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The pope’s appeasement of Islam in Algeria

duluxe

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Leo’s shameful appeasement of Islam ignores the brutal reality of Christians suffering in Muslim lands​


During his first-ever apostolic journey to Algeria on April 13, Pope Leo XIV stood inside the historic Basilica of Our Lady of Africa in Algiers and delivered words that have already sparked outrage among Christians, many of whom live with the daily threat to their lives.


Addressing a tiny Catholic community in a nation that is more than 99 percent Muslim, the pope declared in a post on X: “Communion between Christians and Muslims takes shape under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa. Here, in #Algeria, the maternal love of Lalla Meryem gathers everyone as children, within our rich diversity, in our shared aspiration for dignity, love, justice, and peace. In a world where division and wars sow pain and death, living in unity and peace is a compelling sign.”


The rhetoric is fancifully poetic, but the reality it ignores is brutal. In Algeria itself, the very country the pope held up as a model of “shared aspiration,” Christians exist only by permission, under a 2006 ordinance that criminalizes evangelism of Muslims with penalties of two to five years in prison and steep fines. Distributing Bibles, posting Christian messages online, or even hosting a prayer meeting can trigger prosecution. Dozens of Protestant churches have been forcibly closed. The 2020 constitution erased explicit protection for freedom of conscience, leaving only “freedom of worship in accordance with the law”—a law written by and for the Islamic state. In a country that constitutionally defines itself as Islamic and treats conversion as a crime, the pope’s talk of “communion” and a “shared mantle” is not merely naïve. It is laughable.


The irony deepens when the pope speaks of a world “where division and wars sow pain and death” without once naming the documented pattern of anti-Christian violence by the hands of Muslims.


According to the Open Doors World Watch List 2026, nine of the ten countries where Christians face the most extreme persecution are Muslim-majority: Somalia, Yemen, Sudan, Eritrea, Syria, Nigeria, Pakistan, Libya, and Iran. North Korea is the lone exception to that list. In Nigeria alone, Muslim militants slaughtered thousands of Christians during the reporting period. Yet from the basilica in Algiers, the “successor of Peter” chose not to mention this one-sided reality. Instead, he offered a feel-good vignette about Mary gathering “everyone as children.”


Worse, the pope’s gesture reveals a deeper theological surrender.
 
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