanderous comments were often disseminated about the Orthodox partners working in the region. The greatest difficulty, however, was yet to come.

Suddenly, the Muslims raised territorial claims and demanded that the land be kept as it was and that an Orthodox church should not be erected there; as a result, we started a legal but time-consuming and tedious procedure of discussions with local and Muslim authorities in order to find a solution.

The state would not grant us permission to build anything unless we had the formal consent of the Muslims; thus what followed was a number of meetings with leading Muslim officials in order to resolve the problem.


The effort was hard and the negotiations, delicate and difficult, aimed at the settlement of the land issue with our Church undertaking all the expenses. It often crossed our minds to give up the whole thing, but that thought was weaker than our desire to fight as strongly as we could for the good of the Church, and God was sustaining us all throughout this ordeal. Behind every cloud there is a silver lining!

Our meetings with the Muslims began, and despite the various obstacles, they were continued. In the negotiating Muslim group, one of the representatives of the Muslim community was the mufti. The position of the mufti is considered significant and is highly esteemed. The person occupying it is mature, with deep knowledge of the Quran, but at the same time a benevolent and wise man.

In one of our meetings, apart from the problem that was occupying us, the debate extended to matters of faith. On the one hand, we truly respect everyone�s right to have their own beliefs, but on the other, where circumstances permit, we boldly confess our own faith, which is our strong confidence in True God, who revealed to us His Trinitarian nature, descended from Heaven, became incarnate in the person of Christ, suffered and rose again to save humanity.

These days, after a long struggle, we began to see the first fruits. We are in the final stage of engagement, and the whole thing seems to be nearing completion. It is certain that the fervent prayers of the Orthodox indigenous people as well as those of our Greek brothers have been heard.

Photo by Jerome Taylor

So while the issue of land had been virtually settled and was in the final phase and naturally there was no formal reason for a meeting with the Mufti, the Muslim leader came to our Mission office in order to meet us.

Alone, without the accompaniment of his co-religionists, hesitant and modest this time, and without the familiar air of the leader we had become accustomed to�

He came alone and humbly opened his heart confiding the following admirable thing to us:

I have come to realize that Christ is the truth! And that you, the Orthodox Church, hold true faith 100%. So please, go to my village, teach my fellow villagers about your faith and baptize them! They are suffering because of ignorance. Actually, you will do an act of great benevolence if you build a church for them!

We were all taken by surprise when we heard that. We talked to him, encouraged him and told him to be baptized himself. At that point he did not say much. Utter silence followed. � We realized that if a Muslim who holds an important position dared to change his religion, this conversion would not leave indifferent the fanatics of his faith, all those who ruthlessly take people�s lives without the fear of the God of love�

As you can imagine, we were astonished! He left the Mission office promising once again to do everything possible so that we could overcome the last obstacle and build our church.

God works in mysterious ways! It is really difficult for each one of us to make the right choices. Evil works are usually easy to do, but they soon bring more evil, while every honest shift to the good takes strenuous efforts and sacrifices, small and big.

Therefore, we should never fall into despair for any reason! We have a living God and a powerful weapon: prayer. We have invisible bullets that can invert complex and seemingly dead-end situations. Let us all dedicate ourselves to doing the right thing, to the spiritual struggle, in order to be able to move on and make progress!

Let us send our fervent prayers to God for each difficulty that arises. And let us pray wholeheartedly for the mufti and every mufti that feels trapped in his position. Let us pray for our country and for every nation to find true God. Let us pray for all of us, the Orthodox Christians, to be able to keep true faith since we were made worthy to find it, because it is the only valuable treasure in our lives. Amen!


Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Inauguration of First ROCOR Parish Office in Pakistan

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The Orthodox Mission in Pakistan continues to grow and thrive, thanks be to God. May the Lord and His Most-Pure Mother, the Archangel Michael and St Sergius of Radonezh, continue to guide and protect Fr. Joseph Farooq and his faithful flock.

Related:


Inauguration of First ROCOR Parish Office in Pakistan
Pravoslavie � July 29, 2015

With the blessings of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, First Hierarch of the Russian Church Outside of Russia, Saint Michael the Archangel Orthodox Mission in Pakistan celebrated the establishment of the first ROCOR parish and proper worship space for the Orthodox faithful in Pakistan. They are thankful to the Lord Who is gracious and that the mission work is expanding with every passing day and the number of Orthodox faithful is also increasing day by day. The ROCOR parish in Pakistan is working under the kind protection of the Diocese of Australia and New Zealand under the omophorion of and with the blessing of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion.

July 26, 2015 was a very important and historical day for the Orthodox congregation in Pakistan. The inaugural ceremony of the ROCOR parish took place with the blessings of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion. In attendance on this auspicious day were all the Orthodox faithful from Sargodha and surrounding areas, as well as others who wish to embrace holy Orthodoxy.

The Orthodox youth and parish council played an active role in setting up the worship space and parish house in displaying the beautiful icons of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Most Holy Mother of God and various saints on the walls. With much honor and pleasure they hung the pictures of His Holiness Patriarch Kirill and His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion and a picture of the both of them in a meeting in Moscow. With these pictures the faithful say the parish office really feels the presence and blessings of the hierarchy in the Holy Russian Orthodox Church.


The faithful began arriving early to the parish house, filled with excitement and joy. The inaugural ceremony formally commenced with prayers, including for the good health and many years of His Holiness Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and all Russia and His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad (the ruling Bishop of Pakistan). Fr. Joseph Farooq, in the presence of the congregation, cut the inaugural ribbon and joyfully invited all the faithful to the Sunday Divine Liturgy. After the Divine Liturgy Fr. Joseph preached on the history of Russian Orthodox Church and its presence in Pakistan.




Last but not least, Fr. Joseph humbly thanked His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion and the ROCOR Fund for Assistance which helped the Orthodox mission in Pakistan through its kind donors, so that today they are able to have a parish office and worship space in Sargodha. Although it is a rented place the parish is thankful to the Most Holy Mother of God and Blessed Father Sergius of Radonezh who internally strengthened them to set up the parish house for the congregation. It was a great day for the faithful who now have a sense of belonging in this place.

Previously there was no fixed space for pastoral activities and so Fr. Joseph reached out to the people to find a place for meetings and other activities. All the mission assets were safely kept in the houses of the faithful and are now gathered in the parish house and they have started keeping parish records.

At the end of the ceremony all the faithful and guests were treated with tea and sweets as a traditional Pakistani sign of happiness and sharing. The guests returned home joyfully with hope that holy Orthodoxy will flourish in Pakistan with the help and blessings of our Heavenly Father!

In Pakistan there are many hardships and sufferings for Christians and the families are extremely poor and barely make both ends meet. Hence the parish does not have local income sources to fulfill its basic missionary and pastoral needs, but the ROCOR mission is going well under the protection of our Heavenly Father. May our Gracious God guide us and protect us and may the Most Holy Mother of God save us as through Her intercessions we are all saved!


Humble request:

With the blessing of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, Archbishop of Eastern America and New York, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, the Pakistani mission has dedicated the year 2015 to buying land and building the first holy Russian Orthodox Church in Pakistan as well as a school for Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christian Children. The faithful earnestly pray to God that He may provide kind and generous donors for the completion of this sacred project.

Mission: Saint Michael Archangel Orthodox Mission in Pakistan.
Parish: St. Sergius of Radonezh Orthodox Church in Sargodha, Pakistan.

