March 28, 2013
Bible Burning Spreads to Another Former Soviet State
Kazakhstan follows its neighbors as court orders destruction of religious literature.
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Russia have more in common than just shared borders in Central Asia: All three are states where recently "courts have ordered religious literature to be destroyed," Forum 18 reports.
Previous reports from Forum 18 have detailed routine"Bible destruction" in Uzbekistan and destruction of Islamic books in Russia. But the newest report on Kazakhstan suggests that a recent court order to 'destroy' 121 books (mostly Bibles) confiscated from a Baptist could be the first-ever religious book burning in the country.
"Forum 18 can recall no other court decision in Kazakhstan ordering religious literature to be destroyed," the organization stated.
But Kazakhstan slowly has been restricting religious freedom since 2011, when it enacted a revised religion law designed to curb extremism. The clampdown "intensified"in 2012, when the Kazakh government banned religious groups with less than 50 members—a total of 579 churches and religious communities.
CT previously covered Kazakhstan as the site of "Central Asia's great awakening." Just a few years later, though, CT also reported the troubling trend of religious "freedom, growth, repression, and now uncertainty" in former Soviet regions.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.