“In fact, the Christian growth rate has outpaced the Jewish growth in Israel in the last 12 years!” But you wouldn’t know that reading the NYT; nor would you know that the main reason Christians are dwindling is due to Muslim persecution. “NY Times Skews the News on Christian Decline in the Mideast,” by Tamar Sternthal for CAMERA, May 17:
Pope Benedict XVI’s journey through Jordan, Israel and the West Bank prompted Ethan Bronner, Jerusalem bureau chief for the New York Times, to report on the declining Christian population across the Middle East. But his May 12 story, “Christians in Mideast Losing Numbers and Influence,” misleads on crucial facts about this troubling trend among Palestinian and Israeli Christians. (The article also appeared May 13 in the International Herald Tribune.)
First, while the Christian population is diminishing throughout the Middle East, including the Palestinian areas, the opposite is true in Israel — a key fact Bronner inexplicably ignores.
Second, contrary to Bronner’s article, Palestinian Christians are not emigrating simply because of the “economy, economy, economy,” but largely as a result of systematic Muslim persecution. Again, Bronner neglects this significant factor directly related to the topic of his story.
The thrust of the Times story is that all societies in the Middle East are inhospitable to Christians, who have little future anywhere in the region. Sadly this is true in the Muslim-dominated nations surrounding Israel but it’s not the case in Israel itself.
The Situation Across the Mideast
As Bronner notes, the Christian population throughout the Middle East has been declining for decades. In 1914, Christians constituted 26.4 percent of the total population in what today is Israel, the Palestinian areas, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, while by 2005 they represented at most 9.2 percent (Phillipe Fargues, “The Arab Christians of the Middle East: A Demographic Perspective,” in Christian Communities in the Arab Middle East, Andrea Pacini, ed, Oxford University Press, as cited in Justus Reid Weiner’s Human Rights of Christians in Palestinian Society, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.)
The Ignored Exception
The exception to this regional trend is Israel, where the Christian population has thrived.
As documented in the Central Bureau of Statistics’ Statistical Abstract of Israel 2008 (Chart 2.2), in the last dozen years, Israel’s Christian population grew from 120,600 in 1995 to 151,600 in 2007, representing a growth rate of 25 percent. In fact, the Christian growth rate has outpaced the Jewish growth in Israel in the last 12 years! In 1995, there were 4,522,300 Jews in Israel, and in 2007 there were 5,478,2000, representing a growth rate of 21 percent — 4 percent less than the Christian population grew during the same time….