Turkey is set to
release 38,000 prisoners jailed before a failed July 15 coup attempt to make
room for new detainees.
The government declared a three-month state of
emergency on July 21 and began a sweeping crackdown, arresting more than 23,000
people. The purge has also led to more
than 81,000 people being dismissed or suspended from their jobs, including
police officers, judges, teachers, soldiers and journalists.
During the state of emergency, Turkish lawmakers
also granted President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sweeping powers as a means of
countering the ‘threat to Turkish democracy’.
Under the Turkish Constitution, the emergency measures allow the government
to “partially or entirely” suspend “the exercise of fundamental rights and
freedoms,” so long as that doesn’t violate international law obligations.
However, as the government has taken steps toward
Islamizing the country, imams were whipping the Sunni faithful into a frenzy of
nationalism that led to attacks on churches.
Persecution watchdog groups like Open Doors USA and Voice of the Martyrs
have noted that Turkey, which once boasted two million Christians, has barely
120,000.
For those remaining, the threat of the crackdown
has a ‘chilling effect’– a situation where behavior is suppressed by fear of
reprisal, often affecting free speech.
That’s where SAT-7TURK comes in. Their platform is unique in a time of
uncertainty. SAT-7 USA’s Rex Rogers
explains, “We are the only Christian channel broadcasting on Türksat National
satellite. And now we’re on something called D-Smart, which is a digital kind
of provider. We’re there and we’re able to speak truth to power without
attacking current regimes. We don’t get political or partisan, but we do talk
about human rights and all referencing who Christ is and what Christianity is
about.”
“We’re still licensed. We’re still broadcasting, in
the sovereignty of God. He’s protecting
us. There are no direct threats at this
point in Turkey, to our station, our channel,” says Rogers.
They’re speaking truth, talking about human rights
and it’s a message that resounds with the audience. “We have the talent; we’re
speaking directly to whatever given audience there is at this moment. They’re
calling, they’re responding. All of those are positive indicators.”
Broadcasts serve a potentially huge audience of 4.5
million at a critical place and time. On
top of trying to settle Turkey down internally, there is the brutality of ISIS
on its doorstep and the subsequent two million who have sought refuge in
Turkey.
As each crisis bears down, Turks grow hungrier for
the truth. In fact, the response has
been more than they had anticipated, which also means, “People are hungry. It
means they’re curious. It means they may be (as we say over here)
‘seekers’. They’re asking more about
Christianity. They want to read a Bible. They get access to a Bible. So,
absolutely, there’s openness.”
“There’s considerable concern and anxiety. They’re
human beings. They may be Christians who
believe in a sovereign God, but they’re still human beings experiencing those
emotions. Worry for their children, for
women, in particular, who are more vulnerable, so the anxieties are high.”
It is hope, in the face of fear, he says. “We don’t like adversity. I would never pray
for adversity for you or my children or me. None of us like it. But we also
know God works in and through it. So He is clearly at work in this time of
pressure there in the nation of Turkey.”
In response to the current situation in Turkey, a
SAT-7 TÜRK spokesperson says in an earlier report, “The beauty and
mysteriousness of God gives us hope and joy. There is a reason why SAT-7 TÜRK
is here. There are no other channels on Türksat that speak of the hope we have.
No one else talks about love and joy. Other channels show tension and violence,
which spreads fear. We are the only alternative.”
What can we do, as believers living thousands of
miles away? We should pray.
Just because they haven’t had any specific threats does not mean they’re
invulnerable. There were several hours
when the channel was off air on July 15 because the Türksat broadcast center
came under pressure from coup organizers.
Rogers asks “Prayer for the security and safety of,
not only for our people, but also of churches, of Christian people, in
general. Particularly, if they’ve been
converted from the background of another religion, they’re vulnerable to even
their family members.”
Pray for those who are labeled and treated as
traitors after embracing the Christian faith.
Pray for God to enable those whose lives are
threatened to place all hope and trust in Him.
Pray for converts from a Muslim background (MBBs)
to minister graciously to their families.
- BY RUTH KRAMER
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