Security Tight as Egypt Christians Mark Christmas

Millions of Egyptian Christians thronged churches across this mainly
Muslim nation for Christmas Mass, held Monday amid unusually tight
security but with congregations filled with hope ahead of a key vote on a
new constitution that enshrines equality and criminalizes
discrimination.
The stepped up security was in response to fears that Islamic militants
loyal to ousted President Mohammed Morsi would target churches.
Islamists claim that Egypt's Christians played a disproportionately
large role in the mass protests that preceded Morsi's ouster in a July 3
coup.
Many churches, especially in southern Egyptian strongholds of radical
Muslims, held Midnight Mass several hours early so that worshippers
could avoid returning home after midnight when streets are empty,
raising the possibility of attacks.
A wave of attacks blamed on Islamists in August left dozens of churches
destroyed, burned or looted. Christian homes and businesses were also
targeted.
"We will pray under the night sky," said Adel Shafiq, a Christian from
the town of Dalga south of Cairo, who was attending Mass in a church
looted and burned in August. "There is no roof and no windows. People
are here wearing scarves and hats to fend off the night cold."
At Cairo's St. Mark's Cathedral, seat of the Coptic Orthodox pope,
police armed with machine-guns manned sandbag positions outside the
towering structure. Hours before Mass, sniffing dogs were deployed to
ensure there were no explosives planted inside.
During the service, plainclothes security men stood guard just yards
(meters) from the altar to keep an eye on the congregation as Coptic
Pope Tawadros II led the prayers. Cabinet ministers, army generals and
politicians, mostly Muslims, attended the service.
"We pray for the safety, peace and calm of Egypt and we pray for every
man on its kind land," Pope Tawadros said in a brief sermon. "We have
total confidence that God is watching over our nation even at the time
of crisis."
Elsewhere in Cairo and other main cities, streets leading to large
churches were sealed off and checkpoints were set up in areas with
sizable Christian communities as armored army and police vehicles roamed
the streets.
Metal detectors were placed at the entrances of many churches, where
volunteers searched bags and demanded to see IDs, leading to the
formation of long lines outside churches.
The tight security appeared to do little to dampen spirits, however.
"People are happy and the barrier of fear has been breached. We have
seen the worst already, it's over," said Evon Lutfi, a Christian from
the southern city of Assiut, a stronghold of radical Islamists and home
to a large Christian community.
Egypt's Christians account for some 10 percent of the nation's 90
million people. Mostly members of the Orthodox church, one of
Christendom's oldest, they long have complained of discrimination by the
nation's Muslim majority. They have heavily invested in the anti-Morsi
movement in the hope of gaining equal rights with their Muslim
compatriots after his removal.
The amended constitution Egyptians will vote on later this month in a
nationwide referendum enshrines equality between all Egyptians and
instructs the next parliament to legislate a new law that will
facilitate the construction and maintenance of churches. It also removes
language in the 2012 constitution that critics feared could pave the
way to the creation of a purist Islamic state, something that gravely
alarmed Christians.

"We will vote 'yes' in the referendum so we can have a nation free of
discrimination," said Fawzy Habib, a Christian accountant from Assiut.
The post-Morsi administration hopes the draft, a heavily amended version
of an Islamist-tilted charter adopted under Morsi in 2012, will receive
a comfortable "yes" majority in the Jan. 14-15 referendum to enshrine
the legitimacy of the regime and allow it to move confidently to the
next step of its political transition plan: presidential and
parliamentary elections. Morsi's supporters are boycotting the vote,
which they label as a sham along with the charter itself.
Christians received a huge morale boost Sunday when the country's
interim leader, President Adly Masnour, made a rare visit to St. Mark's
Cathedral and met with the Coptic pontiff. His visit underlined efforts
by the military-backed government to project an image of inclusion ahead
of the referendum.
The highly symbolic visit was the first of its kind since socialist
leader Gamal Abdel-Nasser attended the cathedral's consecration ceremony
more than 40 years ago.
St. Mark's Cathedral was attacked by a mob last April, heightening
Christians' concern over Morsi's rule and laying bare their
vulnerability. Morsi quickly condemned the violence, but in an
unprecedented direct criticism, Pope Tawadros accused him of failing to
protect the cathedral.
———
Associated Press reporter Mamdouh Thabet contributed to this report from Assiut, Egypt.
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