Christians enjoy religious freedom’ Church-State ties excellent

Christians enjoy religious freedom’ Church-State ties excellent

By: Nihal Sharaf

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Re verend Amanuel Benjamin Ghareeb has been the Pastor and caretaker of
the National Evangelical Church of Kuwait for a decade. He was
ordained on Jan. 8, 1999 in what was considered a unique event in the
history of the Evangelical community of Kuwait.

What may be new information to many, Reverend Ghareeb is a Kuwaiti
citizen. He was born in Kuwait in 1950 and has been living peacefully
among his people, Muslims and Christians, throughout the country’s
many ups and downs. This is what made his ordination as a Pastor
special in the memories of many Christians as he was the first Gulf
Arab to be designated for the Church. According to the Reverend
minister, there are currently approximately 200 Christian Kuwaiti
citizens residing in the country.

After graduating from the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of Cairo
in 1989, Reverend Ghareeb returned to Kuwait where he stayed, along
with his family and fellow faithful, even through the Iraqi
occupation. He has helped restore the country as well as bring the
Christian community back together after its liberation.

In an insightful interview with the Arab Times, Reverend Ghareeb talks
about the history of Christianity in Kuwait, the many faithful of
various denominations residing in the country, the meaning of
Evangelical Christianity as well as the recent relationship and
communication developments between the Muslims and Christians who
reside here.

Q: What are the origins of Kuwaiti Christians who were naturalized
during the establishment of Kuwait?

A: Kuwaiti Christians are originally Christian families who immigrated
like any other family to this region. The number of Kuwaiti Christians
is now around 150-200 among approximately 450,000 Christians from all
over the world.

Most of Kuwait’s local Christians belong to 12 large families. As you
know, Kuwait comprises mainly of people who came from three different
sources – from Saudi Arabia, from Iraq and from Iran. The first
Christian families came from southeast Turkey and Iraq and they have
been living in Kuwait for over 90 years and speak the Kuwaiti Arabic
dialect. Other families have come from Palestine, such as Al-Shuhaibar
family, and a few from Lebanon and Syria.

According to the citizenship law, whoever was in Kuwait before 1920 is
considered Kuwaiti and whoever came after the 1940s was
naturalized. At least one Christian family was living here before
1920.

Before the discovery of oil, the process of naturalization was not
available because Kuwait was a simple country and there were no
passports. After the discovery of oil, the number of people increased
considerably and the leadership wanted to organize the country so they
started to issue passports for identification.

Then, in 1959, the citizenship law was passed. As you know before 1961
Kuwait was a British protectorate according to an agreement between
Kuwait and Britain. They cancelled this agreement on June 19, 1961
which we consider the National Day of Kuwait.

Q: What is the history of Christianity in Kuwait?

A: Kuwait is the land of abundance. God has blessed Kuwait and gave
her a wise leadership from its onset. The people of Kuwait have
welcomed anyone who has come from abroad to make a living and they
respect everyone provided they abide by the laws and rules of the
country. We have plenty of stories of success by people who came from
all over the world.

The history of Christians in Kuwait began in the early 1900’s when
Reverend Dr Samuel Zwemer and Reverend Fred Barney who were
missionaries from the Reformed Church of America arrived. Permission
was granted in 1911 by Sheikh Mubarak Al-Sabah to begin medical work
in Kuwait and former American Mission Hospital was established in
1913.

Elder Yacoub Shammas Ibrahim was the first Arab Evangelist to come to
Kuwait in 1919. He came as part of the Arabian Mission of the Reformed
Church of America. In 1931, within the mission’s compound, the
Evangelical Church was built and is considered the first Church built
in Kuwait during modern times.

However, if we go back in history, Failaka Island contains the
remnants of a Church dating to perhaps as early as the 5th or 6th
century when the Hellenes settled on the island according to the
crosses that form part of the structural decoration that were found at
Al-Khazna Hill area on the Island.

Kuwait Oil Company was established in 1934 as a partnership between
Gulf oil and British Petroleum. It was a foreign company so the
majority of the staff were Christians. They built two Churches in
Ahmadi in the late 1940s at the beginning of oil exports. One is
called Saint Paul’s Church which belongs to the Anglicans and the
other belongs to the Catholics and is called `Our Lady of Arabia’.

