{"id":144529,"date":"2024-11-27T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2024-11-27T05:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/carfundacion.roymo.info\/blog\/et_pb_layout\/extracto-post\/"},"modified":"2025-06-04T17:55:19","modified_gmt":"2025-06-04T15:55:19","slug":"persecucion-religiosa-e-intolerancia-siglo-xxi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fundacioncarf.org\/en\/persecucion-religiosa-e-intolerancia-siglo-xxi\/","title":{"rendered":"Religious persecution and intolerance in the 21st century"},"content":{"rendered":"
The persecution<\/a> The religious persecution suffered by many Christians has been provoked by public authorities, by non-Christian groups or by other Christians of different faiths throughout the history of the world.\u00a0Christianity<\/a>.<\/p>\n Persecutions of any kind are deplorable acts, especially those of a religious nature, because they limit the freedom of human beings in their relationship with God. Unfortunately, universal history has shown us that religious persecutions have their origin in ancient times.<\/p>\n In the case of the recent history of Spain, cited as a reference in numerous works, a detailed study published in 1961 by Antonio Montero Moreno, identified a total of 6,832 religious victims murdered in the Republican territory, of which 13 were bishops; 4,184, diocesan priests; 2,365, religious; and 283, nuns. In a study published in 2001, the researcher and priest \u00c1ngel David Mart\u00edn Rubio lowered the total number of members of the clergy murdered during this period in the Republican zone to 6,733.<\/p>\n We know that intolerance is the inability to accept other people's ideas, beliefs or practices when they are different from one's own and that the intolerant person is characterized by maintaining his or her opinion, without paying attention to others.<\/p>\n We also know that when the emotional or passionate component is added, intolerance becomes fanaticism or that, when there is an excessive attachment to following fundamental texts to the letter out of their context, we fall into fundamentalism.<\/p>\n As human attitudes, all of them violate people's dignity, with the most common reasons being race, sex or religion.<\/p>\n Finally, we know that tolerance is an acquired habit<\/strong> and, therefore, a competence that humans can develop voluntarily, since our natural instinct would lead us down the path of intolerance and aggression.<\/p>\n We could deduce up to this point that the origin of the problem is personal<\/strong>The \"own\" of each one of us, and that it depends on the education received in our family, social and cultural environment.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n Francis also asked that \"no one be considered a second-class citizen,\" especially Christians, who represent 1% of the population in the Muslim country, and the Yazidis, a minority persecuted by the Islamic State.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n According to the latest report of Aid to the Church in Need, presented at the end of 2014, a total of 55 countries in the world (28%), have suffered in the last two years a marked worsening or deterioration of religious freedom.<\/strong><\/p>\n In 14 of the 20 countries that suffer persecution for professing the Catholic religion, it is linked to the islamism<\/a> In the other 6, the persecution is linked to authoritarian regimes, most of them communist.<\/p>\nPursuit<\/h3>\n
Intolerance<\/h3>\n
Consequences of religious persecution and intolerance\u00a0<\/h3>\n