A new law will make it easier for
Christians to build churches in Egypt, Coptic Catholic spokesman says
The Coptic Catholic
Church has welcomed a new Egyptian law to facilitate the building of Christian
places of worship.
On August 30 Egypt
passed a law codifying the rights of Christians to build and renovate churches
in the mostly Muslim country. Under the new 10-article law, approved by the
Egyptian parliament, regional governors must rule within four months on
Christian church-building and renovation applications and provide a “justified
decision,” subject to appeal, if refusing authorization.
Critics have warned
some provisions are vaguely worded and say clauses requiring the size of a
church to be “commensurate with the number of Christian community members,”
taking account of “expected population growth,” could be used by local
officials to block permits.
“There’ve been some
criticisms, but the government has tried to resolve any problems, and we now
have a law which meets modern needs,” said Father Rafic Greiche, spokesman for
the Coptic Catholic Church. “No law can be like the Bible – it has to be
interpreted and it can be changed. But having had the same law since the
Ottoman Empire, we’re satisfied we now have one which seeks to avoid sectarian
enmities.”
Father Greiche told
Catholic News Service on September 2 that Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant
churches had been represented by legal experts on the commission drafting the
law, which had been actively promoted by Egypt’s president, Gen. Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi, and Prime Minister Sherif Ismail.
Priests who ministered
in Egypt under the old law said any permit that had to do with a church
building had to be signed by the president. One priest said he waited 21 years for
a permit to build churches. They also said state or local officials could stop
construction for “security issues.” One priest cited the example of a mosque
being built next to a Catholic church, and local authorities closed the church
because Muslim authorities complained the long Sunday liturgies interfered with
their noon call to prayer.
The 200,000-member
Catholic Church has 14 dioceses in Egypt, including pastoral services for
Latin, Melkite, Armenian, Chaldean, Maronite and Syriac Catholics. The much
larger Coptic Orthodox Church makes up at least 10 percent of Egypt’s
population of 82.5 million.
Father Greiche said
Catholics kept a “low profile” in Egypt compared to the Coptic Orthodox Church,
but hoped to carry on building churches, especially in new residential areas
around Cairo, Alexandria and other cities.
“Catholics have moved
to these modern areas, so the church has to move with them,” the church
spokesman said. “We want to serve the whole society, not just the Christian
community. We’ve already built schools and hospitals, so our mission extends
beyond our own parishes.”
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