Saturday, December 13, 1997
Christian groups lobby here, work abroad
By KENNETH JOST / Congressional Quarterly
WASHINGTON -- After working in government for nearly 10 years,
Jim Jacobson followed the path taken by many other Washington
staffers: He joined a private-interest group. In his new job,
Jacobson still travels some familiar corridors on Capitol Hill.
But his work also takes him as far away as China.
Jacobson is president of the U.S. branch of Christian Solidarity
International, a human rights and relief organization. In the
United States, the group has lobbied for the religious persecution
legislation introduced in Congress earlier this year. It also
organized a petition drive to complain that the Clinton administration's
new ambassador to China, former Sen. Jim Sasser, D-Tenn., had
no familiarity before his appointment with the underground "house
church" movement among Chinese Christians.
The organization was founded by a Swiss minister in 1977 to
help persecuted Christians within the Soviet Union. Today, its
British branch is working in Sudan to buy back young Christians
taken as slaves by Muslim troops in the country's bloody civil
war -- efforts that the U.S. branch helped publicize.
Christian Solidarity is one of a number of groups helping persecuted
Christians around the world. Most of the groups have limited budgets
and get little coverage in the secular media. But leaders of the
U.S. campaign are working to bring them greater visibility.
Many of the groups, like Christian Solidarity, began by helping
Christians in communist countries. In recent years, some have
either shifted or expanded their focus to Islamic countries. For
example, the Rev. Keith Roderick, an Episcopal priest in Illinois,
began working in 1982 with Aid to Soviet Christians but now heads
an umbrella organization, the Coalition for the Defense of Human
Rights Under Islamization.
In the early days, some of the groups worked primarily to get
Bibles into countries where distribution was restricted. Open
Doors with Brother Andrew was founded by a Dutch minister who
began smuggling Bibles behind the Iron Curtain in the 1950s. "It's
still an important part of what we do -- taking God's word into
countries where there are not established channels for the importation
of Bibles," says Mike Yoder, director of communications for
the group's U.S. branch.
Yoder acknowledges that more established Christian mission
groups complain that Bible-smuggling "hurts what they're
trying to do because it hurts above-ground activities."
Some groups focus solely on an individual country. The Cardinal
Kung Foundation monitors religious persecution in China. Others
have an international focus. The largest is the World Evangelical
Fellowship, in Singapore, which has spearheaded the campaign for
the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church.
These organizations have a conservative political orientation.
Jacobson worked in the Reagan and Bush administrations and for
a conservative Republican senator. The Christian Coalition, a
core support group for conservative Republicans, has led the lobbying
campaign for the legislation.
But Roderick says the campaign is being "misconstrued"
as a conservative movement. "This is really a humanitarian
issue," Roderick says. "It should not be a liberal issue
or conservative issue, a Republican or Democratic issue."
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.)
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