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No Mercy for Grace Churches

Central Asian republic increasingly views evangelicals as traitors.

Following a 15-hour church raid in late August, Kazakhstan's secret police (the KNB) placed two pastors and two members of Grace Presbyterian Church in Karaganda under investigation for high treason.

Senior pastor Igor Kim, his sister, and the church administrator—all Kazakhstani citizens—as well as Aleksei Kim, the pastor of a sister church, face sentences of up to 10 to 15 years, according to Forum 18, a news service that tracks religious-rights violations.

Government leaders in Kazakhstan, the ninth-largest country in the world, increasingly view adherents of minority religions as unpatriotic. Religion in the oil-rich republic is traditionally tied to race: Kazakhs are expected to be nominal Muslims; Russians are expected to be Orthodox.

Senushi Rukhbayeva, a Kazakh scholar and convert to evangelical Christianity who, like others in this article, asked that her real name not be used, said followers of other religions are viewed with suspicion. Kazakhs who discover she is an evangelical accuse her of repudiating her culture, she said.

Another Kazakh believer told CT, "There is [a lot of] Muslim propaganda addressing the nation through mass media, which makes me feel like our country from year to year is becoming more Muslim. Evangelical Christians will certainly suffer from that."

Political pressures have also converged to create a worsening situation for religious rights. The Beslan school siege and the 2004 and 2005 color revolutions, which toppled nearby regimes, reinforced government suspicions that earnest belief is dangerous.

Several churches in Kazakhstan have had offices raided and computers confiscated, said Jason Tappit, a regional field manager for East-West Ministries. But charges of treason represent a serious upping of the stakes. Tappit believes religious oppression may be rising to a new level, involving "a systematic pursuit of Christian organizations and churches."

The Karaganda church, which reports 3,000 members, is one of 250 Grace Presbyterian Church congregations in the country. Joe Candy, a missionary in Kazakhstan from the mid-1990s until recently, said Igor Kim is the de-facto leader of the country's Protestants.

Grace's leaders have denied any involvement in treason. "I've known [Igor Kim] for 10 years; it's unthinkable that he would be involved in anything inappropriate," Candy said. "He's always been an active proponent of the churches being an active part of society, being supportive of the government, praying for leaders, participating in community events."

Despite the government's unfair treatment of evangelicals, Rukhbayeva said she believes Kazakhstanis are more receptive than ever to Christianity's message. "People are more open to religion [than in early post-Soviet days]," she said.

Kazakhstan is currently bidding for chairmanship of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), a body that, among other things, upholds human rights, freedom for national minorities, and democratization. In November 2006, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom called on the U.S. government to reject Kazakhstan's bid because of blatant religious-rights violations.

But Forum 18's Felix Corley said Kazakhstan has not yet felt much heat from the broader international community. "They can crack down on religious minorities without any handicap," he said. "So they'll carry on doing it."



Related Elsewhere:

Forum 18 News Service coverage of Grace Church's problems in Kazakhstan includes "'The Secret Police's Persecution by Proxy,'" "Treason Charges Against Grace Church Leaders?," and "Church Subjected to 15-Hour Raid."


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 4 comments

Jeri Cadwallader

October 28, 2007  5:36am

Thank you for these articles. I'm in a small town church and we rarely hear much of what is going on in the larger Christian world apart from our own denomination. I coordinate our prayer ministry, and can add these concerns.

RC

October 18, 2007  1:19pm

Thanks for addressing issues such as these. Articles about the glitz and glamour of the American church are getting old. Keep the mission of God the main thing. Good article.

Brad Ryden

October 17, 2007  10:26am

This is one of the things you people do best. Being liberal as I am, I often disagree with some of the things you place out for reading. But news such as this is so important. It mobilizes God's children for prayer and if possible action. Keep doing this, the church needs to hear this, we as members of the body of Christ need to tell our government representatives about these things and some how we need to tell those of this persecuted body of believers that there are people who care.

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