For queries about the Russian Orthodox Church outside Russia in Pakistan, kindly contact: fr.joseph.rocpk at gmail.com



29 / 07 / 2015

Sunday, 2 August 2015

Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov: Epistle on Islam and Muslims

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The writings of the saints of the Church remind us of the urgency of the divine imperative to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with all, including with our Muslim neighbors. 

St. Ignatius Brianchaninov (�1867)

Church hierarchs and teachers who speak in vague and pious words of Christians and Muslims being the "two lungs of one Eastern body," or of "co-existing peacefully" within a "loving dialogue" are evading the commandment of the Savior and Lord to "make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (MT 28:19).

The words of the saints come from a living faith, and from piercing awareness of the nearness of death and eternity. Their words may seem harsh or stern to us, in our weakened and timid state. All the more reason for us to stir ourselves up to evangelical fervor, and to be mindful that, in the words of Metropolitan Tikhon of the OCA, "We are here, in North America, called to be apostles and martyrs for Christ."


Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov (April 30)
+ + +
Epistle on Islam and Muslims
(selected from the saint's letters)

Vainly and erroneously you think and say that virtuous... Muslims will be saved, that is they will join intercourse with God! Vainly you consider the contrary notion a novelty, a brief error! No! Such is the eternal teaching of the true Church, both Old Testament and New. 

The Church has always confessed that there exists one means of salvation: the Redeemer! She has confessed that the most virtuous of the fallen really do descend to Hell. Did the righteous of the True Church, the illumined from whom shone the Holy Spirit, the prophets and wonderworkers, believers in the Redeemer's coming but with the demise of the anticipated coming of the Redeemer, descend to Hell so that, as you wish, the Muslims who neither recognize nor believe in the Redeemer receive, because they seem to you good people, that salvation which is delivered solely-- solely, I repeat to you, by means of -- belief in the Redeemer?

Christians! Know Christ! -- Witness that you don't know Him, that you denied him in claiming the possibility of salvation without Him for some kind of virtue! Claiming the possibility of salvation without belief in Christ denies Him and, maybe not consciously, falls into the grave sin of blasphemy. 

"Therefore we conclude," says the Holy Apostle Paul, "that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law." (Romans 3:28) "Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference: for all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus" (Romans 3:22-4).

You will object: "The Holy Apostle James requires without fail good works; he teaches that 'faith, if it hath not works, is dead' (James 2:17)." Look again at what the Holy Apostle James requires. You will see that he, just like all God-inspired writers of Holy Scripture, requires the works of faith, and not the virtues of our fallen state! He requires living faith, confirmed by the deeds of the new man, and not the virtues of the fallen state, which are repugnant to faith. He cites the deeds of Patriarch Abraham, the work from which appeared the faith of a righteous man: this work consisted of offering as a sacrifice to God his only begotten son. To offer one's son as a sacrifice-- this is totally not a virtue according to human nature: it is a virtue as the fulfillment of the command of God, as a work of faith. 

Take a good look at the New Testament and in general all of Holy Scripture: you will find that it demands fulfillment of the commandments of God, that this fulfillment is called works, that from this fulfillment of God's commandments faith in God comes to life, as functioning; without works faith is dead, lacking any movement. And contrary to this, you will find that virtuous works of the fallen state, done out of feeling, blood, impulses or tenderheartedness-- are prohibited, repudiated! 

And namely for these virtues you like... the Muslims! To them, though it were repudiation of Christ, you want to give salvation.

�Letter No. 203

translated by J. Hargrave
Sources here and here.

Saturday, 1 August 2015

Metropolitan Tikhon: 'The way of the Church is the way of sacrifice and martyrdom'

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"We are here, in North America, called to be apostles and martyrs for Christ."


On July 20, the presiding hierarch of the Orthodox Church in America, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon, delivered a significant address to the OCA's 18th All-American Council in Atlanta, Georgia.

What would he say to this important gathering? Especially in our days of such turmoil, "men�s hearts failing them from fear and the expectation of those things which are coming on the earth" (LK 21:26).

Thanks be to God, His Beatitude presented the message of the Cross and Resurrection. He wasted no time, but from the very beginning "launched out into the deep," renewing our calling as Orthodox Christians. In a manner of speaking, he "rebuked the raging sea," confronting it with calm strength founded upon the Rock. And from such a beginning, having secured his listeners' attention, he set forth his vision.

I recommend listening to the address while having the text before you, and following along. It is lengthy, about an hour and a quarter, but very worthwhile. Text, pdf and audio are available here.

Here are just a few key excerpts, followed by some remarks by Archimandrite Sergius, Abbot of St Tikhon of Zadonsk Monastery:



THE APOSTOLIC WORK OF THE CHURCH
ADDRESS OF THE METROPOLITAN TO THE ORTHODOX CHURCH IN AMERICA
EIGHTEENTH ALL-AMERICAN COUNCIL
ATLANTA, GEORGIA � July 20, 2015 
[...] 
It is only through prayer, and the life that flows from prayer, and the virtues that are engendered by prayer, that we can reach our goal; and our goal is not the passing of resolutions or the compiling of minutes; our goal is not to debate issues or share our opinion; our goal is not to get to the end of this week or even to set the agenda for the next triennium. 
Our goal is to seek God above all, and to let this desire illumine our work together, so that we might make our own the words of Saint Herman of Alaska: 
�And I, a sinner, have tried to love God for more than forty years, and I cannot say that I perfectly love Him,� � �at least let us make a vow to ourselves, that from this day, from this hour, from this very moment, we shall strive above all else to love God and to fulfill His Holy Will!� 

THE WAY OF MARTYRDOM 
We gather in Council at a time when the world, as it is wont to be, is enshrouded in military conflict, economic hardship, civil war and persecution. Even if we remain somewhat shielded from these global realities in our own North American context, we nevertheless feel the weight of these worldwide struggles even as we wrestle with our own challenges in the economic, political, spiritual and moral spheres. 
What can we, as the Orthodox Church in America, offer in the face of these challenges? How can we, small and numerically insignificant, imagine contributing even a bit of light in the midst of such darkness? 
The only way to do something is to heed the words of the Lord, who tells us: Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it; Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it. (Matthew 7:13-14) 
The way of the Church, and the path of Christians walking along that way is difficult, painful and full of sorrow because it is the way of the Cross. But the way of the Cross is also the way of the Resurrection, though this way may lead us through hell itself. And through the Cross and the Resurrection, we find the love of Christ, Who bore the former and gave us the latter. 
The way of the Church is the way of sacrifice and martyrdom � this has been so since the foundation of the Church and it remains true for us today. But it is a sacrifice that begets life and a martyrdom that is victorious in Christ�s holy resurrection. 
A few months ago, I made my official Irenic - peaceful - visit to the ancient Church of Georgia, a Church which has witnessed the martyric life of Christianity from its foundations even up to more recent times. Exactly four hundred years ago, in 1615, the Persian shah, Abbas I, led his great army in an attack on the country of Georgia. At one point during his campaign, he was drawn to a flaming column of light high up in the mountains of the Gareji region. He asked about it and was told that there was a great monastery located there. It was the night of Holy Pascha and the monks of the Davit-Gareji monastery were circling the Church three times with lighted candles in celebration of the Lord�s resurrection. When the Persians arrived at the monastery, the Abbot, Arsen, approached the leader and asked that the monks be given a bit more time to finish the service and for all the brothers to receive Holy Communion. The Persians allowed for this and the fathers partook of the Holy Gifts, encouraged one another, and then presented themselves clad in festive garments before the unbelievers, who straightaway beheaded the Abbot and massacred a total of 6,000 brothers.*  Those martyred brothers now �as a cloud of witnesses� intercede before the throne of God for the salvation of those in the Church of Georgia.

