To avoid “misunderstandings,” no doubt with Misunderstanders of Islam.
While Muslims in the West complain about largely trumped-up discrimination, this is life for Christians in majority Muslim areas, where the spirit of the dhimmi laws is alive and well.
Islamic Tolerance Alert: “Philippines’ Islamic city proud to be different,” by Carmel Crimmins for Reuters (thanks to Twostellas):
MARAWI CITY, Philippines (Reuters) – Father Teresito Soganub doesn’t look like a Catholic priest and, from the outside, his cathedral doesn’t look like a church.
In his parish, tucked away in Marawi, the only Islamic city in the Philippines, it’s easier that way.
“To avoid arguments and to avoid further misunderstandings we just plant the cross deep in our hearts,” said the 47-year-old priest, who doesn’t wear a crucifix or a clerical collar and sports a beard out of respect for his Muslim neighbors.
The Philippines, a largely Catholic country in Southeast Asia, proudly advertises its dominant faith even in the southern region of Mindanao, where an estimated 20 percent of the population is Muslim.
But Marawi City is an exception.
This ramshackle city of wooden shacks and shabbily elegant mosques is around 385 miles south of Manila, but it’s a world apart for many Filipinos.
Marawi is the spiritual centre for the Maranao, the most devout of three major Muslim groups in the Philippines.
A quick glance at the streets of Marawi make it clear that this is a city of the crescent rather than the cross. “Gift of Allah” rather than “Gift of Jesus” is the sign blazoned across the city’s pedicabs, the local bank is Islamic and women are veiled.
Unique to Marawi, Muslim moral rules are part of the city code.
Alcohol and gambling are banned, Muslim women must cover their heads, the sale of pork is forbidden and karaoke clubs, the beating heart of village life across the archipelago including other Muslim regions, are a no-no.
“At home with the family we can do karaoke but we do not allow it in public,” said Camid Gandamra, one of the province’s numerous sultans and also secretary of transport and communications in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), a homeland for Muslims established in 1989.
“It might encourage people to go to nightclubs and other places of amusement that are prohibited for our tribe,” said the father of 12, over tea and muffins in his smart city residence. […]
Father Soganub says local Muslim leaders include him in community discussions and he is constantly having to dissuade locals from trying to find him a wife.
But his modest Santa Maria Auxiliadora Cathedral, with its corrugated iron roof, has no cross outside to show that it is a Christian church.
“People here don’t want a large symbol. The residents don’t want that,” he said.
Catholics account for around 1 percent of Marawi’s 160,000 population and Soganub is lucky if he gets 8 weddings a year.
Most celebrants prefer to get married elsewhere so they can feast on lechon, or roast pig, a staple at celebrations in Catholic parts of the country….