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January 7, 2005

Charity warned to leave religion behind

Topics: Southeast Asia Earthquake and Tsunami

The title of this post is a little misleading; it is the title used by The Courier Mail in their article - it implies that the World Vision-funded project had intentions to that effect when nothing could be further from the truth.

Father Chris Riley, who heads the Catholic charity Youth off the Streets, arrived in Aceh to set up an orphanage to house some of the estimated 35,000 Acehnese children with dead or missing parents, and immediately was told by radical Islamic Defenders Front chief Hilmy Bakar Almascaty that it will be very dangerous if they want to convert children(have you ever heard a religion other than Islamic use such a threat against anyone much less another religion?). Father Riley was told by this radical cleric that he should stick purely to humanitarian work in Aceh, a special place for Muslims because it is the only Indonesian province to have fully implemented Muslim sharia law. This particular group has a long and violent history of terror acts against Christians in Indonesia. 

Father Riley's group is apparently (from the article) a World Vision project. World Vision just happens to be one of the world's leading relief and development agencies. It is a Christian charity, currently helping over 85 million people in nearly 100 countries in their struggle against poverty, hunger and injustice, irrespective of their religious beliefs (my emphasis, their words).

The following article in The Courier-Mail gives us a peak at Muslim's use of charities and how Muslims view and use charities as a political tool, something we need to take strongly into account in our own view of Islamic charities:

The Courier-Mail (Australia) Jan 08, 2005
A HARDLINE Islamic group yesterday took aim at an Australian Catholic charity planning to set up an orphanage in tsunami-ravaged Aceh, warning it not to try to convert Muslim children.

As Prime Minister John Howard defended Australia's decision to keep tabs on how Indonesia manages the nation's $1 billion in aid, signs emerged of simmering religious tensions in devastated Aceh province.

Father Chris Riley, who heads the Catholic charity Youth off the Streets, has arrived there and plans to set up an orphanage to house some of the estimated 35,000 Acehnese children with dead or missing parents.

But radical Islamic Defenders Front chief Hilmy Bakar Almascaty yesterday warned him to stick purely to humanitarian work in Aceh - the only Indonesian province to have fully implemented Muslim sharia law.

"It will be very dangerous if they want to convert children," he said.

"Humanitarian aid is welcome and if they want to support the system or support the construction of new buildings, there will be no problem.

"But the program should be run by Acehnese."

Hilmy's organisation, known as FPI, is better known for smashing up bars and nightclubs in Jakarta and elsewhere which members deem to be un-Islamic.

FPI is now bringing thousands of volunteers to help in the reconstruction of Aceh and to guard against foreign influence from the thousands of foreign military and aid workers now delivering humanitarian assistance to the region.

Hilmy said Aceh was a "special place" for Indonesian Muslims because of its sharia status.

"We plan a social engineering project here after this disaster, based around the Islamic religion," he said. (in other words, Muslims plan to use the disaster for their own purposes so they think Christians would do the same. This is telling of the Islamist's view of the world. "Hyscience comments - not part of article)

World Vision Australia chief executive Tim Costello said warnings like the one aimed at Father Riley would not deter his Christian organisation from its mission to deliver aid to Aceh.

"That warning is not a concern to us," chief executive Tim Costello said.

"There are no doubt other Christian aid agencies that do have an explicit evangelism agenda, but certainly not World Vision. "

Catholic aid agency Caritas Australia said there were no strings attached to its aid program in Aceh.

"I think it's really important in a situation such as the crisis affecting the people of Aceh that they know the aid comes with no strings attached," director Jack de Groot said.

Source The Courier-Mail



Posted by Hyscience at January 7, 2005 2:10 PM

"We plan a social engineering project here after this disaster, based around the Islamic religion," he said. (in other words, Muslims plan to use the disaster for their own purposes so they think Christians would do the same. This is telling of the Islamist's view of the world. "Hyscience comments - not part of article)

Dudes (you who run this site), before the event, Islam IS the official religion there. If they want to build things up again based on the Islamic believe, that's their basic right. Any similar efforts by international helpers with other religion's agenda will be deemed interference. Better concentrate on helping than preaching.

Posted by: ichsan at January 14, 2005 10:16 AM

Donate for Tsunami survivors. Make a contribution today & provide hope and relief for tomorrow. This is the greatest human emergency of our time! Being a Good Giver Takes More Than Just Heart!

Posted by: sonny at March 9, 2005 1:52 AM



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