 * This account of one of the many Muslim jihad campaigns against the Georgian Church, and the resulting "great cloud of witnesses" � martyrs � is included in The Lives of the Georgian Saints, St Herman Press, Platina CA, p 279.

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ � we cannot begin to speak about how to expand the mission, the theme of our Council this year, if we do not begin with the reality of martyrdom, which is the only authentic foundation for our Apostolic work. 
This Apostolic work is not just a theory, just as martyrdom is not just a theory or principle. They are realities of our Church life that challenge us where we are. And we are here, in North America, called to be apostles and martyrs for Christ. 
Saint Tikhon of Moscow, the Enlightener of North America, understood this fully when he addressed a similar gathering to ours 106 years ago. He entitled his talk with the words which we have chosen as the theme of this week�s Council; and he did it with the full realization that the question �how to expand the mission� could only be answered with a full acceptance of the martyric life of the Church and a commitment to live that life where he was, where the Church was, and where the Church could be... 
Just as the Georgian monks facing certain death on the feast of Holy Pascha, so Saint Tikhon clung to the joy and the hope of the resurrection which would be the foundation of his apostolic work, and this, without any foreknowledge of the Cross that would be his to bear as Patriarch of the Russian Church...

Is His Beatitude, through this recounting of the link between Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow's apostolic labors and his eventual martyrdom, preparing us for martyric trials ahead?  Surely we must let these words sink down into our ears � and prepare for trials � as we labor here in America.

---

And this from the address of Archimandrite Sergius, Abbot of St Tikhon's Monastery:

I ask you a simple question now. Do you enjoy and sense the peace, blessing and love that are given to you in the person of my Bishop and confessor, Metropolitan Tikhon? Do you sense that God is with us in a real way now in his leadership and his person? 
I believe that the answer to the above is yes and I offer for your consideration that he is a direct product of St. Tikhon�s Monastery and that starting as a simple novice, history will show you that he is the first Metropolitan of this Orthodox Church in America that began as a lowly novice cleaning sinks, toilets, cooking, directing, and serving in whatever capacity he was asked � just as he serves in that same humble way now. I offer to you the product of a life of prayer, humility and of our Church�s Monastery, the Monastery of St. Tikhon of Zadonsk.
---

I was greatly encouraged and deeply consoled as well as inspired by the words of His Beatitude, Metropolitan Tikhon. His words and example should inspire and urge us all on to do what we can to advance the Orthodox Gospel of Jesus Christ here in the Americas. AXIOS and thanks be to God!



Friday, 17 July 2015

Message to Muslims after Chattanooga Jihad Attack: 'Time to Repent'

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. . . and turn to Jesus Christ.

Christ receives the Prodigal Son

Dear Muslim brothers and sisters, if you have a conscience, and if you are, at the very least, made uneasy deep in your heart of hearts every time another of your fellow Muslims launches a bloody jihad attack, there is an answer for you:

Repent, and leave your false religion.  Now.

Surely you must know that the Islamic State (ISIS) (and its �lone wolf� followers like Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez in Chattanooga) bases every single one of its atrocities on the commands of the Quran and on the example of Muhammad as conveyed in Islam's other sacred texts, the ahadith and the Sira?  

Is that the example you wish to follow?

That is the example being followed by every Muslim jihadi murderer, whether in the Middle East, Africa, Indonesia, Malaysia, France, England, or here in North America.

Surely you must know that for nearly fourteen centuries all schools of Islamic jurisprudence have consistently mandated offensive jihad � the killing of non-Muslims to advance Islam � as an obligation for all Muslims. For those who cannot wage open jihad, supporting it financially or through other means is required. 

Is that the teaching you wish to follow, one that commands bloodshed, hatred, and unending warfare?

You have a choice. Each and every Muslim jihad attack slaps you in the face to wake you up. Is that what you want to belong to?


Don�t turn to the Quran for help. 

It presents a false and distorted view of God and Jesus. Turn to the Christian Bible. Read the Gospels first, and learn about the real Jesus, who laid down his life for the world. Such love as this does not exist among men. His is the love of God � the True God � for mankind. He lays down his own life to give us new life.

Don�t turn to Muhammad for help. He can�t save you. 

And if you continue to follow him � knowing what you know about Islam and jihad, and with your conscience screaming at you to turn to Jesus Christ � if you continue to follow Muhammad, he will lead you into hellfire.

We Christians have a message for you, one of love and forgiveness. We too are sinners, fallen, astray, needing the True Shepherd to guide our souls. Knowing the love of God, the forgiveness He offers, the eternal life only He can give, we offer that to you. We long to call you brothers and sisters, and so we invite you to turn to Jesus Christ.

Did you see the messages of forgiveness from the families of those Christians martyred by ISIS in Libya and Ethiopia? This is the love of God through Jesus Christ in action. 

Did you see the video "Letter from the People of the Cross to ISIS"? It will reach into your soul and touch your heart. 

Like them, we invite you to turn to Jesus Christ and be set free from your slavery to the false god and false prophet of Islam. And I would encourage you to turn to Jesus Christ as He has been known and preached in the Orthodox Church for nearly two-thousand years. 

Pray to Jesus Christ, read the New Testament, especially the Gospels. Explore the resources on this blog, especially here, here and here. Then seek out an Orthodox Church, talk to the priest, and unburden your aching heart.

We know this is hard for you. What we are going through is something huge, immense. We are all living through one of the most dire times in the history of the world. The signs are everywhere around us. We all are being forced to make a choice. No more relaxing, easy life. No more lies, no more ignoring the still small voice within us calling us to repent. Now is the time.

You know you have a choice. The biggest choice of your life, and it can lead to eternal life with God. Make the right choice today, now. We�re waiting for you with open arms.


Thursday, 25 June 2015

Fr. Daniel Byantoro and the Future of Orthodoxy in Indonesia

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"Despite the presence of Islam in Indonesia, there is great hope for Orthodoxy there... We are seeing in the world today a rising culture of hatred and death, and the only way to defeat it is with the culture of love and life�that is, the culture of the Gospel, the culture of Orthodoxy."

See also these feature articles:


via 'I Believe in the Future of Orthodoxy in Indonesia' � A Conversation with Archimandrite Daniel (Byantoro)
Pravoslavie � June 23, 2015 (Thanks to Bill)

Fr. Daniel at Sretensky Monastery, Moscow
On Monday June 15, Archimandrite Daniel Byantoro arrived in Moscow with his fellow priest Fr. Alexios. Fr. Daniel is the first Indonesian convert to Orthodoxy and the founder and heart of the struggling Orthodox Church there. He came to Russia for several days to visit holy sites, hierarchs and friends, and to spread the word of his mission to his spiritual brothers and sisters in Russia. On Wednesday he sat down for an interview with Pravoslavie.ru in which he spoke about his country and its Christian history.

At a public lecture the night before given at the Fund of Slavic Culture Fr. Daniel spoke more about his own conversion experience. Raised in an entirely Islamic village, all that he knew of Christianity came from the Koran: as Christians worship three Gods, turned a prophet into God and made God weak, unable to save His prophet from crucifixion, they are going to hell. Islam denies that Christ is the Son of God; they deny the Trinity as well as the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ, and therefore, as Fr. Daniel noted, they deny the entirety of Christian teaching (see Koran 5:72, 73, 98:6 which Fr. Daniel referenced easily from memory).


