| CAIRO, Egypt (BP) -- For Christians living in predominantly Muslim Egypt, the week of June 24 began with a heavy question: What does the election of an Islamic-fundamentalist president mean for the future of Christians in the country? That question rings as loud as the cheers that erupted from Cairo's Tahrir Square when Egyptian officials announced Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammed Morsi narrowly won a presidential runoff against former regime member Ahmed Shafiq. No doubt, the occasion was momentous: Morsi's win marked the first time Egyptians had freely elected a president in their country's modern history. Revolutionaries overthrew former President Hosni Mubarak's 30 years of dictatorial rule last year. Nearly 16 months later, Egyptian voters had chosen a leader for themselves in a country that had suppressed free speech and harbored corruption for decades. The tens of thousands of demonstrators packing Tahrir Square on June 24 seemed to celebrate the freedom to elect a president as much -- if not more -- than the president they elected. Indeed, Morsi had garnered tepid support during the first rounds of presidential elections in May. But when those contests put him into a runoff with a former member of Mubarak's regime, Egyptians faced a stark choice: a throwback to the old ways or a future with an Islamist leader. Even some secularists chose the Islamic leader after military officials made a series of sweeping declarations on the eve of the runoff: The ruling military council drained the presidency of significant powers and held onto powers of legislation and security for itself. Many Egyptians balked at what they saw as a bald power grab at best and an intentional coup at worst. If that helped propel Morsi to win, it's unclear what powers he'll possess in coming weeks. Demonstrators say they are determined to force the military council to return powers to the presidency ahead of a scheduled handover to civilian rule on Sunday, July 1. Meanwhile, minority groups -- including Christians that make up as much as 10 percent of the population -- wonder what Morsi's win means for them in the long run. In an email two days after Morsi's victory, Pastor Sameh Maurice of Kasr el Dobara Church in Cairo told WORLD that Christians are concerned about Morsi's presidency. Kasr el Dobara -- the largest evangelical congregation in the Middle East -- has had a front-row seat to the massive demonstrations over the last year for a simple reason: The church sits just off Tahrir Square. During last year's 18-day revolution that ousted Mubarak, the church's volunteer doctors tended injured protesters and interacted with demonstrators in the streets. Continued... |