Aftershocks of 9/11 continue to affect Egypt’s Arab culture

Aftershocks of 9/11 continue to affect Egypt’s Arab culture

 

The aftershocks of 9/11 continue to reverberate in the Arab world, especially in Egypt.

Muhammad Atta, the suspected master mind of the terrorist acts of 9/11, was Egyptian. Moreover, Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda terrorist network grew in part out of Egyptian extremist groups and many of its leaders are Egyptians. Osama bin Laden’s top aide and ideological mentor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, is a longtime Egyptian radical and founder of Egypt’s Islamic Jihad movement.

Their brand of Islam claims a small- but potent- following in Egypt. And the recent escalation of violence between Israelis and Palestinians has brought them new recruits as rage in the region grows.

Radical Islamists assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981 after he made peace with Israel. They’ve tried several times since to kill Sadat’s successor, Hosni Mubarak.

The Egyptian government has responded with harsh crackdowns. But the militants persist- determined to replace the current regime with an Islamist state. Radicals also have carried out deadly attacks on foreign tourists and Coptic Christians in recent years.

Bottom line: Islamic extremism in Egypt isn’t going away anytime soon. Since Sept. 11, 2001, foreign tourists have responded by staying away in droves- seriously damaging Egypt’s already-struggling economy.

How should the world’s Christians respond? Stay home? Stop praying for Egypt? Write off the Arab world?

“The message of the attacks is destruction and the authority of darkness over the world, because the devil comes to steal, kill and destroy,” an Egyptian Christian pastor says.

“But Jesus is the Light of the world. This is the hour we have to demonstrate the gospel. We want to raise a movement to pray for the Arabs and all Muslims.”

(BP)