According to Islamic belief, all the prophets from Adam to Christ were Muslims�Judaism and Christianity are but deviations from the pure religion of Islam. And what�s more, as Fr. Daniel expounded the night before over dinner, Muslims believe that everything in creation is naturally Muslim, submitting to the will of God. Apart from any outside influences everyone would naturally grow up to worship the God of the Muslims. Orthodox Christianity also teaches that human will naturally finds its telos in Christ, although we inherit a fallen mode of human nature. Conversely, Islam teaches that to leave the religion is to wholly forfeit your human nature�that is, Christians, Jews, and others are not human, and therefore it is permissible to deceive and terribly abuse them when expedient and for the desired end of their conversion. As Fr. Daniel emphasized, these are two competing systems�both cannot be true. We are called to make a firm decision and be educated in our decision to lead others to true human fulfillment in Christ.

Given this education he had no interest in Christianity, but questions about God remained with him. Islam is wholly iconoclastic; God cannot be imagined, and local Muslim clerics could not explain to him who is God, nor could the first Christian he met in high school explain the Trinity. His search continued until one night, in the midst of his evening prayers, he beheld a vision of light in the form of a man. He heard a voice in the depths of his being which said �if you want to be saved, follow Me.� When it happened again the next night he asked the identity of this vision. He shuddered at the answer: �Jesus Christ.� He was confused and disturbed�why, while worshiping as a Muslim, had he seen Christ, and not Mohammed? Again the third night Christ appeared to him, proclaiming that salvation has nothing to do with Mohammed but is found only in following Him.

Understandably, Fr. Daniel was confused�he believed what he had been taught, and he believed what he had seen. He fasted and prayed, and opening the Koran, his eyes fell on a passage that led to his conversion to Christ. Koran 3:45 speaks of the Annunciation to the Virgin Mary, referring to Jesus as the �Word� of God. Contemplating this verse he had read so many times, Fr. Daniel realized: 

Man�s word comes out of his mouth but originates in his mind. This means man�s word is one with him, and if Jesus is God�s Word then He is one with God. The Word and the Speaker are one. But what of the Spirit? Man can only speak while living, and man lives because he has a spirit. Man�s spirit is within him, and thus his word and spirit are within him. Therefore God�s Word and Spirit are also within Him, and the God of the Christians is One. But why is the Word of God also called the Son of God? The Word resides within the mind, so the mind is pregnant with the word, and the mouth gives birth to the word, so the word is the child of the mind. Thus, if Jesus is the Word of God then He is also the Son of God. To have a Son God does not need a wife, for what is meant by Son is Word.

He further understood that among humans we cannot know each other without words, and so man can only know God by His Word. According even to the Koran the Word of God is Jesus, and therefore to know God He must know Christ. That night Fr. Daniel became a Christian.

Fr. Daniel became a Protestant, although he was confused by the multitude of denominations. He wanted the one, pure teaching of Christ that he knew from the Scriptures. In 1979 he began seminary studies in South Korea but his heart remained restless, until, in his final year, he happened upon an English copy of The Orthodox Church by Metropolitan Kallistos Ware. As have so many over the years since it was written, he found the unwavering Church of Jesus Christ for which his heart had been yearning since his conversion, and he soon learned that not far from his dormitory was located an Orthodox Church. His heart was home. On September 6, 1983, he became the first and only Orthodox Christian from Indonesia. From Korea he traveled to Greece, spending 10 months on Mount Athos where he became acquainted with the holy elder Emelianos. He then traveled to America where he was ordained to the priesthood in 1987.

On June 6, 1988 he returned home to Indonesia to found the Indonesian Orthodox Church. In 1989 he baptized the first convert�a young Muslim man, and in 1996 he founded Indonesia�s first Orthodox Church�the Holy Trinity parish in the city of Solo in the center of Java. Since then, by the grace of God, the mission has been slowly but steadily growing. Today there are 2,000 Orthodox Christians in 30 parishes and mission outposts, served by 14 priests (and four more have already reposed in the Lord). All converts are brought into the Church by the one Christian baptism regardless of their religious background.

Fr. Daniel believes that, despite the presence of Islam in Indonesia, there is great hope for Orthodoxy there. He hopes and believes that Indonesia will one day be an Orthodox country, and he looks to his spiritual brothers and sisters in Russia, who have endured and been strengthened by unspeakable suffering, to be a support for the struggling mission in Indonesia. Fr. Daniel called upon all Russians to once again become missionary beacons to the world and bring the light of Christ to all. He finished his remarks by emphasizing that we are seeing in the world today a rising culture of hatred and death, and the only way to defeat it is with the culture of love and life�that is, the culture of the Gospel, the culture of Orthodoxy, the culture that formed Russian 1,000 years ago. This culture, Fr. Daniel believes, does not need to be defended, but speaks for itself as the truth.

Fr. Daniel told Pravoslavie.ru more about the history and current state of the Orthodox mission in Indonesia:    

�Father, tell us about your trip. What brought you to Russia?

I came to Russia at the invitation of the committee for the celebration of the anniversary of the canonization of St. John of Kronstadt, and I also came to meet with our Russian hierarchs to discuss the status and needs of our mission in Indonesia. I wanted to meet with His Holiness Patriarch Kirill, but that was not possible. I did meet with Metropolitan Hilarion Alfeyev, and with Archbishop Mark of Yegorievsk, and I was very satisfied with these meetings. I say that it is a miracle of God, because even without planning I was able to see the both of them. Secondly, I came to Moscow at the invitation of a group of laypeople who are the spiritual children of Fr. Matthew from Siberia. Last year they visited Indonesia, so they know our churches. They were searching for evidence of St. Matthew�s travels to Indonesia. They believe that St. Matthew visited that land. I went with them to the place, on the island of Sumatra, in the village of Barus. I see in our meeting in Indonesia the Providence of God, because then by invitation from St. Petersburg I was able to come to Moscow. I have been praying for this. So, I see that this is God�s Providence. And it�s no small miracle for me.

�Tell us a little bit about Indonesia as a country.

�Indonesia is an open country that has a lot of influence from cultures from all over the world. Indonesia does not have one culture�we consist of so many different races and ethnicities. We have nearly 700 languages and dialects. They are not spoken by people coming from outside, but by Indonesians. So, we have the yellow race, the brown race, Eurasian�a mix of Asian and European�and we have black people. Indonesia consists of over 17,000 islands. There are five main, large islands: Sumatra, Java, Kalimantan or Borneo, Sulawesi, and Papua. And the most famous island is of course Bali�everybody knows that one.

Historically, Indonesian people, especially western Indonesians, came from South China 5,000 years ago. And the black people may have come from Africa by raft, also around 5,000 years ago. At that time, people were animists or shamanists. At the beginning of the first century we began to have Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms. The largest Buddhist kingdom we had was in the seventh century, called the Kingdom of Srivijaya. The largest and last Hindu kingdom was in the thirteenth century, called the Kingdom of Majapahit, which is my hometown. Islam arrived in the fifteenth century. This Hindu kingdom was destroyed, and Islamic kingdoms began to rule the country, up to today. 

The Dutch came to Indonesia in the sixteenth century; the Portuguese first came to Indonesia, but they were unable to stay for long because they were kicked out by the Dutch. The Dutch were unable to rule all of Indonesia but only different parts of the islands. Their rule lasted 350 years.

On October 28, 1928, an educated young Indonesian felt the need to unite our country against the Dutch, who had chopped up our country. Then we adopted the Malay language as our national language. It is similar to the language spoken in Malaysia but it developed differently. So at that time we recognized one Indonesian language, one country that consists of so many different islands and so many different ethnicities, tribes, and races. 

Our young people continued to fight the Dutch. On August 17, 1945 we were able to get our independence�it was not given but we fought for our independence. The first president was Mr. Sukarno, and he was the close friend of the Russian President Brezhnev. 

