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Doha: The first Christian church in the
conservative Muslim state of Qatar since the arrival of
Islam in the 7th century is to be built on land donated
by the reform-minded Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin
Khalifa alThani.
The $7
million development of the Church of the Epiphany, which
will not have a spire or freestanding cross, will begin
early next year.
Clive
Handford, the Nicosia-based Anglican Bishop in Cyprus
and the Gulf, says: “We are there as guests in a Muslim
country and we wish to be sensitive to our hosts ... but
once you’re inside the gates it will be quite obvious
that you are in a Christian center.”
The
walkways and grounds of the church, in Qatar’s capital,
Doha, will have crosses and flower motifs resembling
those used in early Christian churches. “We hope that
the center can be a base for ongoing Muslim-Christian
dialogue,” Bishop Handford told The Monitor.
Qatar’s
Anglican community, which has held services in an
English-language school in Doha for decades, is
estimated to number between 7,000 and 10,000 people.
“Our church is like a microcosm of the Anglican
community,” says Ian Young, who has been the chief
Anglican priest in Doha since 1991. “I’ve got 28
nationalities from every continent.”
Dr.
Young, who is from Perth in Scotland, will run the new
church. “It will be a home for people who are away from
home,” he says. “As well as a place of worship, it will
be a place where people can meet.”
The
complex will include conference facilities, temporary
living accommodations, a library, and a cafe. Also in
the works, with land again provided by the Emir, are
church buildings to serve Catholics - who comprise the
majority of Qatar’s 70,000 Christian expatriates -
Egyptian Coptic Christians and Indian Christians.
Missionaries brought Christianity to the Gulf in the
second half of the 5th century but it disappeared from
most Gulf Arab states within a few centuries of the
arrival of Islam. Over the past 100 years, particularly
since the discovery of oil, Christian expatriates have
migrated to the region which is currently enjoying an
economic boom that is attracting more foreign workers.
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This page
is updated on February 21, 2009 |
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