To me, one of the most poignant facets of the article is that some of the targets appear to be eastern Christians. Fox says that St. Andrew, the church in the first anecdote, includes members with roots in Syria, Iraq, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. And Chaldean Christians from Iraq, worshiping in San Diego, have hired security, just in case.
Can you imagine fleeing nearly halfway around the world, only to learn your persecutors are still stalking you? Actually, they don’t have to imagine it in Europe: Christians are being persecuted in refugee camps, according to Open Doors Germany.
Still another strength in the Fox report is noting the rise in anti-Semitic incidents, including outright crimes and conspiracies. It mentions, for one, the FBI arresting a Muslim convert in analleged plot to blow up the Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center in South Florida. The story notes that a counter-terrorism outfit of the Los Angeles Police Department works with Jewish, Muslim and Sikh groups on terrorism-related issues.
The counter-terrorism spokesman is one of a satisfying variety of sources in this report, including not only police and church people but academics and the watchdog group International Christian Concern.
Having praised the Fox article, I have a few criticisms.
In the Riverside incident in the lede, it’s not clear whether Ryan Railsback was the investigating officer or the public information officer. Either way, Fox should have asked him why the police report doesn’t say that some congregants said they heard shouts of “Allahu Akbar.”
There’s also the question of numbers.
“Jeff King, president of International Christian Concern, notes the threat tally is growing,” Fox says. And what is that tally?
Ryan Mauro, an officer from the Clarion Project says that “many churches” are hiring security guards or self-defense instructors. How many is many?
And what is the Clarion Project? It’s an anti-jihadi group that has, for one thing, produced thosefierce films about Islamic extremism, like Obsession and The Third Jihad. Mauro is clearly afavorite on Fox News, but he’s also often dinged as a fearmongerer. Not that we should help his foes turn him into a pariah; but it may have been safer to add input from a group with broader acceptance, like the Center for Religious Freedom at Freedom House.
Finally, although Fox News associates anti-Christian hate with anti-Semitism, it stumbles in its documentation when it says, “A 2014 audit by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) found that anti-Semitic incidents rose 21 percent across the country that year.” Actually, that was the 2015 audit of events, which occurred in 2014. And why not get the 2016 audit, the most recent report? Perhaps because the rise was slower, at 3 percent? But assaults, the most violent anti-Semitic category, rose more than 50 percent rise from 2014.
Please note, though, that most of my criticisms here are comparatively minor. They have to do with sourcing and fact checking, issues that I find all too common in mainstream media these days. But the article serves a vital journalistic function of not only reporting facts but spotting trends.
And after seeing the trends in the Middle East and Europe, there is little reason to believe churches in North America will be exempt. I’m sure they don’t think so at St. Andrew’s Church in Riverside.