From 1945 until the 1960�s, Indonesia and Russia were in a very close relationship. In 1965 there was an attempted coup by the Communist party of Indonesia. But then there was a big massacre�more than two million Indonesians were massacred, by their own people, especially by the Muslim party. It was horrendous. 

Then President Sukarno was put under house arrest, and his general, Mr. Suharto, became dictator of Indonesia. International people called him a benevolent dictator. He was president for thirty-three years, after which he was toppled by a student demonstration in 1998. 

Then there was another disaster�the rape and looting of the Indonesian Chinese. It was another horrendous situation. After that we had an election, and since then we have had elections regularly; now we have our sixth president, and the country is a democratic republic.

�When did Christianity come to Indonesia?

�Christianity has deep roots in Indonesia, although they are thin. According to available documents, in the seventh century, before Islam came to Indonesia, there were Syriac Christian people in Indonesia, even during the kingdoms of Srivijaya and Majapahit. We do not know exactly whether they were Nestorian, Monophysite, or Syriac Byzantine. 

In the eleventh century there was an envoy from the Pope of Rome�a priest who visited Beijing, stopped over in Indonesia, and met with ten native Indonesian Christians. Presumably they were the remnant of those ancient Christians. And this Roman Catholic priest (possibly the Churches were not yet separated), according to this document, gave Communion to those Indonesian Christians. After that we do not hear any stories of Christianity in Indonesia. 

Later, a Roman priest visited the kingdom of Majapahit, but again there are no further histories. Christianity in the form of Roman Catholicism and Protestantism came to Indonesia through the Dutch and the Portuguese in the sixteenth century. 

While the Dutch were still in Indonesia, there were Armenian and Russian Christians. The Russians presumably came to Indonesia together with St. John of Shanghai. When they left China for the Philippines, some of them went to Indonesia, and then Archbishop John went to San Francisco. Those Russian people had two churches at that time�the church of St. John the Baptist in the city of Jakarta, as I was told (of course it is no longer there), and another in the city of Bandung. But during the massacre of 1965 these people fled Indonesia, so there is no trace of the Armenian or Russian people in Indonesia anymore. 

Thus, Orthodox Christianity came back to Indonesia when I started the mission. It will definitely stay in Indonesia, because I am not an immigrant or a foreigner. I am a son of the land. Spiritual Russia returned later.

�Could you tell us about the modern situation of Orthodox Christians in Indonesia.

�Of course the situation of the Orthodox Church in Indonesia is still weak, because we do not receive any help from anywhere, and financially I have to work hard to be able to sustain the mission. From time to time I go to America to raise funds, but they are not sufficient to help all the priests or even to obtain the things we need. I have to work, teaching at the university and giving seminars. I am invited to preach in non-Orthodox churches, because I need the money. With the money I save through my work, sometimes through gifts from non-Orthodox friends, I buy land and build simple churches on it. I also help the priests from time to time�sometimes with schooling their children, when their wives are sick, and many other things. It is fortunate that I�m not married; otherwise my wife would get angry with me because I have nothing! Whatever I get I use to help others. For two years I was helped by the Moscow Patriarchate�it has not been cut off completely. Not all of our priests were getting a share, so I gave what was given to me. I distributed to those priests who did not receive anything, so that I was left with nothing.

Now the Church is still growing in spite of these dire needs and difficulties. I give seminars in different cities and places in Indonesia to open new communities of Orthodox converts. With that the need to buy more land and build more churches is increasing. Now I am coming to a point where I cannot do it myself. I am getting older. My body does not cooperate with my zeal inside. The zeal does not subside�I still feel young inside, but my body cannot pretend that it is still young. My biggest desire is to build a monastery, because when I am not able to do anything then I need to go the monastery and start monastic life. With the small savings that I had I was able to buy a piece of land�2,000 square meters I think. So I bought the land already, but I was not able to continue building because I did not have enough money to build the monastery. Therefore, I appeal to anyone who is interested in helping to build a monastery. I am willing to name the monastery after the patron saint of the person who contributes�or however they want it to be named.

Another thing I want is to have a seminary, because it is important for people to be educated within the context of their own country and culture. The sense of the impending time to leave this world is very strong within me. The sense that God will call me home is very strong. I hope it is not soon, but you cannot tell. So that is why I need more young people to come along, to continue the efforts of the mission. I need to send students to study theology, hopefully in Russia, to replace me and Fr. Alexis when we are gone.

I think another urgent need that we have now concerns the first-built Orthodox Church in Indonesia in the city of Solo, in the center of Java, where Fr. Alexis is pastor. I bought that land. At first I rented the land from a Muslim cleric and then I was able to buy the land. In 1996 we bought the Holy Trinity church�the first ever Orthodox Church in Indonesia. And then I was able one-by-one to buy the other plots of land surrounding the church. This church was surrounded by Muslim neighbors. We were able to buy all this land around so that it could become our compound. However there are still four plots of land belonging to these Muslim neighbors, which we want to buy, so we can free the surrounding area to be the land belonging to the church. We need around $40,000 to free this land, and we are planning to build a wall around it to make it a historical landmark of our first Orthodox mission�so that when I die, our next generation will know that this is how Orthodoxy started.

Now we have altogether 2,000 people spread out all over Indonesia, with thirty churches and mission outposts, and it�s still growing. In Indonesia, any church or religion can operate only if it�s registered with the state. There are six religions recognized by the state. Islam is the majority of course, then Roman Catholicism, and then Protestantism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism�the Chinese religion. These are the six recognized religions. We had a difficult time when we registered because we are not Roman Catholic and we are not Protestant. I was kicked around like a ball here and there. But through God�s grace and miracles the government was willing to accept us, and we were put in the Protestant department. They changed the name to the �Christian� department, because there are now non-Protestants in it! So our presence changed the law, in a way.

I have good relations with all other non-Orthodox Christian leaders, because I cannot afford to be at enmity with them in our minority status. We are a minority within a minority, so I can�t isolate myself from the others. We have worked together with Protestants many times�of course, without compromising the faith. I always wear my black robe and my cross when I am in an official meeting with them to show them that I am not Protestant. Basically, Indonesian people are very tolerant. It is because of their Hindu and Buddhist background. But there is growing influence from the Middle East, especially the Wahhabi type of Islam.* They create problems for us Christians. Many times they have destroyed churches, closed down churches, and in some areas they even kill Christians. We have difficulties with that. However I try very hard to have good relations with the Muslims�especially those who claim to be moderate.

[* Two nights prior to this interview, Fr. Daniel noted that, for example, over the past 15 years more women have begun wearing hijabs in Indonesia. He also commented that while Muslims in Russia tend to be more peaceful thanks to the influence of their Christian neighbors, now the Koran is available in Russian, and men being trained in Arabia are bringing a purer Islam. He worries that they will throw off their Christian influences and embrace a more violent, Koranic Islam.]


From time to time we have interfaith meetings, to discuss common concerns in the nation. However, I sometimes I feel wary, because what is on paper is not manifested on the ground. On paper of course we can be tolerant to one another, but on the ground they have many times burned our churches. So, I do not know which face of Islam I should believe. Also, the government has a law that if any Christians want to build a church, you must have at least ninety members from your area, and you must have sixty signatures from surrounding Muslim neighbors. To get two signatures is lucky�to get sixty is nearly impossible. Therefore, we have to try in different ways to get this permission�usually through diplomacy and connections. Sometimes we can prevail, many times not. But with God�s miracles, everything is possible.

Recently, I was invited to a radical Muslim madrasa�an Islamic boarding school. It has 6,000 students. They are planning to make an Islamic country out of Indonesia. I was surprised that I was invited to explain the Trinity in that place. Of course with them I had to use the primary sources�the Hebrew, the Greek, and the Arabic. By God�s grace I know those three languages. I also used the pattern of Islamic theological thought to explain to them. I was perhaps the first Christian clergyman to talk in that situation. When we went there, forty-five Protestant pastors escorted me, because they wanted to know what would happen. We went by bus, together. They wanted to protect me also�that is the fruit of my friendship with them. 

So to my surprise, after I finished my lecture, these Muslim clerics�one or two hundred of them, maybe more�gave me a long, standing ovation. They came to shake my hand, to embrace me, thanking me for explaining the Trinity in a way they understood. And they told the people that we have a guest of another religion, but it should not be another religion because they believe in one God! So that is an example of how I communicate with the Muslims. I do not take a confrontational approach, but one of friendship and dialogue.

The members of the Indonesian Church vary. A few of them are rich people�some are educated, many are not. Many are poor.

�How do you arrange the liturgical life of the parishes?

�In the past, when I started the mission in Solo, we had Liturgy every day, early in the morning; but eventually it turned out to be impractical for people who have to work. Especially now in the big cities, where traffic jams are so horrendous�as in Jakarta�and not many people have their own cars, it is impossible to have a regular liturgical life. It is impossible to have weekday worship. Usually we have only Saturday Vespers and Sunday Liturgy. Confession is heard either on Saturday or on Sunday during the Liturgy. We emphasize long preaching, because the people need teaching more than anything else. It is my belief that the Bible should be an open book for the people, so that�s why I conduct a lot Bible study. Sometimes it�s topical Bible study, according to dogma, or book study, like the Letter to the Romans, verse-by-verse, word-by-word. I want my people to be Biblically literate. If not, Indonesian people can be very superstitious. If there is no Biblical information, I�m afraid they�ll understand our ceremonies superstitiously. That is why Liturgy and Bible teaching go side-by-side in the Indonesian Church. I insist that they bring their Bibles to church, because when I preach I cite directly from the Bible, asking the people to open their Bibles to read the verses that I mention. Then they not only listen, but also participate in the preaching. I also allow them to interrupt, even ask questions during the preaching. In that way the worship will be lively. And we do not have a choir�everybody sings. So we have liturgical congregational singing. Everybody participates.

�How often do the people confess and commune?

�Every time they want to take Communion they have to confess. This may be in another place if they feel that they have a great sin they have to confess, because the priest usually does not have enough time during the service. But the norm is that they confess every time they want to take Communion.

�How do you keep the fasts?

�The diet of Indonesian people is very different from the European or Russian diet. Cheese is not part of our diet. People in the villages usually don�t eat meat very often, and olive oil is not a delicacy for us, so we do not use it. So, if we follow the fast as it is done in Greece, Russia, or America, our people would never fast because their food is always fasting food. But fortunately, I was on Mt. Athos and I saw some monks that sometimes do not eat until the ninth hour or just before Vespers. I got inspiration from that practice, and I told my people that in order for them to feel the fast they should eat vegetarian food, and eat only at the time of the ninth hour or before Vespers. So that�s what we do. We fast on Friday and Wednesday, just like any other Orthodox.

�What problems do the Orthodox people in Indonesia face?

�The problem is economic. It is difficult to get people to convert, but easy to lose them. So far we do not have many people; many young women want to get married and we don�t have many young men in the Church and vice versa, so they find people from outside the faith�either from non-Orthodox Christianity, or some other religion. We lose people through that kind of situation. We also lose people because of the economic situation. They may work in a non-Orthodox institution, and this institution is willing to accept them if they leave the Orthodox Church and join that church. Sometimes there are very unethical denominations. They provide buses and stop in places where there are Orthodox people, or any other Christians, to bring them to that church. In that way we also lose people. The Muslims are also very aggressive now. They also try to convert Christians to Islam. Sometimes we lose people back to Islam. Some churches provide scholarships to the children�especially Pentecostals�with the promise that they will bring their parents to the church. One time we lost a family because of that�because of the money. It�s very painful for us, because we convert people with much difficulty and we lose them through Islamic influence.

�Are there any Indonesian saints?

�No, we do not yet have any saints. Well, there is Father Gregory who was murdered. We do not know who killed him, but we believe it was a Muslim, because when I called his phone, a woman answered and said �As-salamu alaikum.� I consider him to be a martyr, personally. People may not believe that, it�s not officially recognized, but I believe he was killed in the line of duty and that he is a martyr.

�What is the potential for the growth of Orthodoxy in Indonesia?

�Orthodoxy has great potential to grow in Indonesia, if we have enough available information about the faith. Therefore we need more books about Orthodoxy in the Indonesian language. I have written books on various topics, published in the past, but because of a lack of money now they are just sitting as files on my computer. Since I know the mind of the people I can explain things to them in a way they can understand. Just as Byzantine Orthodoxy became Russian Orthodoxy, in the future Russian Orthodoxy will become Indonesian Orthodoxy. We want to be just as the Russians, but as Indonesians. We cannot be other than what we are. And I said before, we hope to build a seminary, monastery, and more churches.

�What is needed to develop the preaching in Indonesia?

�Education, availability of books, a website� In the future we need a local bishop in Indonesia for the ordination of priests, so that we will not have to wait for a foreign bishop to come to us from far away. Also, there is a law that foreign nationals cannot be religious leaders of any kind, and thus we call ourselves the Indonesian Orthodox Church�not the Greek, or Russian, even though we are under the Russian Church.

�You spent time on Mt. Athos at Simenopetra Monastery, and you knew Elder Emelianos. What did you learn from him that you have kept with you in your personal life and in your work with the mission?

�Many things, many things. I always remember his word: ipomoni (?p?�???). �Be patient.� I will never forget that he would always say ipomoni, �be patient.� Learning to be patient is hard for me because I�m a person who is on the go all the time. I�m a doer, and to be patient is not one of my traits, but I have to learn. And that is what I learned from Father Emelianos. Also his openness�he was very open with me in spite of my being the first Indonesian ever to step foot on Mt. Athos. He treated me just like a son, even though at that time I did not speak Greek well�but I was able to understand what he said. Of course I had Fr. Makarios from France, who was helping me translate what he said. So the word that always I remember from Father Amelianos is ipomoni.

�Concerning how people live in Indonesia: What is the difference in worldview or lifestyle between Muslims and Christians?

�I think it is in the way they look, the way they behave. You can tell by the way they talk, the type of language, their choice of words. They differ. And there is separation even in how they clothe themselves. In terms of their general attitude�after all we are Indonesian, so it�s difficult to say.


Dimitry Degtirev interviewed Archimandrite Daniel Byantoro


If anyone would like to help Fr. Daniel and the Orthodox Christians in Indonesia, donations can be sent to the following bank account:

Bank Name: CitiBank
Account number: 8000352267
Name on account: Bambang Dwi Byantoro
CIF number: 627405
Address: Landmark Building
Street: Jalan Jendral Sudirman No. 1
City: Jakarta
Country: Indonesia 12910
Swift Code: CITIIDJX
E-mail address: m2j2pa4it@gmail.com.

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

The Kurdish People, the Yezidi Religion, and Christianity

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�To tell the truth is useful to those to whom it is spoken,
but disadvantageous to those who tell it,
because it makes them disliked.�
~ Blaise Pascal, Pens�es.

