BBC Lies About the
Growth of Israel’s Christian Population
By Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz December 31, 2018 , 4:09 pm
Breaking Israel News
Latest News Biblical perspective
You too must
befriend the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.”
Deuteronomy 10:19 (The Israel Bible™)
Arab Christians take part in the Christmas Parade in the
Northern Israeli city of Nazareth, on Christmas Eve, on December 24, 2018.
(Credit: Anat Hermony/Flash90)
Recent statistics show that the Christian population of
Israel is flourishing but not everyone is happy to present that simple truth.
Last week, the Israel Bureau of Statistics published the
2018 figures on Christians living in Israel.
According to the report, approximately 175,000 Christians currently live in the
Holy Land making up two percent of the total population. Of those, 77.7 percent
are Arab Christians. This represents a 2.2 percent growth in Israel’s Christian
population in the past year.
The report showed that 70.6 percent of these Christians
live in northern Israel. Of the non-Arab Christians, 40.9 percent live in Tel
Aviv and other central districts, and 33.8 percent live in the north and in
Haifa.
BBC Watch reported
on an edition of the BBC Radio 4 program ‘World at One’ aired on December
26th. During the program, the UK Foreign Secretary was set to describe the
plight of persecuted Christians around the world. Presenter Jonny Dymond
introduced that section of the show by incorrectly saying that just as in other
Muslim majority
countries in the Middle East, the Christian population in Israel was shrinking.
“More than 200 million Christians are at risk of
persecution around the world – a number that has risen sharply over the past
few decades according to the Foreign Office,” Dymond said. “In Christianity’s
home – the Middle East – the numbers speak for themselves. Four fifths of
Iraq’s Christians have fled or been killed. In Israel and the Palestinian
territories as those following other religions have grown sharply in number,
the Christian population has shrunk. Today the Foreign Secretary Jeremy
Hunt ordered a review into the persecuted Christians around the world and how
much help they get from the UK.”
BBC Watch pointed out that the truth was precisely
the opposite of Dymond’s statement.
“In contrast to Dymond’s claim that the Christian
population of Israel has ‘shrunk,’ throughout the first 70 years of Israel’s
existence it steadily grew from 34,000 to 171,900,” BBC Watch wrote.
”Had Dymond confined himself to saying that in the Palestinian territories –
the parts of Judea & Samaria governed for decades by the Palestinian
Authority and the Gaza Strip now under Hamas control for over a decade – the
Christian population has shrunk, he would have been correct. However, his
inclusion of Israel in that claim is inaccurate and, particularly in an item
about persecution of Christian communities, materially misleading to BBC
audiences.”
Citing an article written by
Khaled Abu Toameh for the Gatestone Institute, BBC Watch noted
that the Christian population in Bethlehem has
suffered the most. In addition to being targeted by intimidation and land theft
perpetrated by Muslims backed by the Palestinian Authority, the Christian
population of Bethlehem has dwindled from more than 70 percent when Israel had
sovereignty over the area to less than 15% of the population since the PA took
over.
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