Up until now, the two Churches are still maintained by the Kuwaiti
government through Kuwait Oil Company and people are still worshipping
God in these two Churches. In the late 1950s, the Catholic Church in
Kuwait City was built and the land on which it was built was a gift
bestowed by the previous ruler of Kuwait, Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem
Al-Sabah.

In the 1960s, the Coptic Orthodox Christians conducted their prayers
in a rented house near the Catholic Church. It was demolished due to
renovations recently; however, land was given to them in Hawalli to
build their new Church. In the 1960s and 70s the Greek Orthodox came
and also rented villas to be remodeled into Churches as well as the
Armenian Orthodox.

Q: What are the Christian denominations that are currently available
in Kuwait?

A: The number of established Churches in Kuwait is currently seven;
however, there are 85 prayer groups of various Evangelical
denominations that worship in the Evangelical Compound. The Catholics,
including the Maronite Christians, mostly come from Asian countries
such as India, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Pakistan as
well as from Arab countries such as Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan, Palestine
and Syria.

Also available in Kuwait is the Anglican Episcopalian Church, the
Greek Orthodox Church, the Armenian Orthodox Church, the Coptic
Orthodox Church as well as the Greek Catholic Church.

Q: How would you describe the relationship between the Christians of
Kuwait and the government?

A: We thank God that we as Christians in Kuwait enjoy a large amount
of religious freedom. Kuwait’s Constitution states that `freedom of
belief is absolute,’ and that `the State protects the freedom of
practicing religion in accordance with established customs, provided
that it does not conflict with public policy or morals.’

In December 1999, the Bible Society in the Gulf Shop was built. So the
Church even has an agreement with the Kuwaiti government to import
books and gifts that nurture the faith of Christians of different
backgrounds and languages.

Abiding by the rules of censorship of the Ministry of Information,
books and Bibles written in 50 different languages are now available
at the bookstore. The trust between us and the ministry is growing
because they know us through our long history of working together.

The creation of the Islamic Christian Relations Council (ICRC) was
also a huge step towards strengthening ties between the Muslims and
Christians of Kuwait. The Council’s establishment was announced in
February 2009 and was an initiative by the National Consensus Movement
run by our Shiite brothers. They approached the Church for the purpose
of gathering all Muslims, Shiite and Sunni, and all Christians, the
Catholics, Protestants and the Orthodox.

The Council comprises of 11 Islamic and Christian scholars and
authoritative figures such as Professor Mohammed Baker Al-Mohary who
is the Council’s President, myself, Reverend Amanuel Ghareeb, the
Vice-Resident; Professor Zuhair Abdul-Hadi Al-Mahmeed, who is the
General Secretary and Sheikh Hussain Al-Azhary who is the Research and
Consultancy Manager.

All the members agreed on the by-laws of the Council in order to
strengthen relations and inter-religious dialogue between all the
Muslims and Christians of Kuwait in order to cooperate and defend
ourselves against any attacks on the two religions in the country and
outside.

Our general targets include centering all actions and discussions from
the principle of belief in and worship of One God; rallying rational
energies to meet the various intellectual and societal challenges;
establishing trust between the two faiths through various seminars and
activities as well as providing consultation to decision makers in the
Muslim and Christian communities by studying and analyzing
intellectual and societal developments.

On Dec 23 last year, the Council members held a meeting to evaluate
the visit that was made on Dec 14-16 to the Vatican in which they met
with different councils in the Vatican such as the Pontifical Council
for Interreligious Dialogue and the Pontifical Institute for Arabic
and Islamic Studies.

It was a successful visit. We thank God we were able to introduce
ourselves to them and build relations of cooperation. We invited them
for a conference which will be held on November 2010 regarding Saint
Mary and they promised to participate.

This year we are also planning to visit Egypt and meet with Muslim and
Christian spiritual authorities such as Al-Azhar’s Sheikh and Mufti as
well as Pope Shounuda.

Q: How did Evangelical Protestant Christianity arise and the main
differences between this denomination and Catholicism?

A: This goes back to the middle ages or medieval times in the 15th
century when corruption was very apparent in the Catholic Church and
its teachings, which we, as Protestants, do not believe is according
to the Bible. Martin Luther began the religious Protestant reformation
in Germany.

He created the Ninety-Five Theses in 1517 which debated and criticized
the Church and the Pope and challenged their authority by teaching
that the Bible is the only source of divine knowledge. His original
goal was to reform the Catholic Church from inside-out and he
translated the Bible from Latin into the German language in order for
it to be more accessible to the people.

