PARIS,
December 31, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – At the Porte de Clingncourt
underground terminal in northern Paris, a couple of youths are busy
distributing gospels among passers-by in their annual tradition on the
eve of the New Year. But most of the receivers were apparently Muslims
and Arabs at the heavily populated Muslim area of Saint Quen.
“An
increasing number of Muslims convert to Christianity especially on
Christmas,” Fadila, a Parisian of Algerian origin, told
IslamOnline.net while handing out gospels translated into Arabic to
people of North African appearance.
“Arabs
and Muslims are fed up with the badly damaged image of their faith [in
the West] and escaped to the Messiah. Every Sunday the Church of Saint
Quen receives a new batch of Muslims,” added Fadila, who converted
to Christianity three years ago.
French
Arabs have changed their names to spare themselves police and
employers' discrimination, and dozens have opted for the new lease of
life to escape the harsh reality.
French
Muslims and Arabs, estimated at some six million, are heavily
concentrated in the Paris suburb of Saint Denis, the scene of deadly
riots by angry immigrant youths in October.
Years
of government negligence and marginalization have turned the northern
Paris district of Saint Denis, where half a million Muslims live, into
a hotbed for unemployment and aberration.
Many
voiced anger at racial discrimination despite being born in France, a
lack of educational and employment prospects and police harassment.
First
Church
IOL
correspondent says that Algerian tribesmen who immigrated to France
are the favorite target of proselytizers.
He
says that the converts have established the first North African church
in France and called it Notre Dame de Kabylie.
They
further founded the Iqbal Association in 2001 with the maim task of
proselytizing North Africans and giving some advice to the newcomers
to stick to their new faith.
Followers
of the international Jehovah's Witnesses organization, a mix of
Christianity and Judaism, have also joined the proselytizing drive in
France, paying visits to Muslims at their homes carrying their books
and presents, says IOL correspondent.
The
organization branch in France have further distributed their tenets
glossy magazines and brochures in Arabic.
Christian
organizations in secular France, in general, are used to sending Santa
Claus to schools on Christmas Eve to distribute presents and sweets to
children irrespective of their religion.
The
Christmas tree with its ornaments has proved a source of friction last
Christmas as some teachers in a Paris school demanded to remove it
because it violated the secular nature of the state.
There
is no official data on the number of Muslims who converted to Christianity in
France.
But
France Echos Web site, however, put at 7,000 the number of North
Africans who converted to Christianity over the past few years.
The
Web site, which closely follows up news of proselytizing in the
country, said some 50,000 Christians had reverted to Islam according
to a 2004 study undertaken by French security agencies.