Related:

PRAVOSLAVIE � May 11, 2015

This English translation of an interview by the Russian correspondent for the R�daw� newspaper with Monk Madai, an Orthodox Kurd, was sent to OrthoChristian.com for publication.

Monk Madai (Maamdi) was born in Tbilisi, Georgia, to a Kurdish-Yezidi family. In 2002, he and his family moved to Moscow, where in 2007 he was baptized in the Orthodox Church with the name Seraphim.

In 2009 Seraphim finished the �School of Orthodox Mission�, which was established by priest Daniel Sysoev. That same year, Fr. Daniel was killed in his own church by a Muslim extremist.

In 2012, Seraphim went to Greece, to live in one of the Greek monasteries. In 2014 he became a monk with the name Madai (in honor of the grandson of Noah, the son of Japheth, Medes� grandparent, one of the descendant nations of whom are the Kurds). In the same year he entered the Theological Department of the University of Athens. He is a monk of the Georgian Orthodox Church, in the Patriarchal Stavropegic Monastery of Holy Queen Sunniva, Norway.

Hoshavi Muhammad: We would like to welcome our honored guest, monk Madai. Monk Madai, in your first interview you said that the majority of Kurds confess the Islamic faith, while the minority belong to a closed religion, known as Yezidism. Why do you think that Yezidism is a false religion?

Monk Madai: I say that as a Christian, speaking from the point of view of Divine Revelation. A religion that is closed to other people and that is held by a small number of people cannot be the truth for all people. Neither can a faith come from God that only acknowledges one language, here I am speaking about Islam.

In and of itself Yezidism arose as a result of the compilation of various religious teachings. It is a natural phenomenon when in the context of Christianity, Judaism or Islam religious leaders appear who, on the basis of traditional religious teachings, add something new and create their own �true path�.

H.M.: In your opinion the founder of Yezidism is the Arab Sufi Sheikh Adi. He radically changed the worldview of Kurdish society. He united ideas from heretical Christianity, Islam, Judaism and Paganism to form Yezidism. For the Yezidis, is Sheikh Adi God or a messenger of God?

M.M.: That is not merely my opinion; it is a well-known and credible fact that the Arab Sheikh Adi descended from the Arabic Umayyad Caliphs. The testimonies of his contemporaries tell us that he was a Muslim of the Sufi doctrine and studied under well-known Sufis of the time. He later settled in a Christian monastery (now called Lalish) and wrote his Tariqa (path). His followers began to be called �Adavis� (followers of Adi) among the locals. Today they are known as Yezidis.

Unfortunately, modern Sheikhs and Pirs, and the clerics of Lalish as a whole, react very negatively to the historical facts which show that Yezidism is an offshoot of Islam. This is related to the fact that Yezidis have always been persecuted by Muslims. Any contact with Muslims is, therefore, categorically rejected by Yezidis. 


Thus, the preaching of Yezidi Sheikhs, Pirs and Qawwals about a connection between Yezidism and the ancient beliefs of Mesopotamia have turned their followers into a marginalized group. 

It is notably amongst Yezidis that we observe total ignorance in the area of religious studies and historiography. Their lives are nourished by the imagination, by fantasies that lead them away from thoughts of God and instead give rise to incredible self-importance. Highly unlikely versions as to the origins of Yezidism have arisen in the works of various representatives of the religion. What is most important is that they do not display a unified opinion on virtually any of the doctrinal and historical questions about Yezidism. One must note that these versions began to circulate in the beginning of the 20th century; and adding fuel to the flames was Kurdish nationalism, representatives of which decided to choose Yezidism as the �pre-Islamic Kurdish religion�.

An example of disunity is seen when we raise the question: �Who is Sheikh Adi to the Yezidis?� Even among Yezidis we cannot find an unequivocal answer. For some he is God, for others he is the messenger of God. However, most Yezidi �theologians� consider him to be a reincarnation of God or Tawsi Melek1. Although in Sufism adepts deify their teachers, in their writings, Sheikh Adi�s contemporaries mention nothing that would lead one to believe that he considered himself to be an incarnation of Allah or Tawsi Melek.

H.M.: What is unclear in Yezidism? Are you asserting that Yezidi theologians are not proving something?

M.M.: Among the representatives of Yezidism there aren�t any genuine theologians, i.e., people who could write a totally independent, scholarly theological thesis based on reliable facts. Yezidi �theologians� are slaves to their caste. This concerns the Sheikhs, Pirs and various Elims who are fully entitled to write and speak about Yezidism. Their slavery resides in the fact that they know the truth about Yezidism but do not write anything that contradicts popular mythological tradition.

Currently, it is the cast of Pirs for the most part who write about Yezidism and head religious communities. It is precisely they who offer the Murid2 a religious �surrogate�. They know the truth about Yezidism, possessing a large amount of scientific material, as well as having acquired quite a good understanding of the history of religious studies, however, regardless of this they consciously hide the truth and propagandize lies.

Woe to such Yezidi �theologians�! They know very well that the doctrines of the Resurrection of the dead and of reincarnation are as different as night and day. But in Yezidism both doctrines are acknowledged as being true. Are we to believe that they don�t know that the Resurrection of the dead is a Biblical doctrine foreign to the entire pagan world, while reincarnation is present in paganism, notably in Indian philosophy? If the founders of Yezidism did not know this or if they merely confused things, the modern Yezidi teachers do know, yet they continue to ignore it.

Or consider the question of how one can call himself a monotheist when he worships the sun and an animal (the peacock)? In monotheism we believe exclusively in one God; it is a faith that does not permit the worship of God�s creation: the sun, the moon, animals, etc. The worship of creation is found only in Paganism, notably the worship of the sun and animals. 

Nevertheless, the Yezidis are naive in that they combine the mutually exclusive concepts of monotheism and paganism, ignoring the contradictions between these two doctrines. We could continue the list of contradictions, but here one must ask himself: don�t the Yezidi �theologians� see the blatant theological errors in their religion? They see them but, as I said above, they have become slaves to their caste. After all, it is not only important to be well read and intelligent, one must also be honest. And this is what Yezidi �theologians� precisely lack, honesty and scientific professionalism (at any rate those who I am familiar with). 

This, however, cannot be said about our simple people, who in their simplicity accept everything that the Sheikhs and Pirs tell them. The people, being uneducated, generally know very little about the history of Yezidism. But they have the right to know!

H.M.: You said that after becoming Christian you acquired peace of mind and a certain relationship with God. Did you not feel this in Yezidism?

M.M.: That is not only my experience, but the experience of a great number of people who have turned to Christ. For many years I have been collecting material on Kurds who have converted from Islam and Yezidism to Christianity. Every one of them expresses essentially the same thing: a living, real encounter with God, which they did not have before.

How can one experience God when God is not desired? All of the sermons and writings by Yezidi �theologians� amount to an attempt at proving how ancient their religion is or to a discourse on rituals, etc. A great number of Yezidi Internet sites and blogs have been created, where they discuss everything under the sun, except for God. You won�t find a single Yezidi site which makes an appeal to moral purity, to struggling against sin, or which at least gave some practical spiritual advice. The articles are focused solely on news, the history of religion and the spread of Christianity. In addition, there are also some anti-Christian publications.

People searching for true spiritual life, a life with God, are not satisfied with these �surrogates�. Many people are searching, and as the last 20 years have shown, a significant many find a closeness to God in the Orthodox Church. If there really were a �spiritual connection� in Yezidism, why would people be converting to Christianity? As experience shows, if Yezidis or Muslims encounter authentic Christianity by their own free will, a large part of them accept to be baptized.

H.M.: Yezidis are themselves very radical and cruel to those people who refute their religion. In southern Kurdistan Yezidis often kill those who abandon their religion. What is the attitude of your parents, relatives and close friends on this subject?

M.M.: Such radicalism amongst Yezidis is a remnant of its Islamic roots. Thanks to a century of living with Christians (with Georgians, Russians and Armenians) this radicalism has essentially disappeared. Yezidis, just as Muslims in post-Soviet countries, have begun to look at this question in a way which resembles the Christian view, namely to respect the freedom granted to each person by God. Nevertheless, there remains a certain category of people who are given over to radicalism.

Fortunately, Christian nation-states have created laws on a constitutional level that protect what is known as �freedom of thought�. These laws guarantee and defend the citizen�s right to freely choose what he believes. Therefore, for fear of the law radicals are forced to resign themselves to the situation. I hope that the day will come when in our historical homeland of Kurdistan we arrive at such a high level of freedom.

H.M.: Don�t you think that the Yezidis will become more religious after the events in Shingal3?

M.M.: The events in Shingal are a wound to the entire nation. The ezdixan were shaken to their very foundations�how can we speak here of a spiritual uprising? After such a catastrophe, there is despair rather than any hope for renewal.

H.M.: You said that many Kurds have become Orthodox Christians. In your opinion, what is the cause of this?

M.M.: There are two factors. The first one is that Christianity teaches us that God is Love. This is the greatest revelation of all, completely unknown to any other religion before it, that God is a loving Father who created angels and people out of the abundance of his love and calls them to Eternal Life. This was unknown to Yezidism and Islam.

For example, in Islam we find the figure of Allah as a just, yet retributive judge. However, this image of God is not elevated to the figure manifested in Christianity �the image of the Heavenly Father who so loves his creation that He is willing to sacrifice himself for its redemption.

There is a feast in Islam, during the night of which, as Muslims believe, Allah descends from the heights of a heavenly stairway to its lowest step. Muslims believe that Allah becomes closer to them at this moment and they pray fervently to him about all their needs. For God all things are possible, and Christianity teaches us that not only can God descend to the lower heavens but even as far as the earth in order to help people. We also know that, through his love for us, He descended as far as the murky depths of hell� There you have it, the deeds true love is capable of accomplishing. And this message, and one�s personal encounter with it, lead people to Christ, because it is precisely the Gospel (Mezgini) which is delivered by God from Heaven.

As concerns Yezidism, we should begin by saying that Christianity is the one religion which reveals the light to mankind, which opens the Heavens to him, while paganism exists only here, on earth. In paganism all the attention is directed to external things submerged in the earth�s elements. Paganism lacks the Heaven that Christianity teaches us about. It lacks the belief in One God to whom we must give all of our worship. It lacks the belief in the image of God in man, who is called to divinize himself and to attain infinite perfection in God. All the Pagan�s supplications to the gods, or to the One God, are tied to temporal and earthly bounty, the Pagan only needs temporal things from God, but not God Himself. And this is the peculiarity of Paganism: it aims to create more and more comfort for man, who seeks less and less to turn to God and to limit himself in the desires of the flesh. Yezidism is a religion without an ideal of human perfection. It does not require one to seek spiritual perfection; the focus is rather on the accomplishment of precepts that are only superficial, all the values of which possess an exclusively worldly character.

The second factor is of an ethnic nature. If Yezidism is the religion of a single ethnic group, and if Islam is the religion of a single language and of a titular nation, Christianity is for all nations and all languages.

When Kurdish Muslims read the Bible and Orthodox prayers in Kurdish, they are amazed because for centuries in the eyes of many practicing Kurdish Muslims the Kurdish language has been viewed as inferior to Arabic. According to Islamic doctrine, Salat4 cannot be practiced in Kurdish; it must be practiced in Arabic, even if one doesn�t understand it. The Kurdish translation of the Quran is not considered to be the word of God, which is only believed to be the Arabic text. Even the Hadith5 must be read in Arabic, where we read that Arabic is the language of Allah as well as the language spoken in paradise. It would appear that in Islam all non-Arabs are second-class citizens. Even while citing the Quran in Kurdish, one must first make his citation in Arabic, thus showing that Kurdish is somehow inferior, unable to adequately express the words of the Quran. We disagree with this position. Kurdish is a fully-fledged language and in no way inferior to Arabic.

Such claims to linguistic superiority do not exist in Christianity. The word of God exists in one�s native tongue and one can also pray in it. Divine Revelation, proclaimed by Jesus Christ, is seen as being equal in all languages because the Lord revealed His Gospel clearly. The proof of this is the Pentecost, when He gave the gift of speaking in different tongues to His Apostles in order to overcome any linguistic barriers. And as is testified in the Acts of the Apostles, the Apostles even spoke in the Median language.6

The situation with Yezidism is much worse because the qawls7 and bayts8 are so rife with Arabic influence that at times one must agree with those who assert that these genres use broken Arabic. Thus, here too we are confronted with a linguistic problem.

Sheikh Adi created Yezidism, and the converts to this religion among the Kurdish people essentially broke off from the main Kurdish population. If the teachings of Muhammad brought strife and separation to the Kurdish people, the teachings of Sheikh Adi served as a continuation of a process already in motion. To this day people do not know who they are�Kurds or Yezidis? or Kurdish Yezidis?

Perhaps only the Lord Jesus Christ can make the ultimate dream of the Kurdish people become a reality: to bring cohesion and genuine unity to the Kurdish people. Baptized Kurds, converts from Sunnism, Shiism, Alevism and Yezidism, stand side by side in the same Church and pray together in the same place where even unbaptized Kurds may go. In contrast, you will not find any Yezidis in mosques; and you will certainly not find any Muslims praying in Lalish. One can already see how a tree will grow and what kind of fruits it will bring by looking at its roots. As our proverb states: Axiryax�rsiv�dax�re (a good end is seen in the beginning).

H.M.: Do you only preach Orthodoxy to Yezidis? Or are you planning to preach to Muslims as well?

M.M.: It is Christ who preaches; with His love He reaches the hearts of those who search truth and true life, while people like me merely help Him.

H.M.: There are many Orthodox Kurds in Russia. Are you planning to start your own organization?

M.M.: Yes, there are very many Orthodox Kurds in Russia. And not only in Russia, there are many Orthodox Kurds in Georgia and in Western Europe. We must not simply start our own organizations�we must also build churches where services are held in Kurdish. This is what Orthodox Kurds want, and it must be said that there are many Yezidis and Kurdish Muslims who want the same thing. There is a vital need for such action, but when and where it will take place will depend entirely on God�s blessing.


NOTES:

1 Tawsi Melek translates as �the Peacock Angel�. Source: http://www.yeziditruth.org/.�Trans.
2 In the Yezidi caste system the Murids, or commoners, occupy the lowest rank. Source: ibid.�Trans.
3 Shingal or Sinjar in Northern Iraqi Kurdistan was the site of a Kurdish massacre in August, 2014 by the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Source: wikipedia.org. Translator�s footnote.
4 Salat is the practice of ritualistic prayer in Islam. Source: wikipedia.org.�Trans.
5 Hadith are also called the �Prophetic Traditions�, that is, the sayings and deeds of Muhammad. �Trans.
6 The Median language was an old Iranian language (500 BC - 100 AD), part of the Indo-European group and related to Kurdish. Source: ibid.�Trans.
7 A qawl is an orally transmitted form of Yezidi poetry, central to religious life in Yezidism. Source: http://www.iranicaonline.org�Trans.
8 A bayt is an orally transmitted form of Yezidi folk literature, sung in verse or spoken in prose. Source: ibid.�Trans.



 
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