Shawn Powers
May 4, 2009
Al-Jazeera is reporting that members of the US military, led by Lieutenant-Colonel Gary Hensley, the chief of the US military chaplains in Afghanistan, have been “proselytizing” the Christian faith in Afghanistan. Al-Jazeera obtained video from Brian Hughes, a former member of the US military who recorded training sessions at Bagram Air Base during a visit just over a year ago. The footage shows stacks of bibles, translated into Pashto and Dari, evidently ready for distribution by US troops to local Afghanis. Perhaps most controversial is footage in which Hensley while delivering a sermon to a packed evangelical church on the Bagram Air Base, told his audience: “The special forces guys – they hunt men…We do the same things as Christians, we hunt people for Jesus,” adding, “get the hound of heaven after them, so we get them into the kingdom. That’s what we do, that’s our business.”
Promoting any type of religion is against Department of Defense (DOD) regulations, specifically General Order Number 1, which makes it illegal for any US military personnel to “[p]roselytizing any religion, faith, or practice.” Despite this, the report includes footage of Captain Emmit Furner, a military chaplain, explaining to a group of troops that while they aren’t allowed to proselytize, they “can give gifts.” As an example of the fine line between proselytizing and gift giving, Sergeant Jon Watt, a soldier set to become a military chaplain, explained to his fellow US serviceman, “I bought a carpet and then I gave the guy a Bible after I conducted my business.”
Approximately 99 percent of Afghanis are Muslim (mostly Sunni), and “Islam is a central, pervasive influence throughout Afghan society.” The Constitution of Afghanistan mandates the death penalty for apostasy from Islam (via the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence). The last known Afghani Christian convert, Abdul Rahman only escaped the death penalty because the Afghani government, under significant pressure from the US and UK, let him sneak out of the country to seek asylum in Italy. Rahman was first arrested in 2006 for merely possessing a Bible, and after his arrest, he was unable to find a single lawyer in Kabul wiling to defend him. In 2005, a news report about U.S. interrogators desecrating the Quran triggered riots in Afghanistan, leaving several people dead. One can only imagine what would happen if an American soldier was found distributing Bibles throughout Afghanistan.
Over at the Huffington Post, Jeremy Scahill notes how this story will confirm wide-spread perceptions in the region that US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq are fighting a “war on Islam,” Indeed, it is precisely this meme that has made US public diplomacy outreach to Muslims since 9/11 so difficult. Couched in a narrative of a “war on Islam,” American military efforts, regardless of their positive contribution to Afghani society, will be seen as hostile to the majority of Afghanis who have very little actual interaction with US soldiers. While U.S. military spokeswoman Major Jennifer Willis has since responded to the report, arguing that the sermons “were taken out of context and chaplains were told to make clear to soldiers that they could not proselytize while serving,” it is difficult to imagine that most Afghanis will find such commentary credible in the face of such compelling and credible video filmed by a former member of the US military.
US troops urged to share faith in Afghanistan