Among Luther’s questionings in the Theses were the intercession of and
devotion to the saints as well as the mandatory clerical
celibacy. However, when he was faced with severe opposition from his
Holiness the Pope and other authorities, he was obliged to start a new
Church. There were movements prior to his which were quickly
stopped. Nevertheless, Luther succeeded in spreading his thoughts of
reformation in Germany. The reformation spread to the whole of Europe,
England then North America.

>From what I understand, there are two explanations to Protestant
Christianity. During the trial of Martin Luther they told him that he
had to deny his reformation principles. He told them that, unless
they provided him with proof from the Bible itself that his thoughts
were wrong, he would not retract his statements. `On this I stand,’
he said. So, from this statement, they said that `he protested’. So
his followers are the people who `protested’ the teachings of the
Catholic Church and the Pope.

The second explanation is the literal meaning of Latin term
`Protestarri’. `Testarri’ means `the text’ in Latin and `pro’ in Latin
means `for’ in English. So the word means `For the Text’, meaning the
people of that faith follow the Bible only, which is considered
infallible, and refuse to accept any other teachings which are only
considered traditions.

The reformation also took different forms pertaining to different
countries, but the main principles of Luther remained especially the
authority and infallibility of the Bible. Therefore the Protestant
Church does not have as much control over the interpretation of
religion as the Catholics.

Evangelism is for the Protestant denominations only. Evangelism is a
term that has two different meanings pertaining to the West and the
Arab world. In the Arab world the term Evangelical is derived from the
Arabic word `Injeeliya’. The term was first used in Egypt to define
the Presbyterian Church which taught the `Injeel’ only. `Injeel’ is
the Arabic word for Bible.

In the West, as far as I understand, the term Evangelical was used to
define the group of Churches who concentrate on Evangelism more than
other teachings. So they can say `so and so Church is Evangelical and
so and so Church is not Evangelical’. According to the Bible, every
Church should be Evangelical. The Church has many responsibilities but
Evangelism is very important because these are the orders of Jesus
Christ (PBUH).

Now there are various Protestant denominations whose followers worship
in the NECK Compound.

Q: What main services does the Evangelical Church provide?

A: We have a variety of services that meet the spiritual and
psychological needs of all age groups such as Sunday school, teenagers
meeting, youth meeting, eagles meeting for recent university graduates
as well as Al Salam International Academy, which is joint venture
between, the Arabic Language Congregation and the Metropolitan Baptist
Church in Kuwait. We also provide Thursday services to teach Church
members of all ages, a nursery and a ministers’ training program.

The Church Diwaniya was built in order to communicate with people in
the local community. Like every year we held a Christmas Diwaniya in
2009 where many people of Kuwait came to give us their well
wishes. The Church also invites many high ranking Muslim and Christian
authorities for Ghabqa (get-together) during Ramadan.

biography
Name: Amanuel B. Y. Ghareeb
Date of birth: 9/1/1950
Place of birth: Kuwait
Marital status: Married

Certificate: 1. Bachelor of Science (Geology, Chemistry) from Kuwait
University 1971; 2. Bachelor of Theological Sciences from Evangelical
Theological Seminary in Cairo – 1989.
Practical Experience:
Civilian Experience:
From 1/8/1971 to 1/3/1996: Worked in the Ministry of Oil as
geologist, senior geologist, controller of drilling and production and
finally acting IT manager. n Church Experience:
1979-1991: Member of Church’s Council (by election)
1991: Vice president of Church’s Council.
1997-1997: Joint Administrator of The National Evangelical Church in Kuwait.
12/10/1992: Elected and ordained as Church Ruling Elder.
1991-1996: Elected as a member of Executive Committee of The Fellowship of
the Middle East Evangelical Churches (F.M.E.E.C).
1991 until now: Church representative in The Middle East Council of
Churches (M.E.C.C); Member of Regional Advisory Committee of Bible
Society in Gulf. 8/1/1999: Ordained and installed as The Church
Pastor.
15/2/1999 until now: Selected as a coordinator between Arab Christian
clergymen and government.
2005: Participated in founding The Christian Churches Fellowship In Kuwait
then elected as Vice-Chairman of The Fellowship.
2009: Participated in founding Islamic Christian Relation Council then elected as Vice-Chairman of the Council.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.arabtimesonline.com/NewsDetails/tabid/

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS