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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 30
    Dec
    2012
    3:30pm, EST

    Attack on Coptic church building in Libya kills two

    By Ali Shuaib, Reuters
    TRIPOLI, Libya --  A bombing on Sunday at a building belonging to a Coptic church in western Libya killed two Egyptian men and wounded two others, a military spokesman said.

    Attackers threw a homemade bomb at an administration building belonging to the Egyptian Coptic church in Dafniya, close to the western city of Misrata, said Ibrahim Rajab of the Misrata military council.

    The Egyptian consul in the city, Tareq Dahrouj, said he visited the church and the building where the two church workers were killed early on Sunday.


    "The explosion seems like it was very strong and I have started making my investigations with Misrata officials,'' he said.Libya has small communities of Egyptians, Greeks and Italians who account for most of the Christian minority in the predominantly Islamic country.

    Libya's new rulers have struggled to impose their authority on myriad armed groups who helped oust dictator Moammar Gadhafi last year but have yet to lay down their arms. Sunday's attack was the first major assault on a Christian target since the revolution.

    Coptic Christians in Egypt have become increasingly worried after an upsurge in attacks on churches, which they blame on hardline Islamists, in the wake of the removal from office in 2011 of President Hosni Mubarak.

    Repeated attacks on foreign diplomatic and aid centers in Libya's eastern city of Benghazi have made it very dangerous for non-locals to work and live there.

    Related story

    Obama on Benghazi: 'This was a huge problem'

    The worst attack on a foreign target was on Sept. 11, when the U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three embassy staff were killed in an attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi.

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    71 comments

    Islam has no respect for the rights of religious minorities.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: libya, bombing, islam, coptic, misrata
  • 13
    Dec
    2012
    5:36pm, EST

    Egyptian Copts gather in cave cathedral ahead of vote on a constitution

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    An Egyptian flag is waved as thousands of Egyptian Copts attend a Mass in the Cave Cathedral, or St Sama'ans, in the Manshiet Nasser district of Cairo on Dec. 13, 2012, where they prayed for Egypt ahead of the disputed referendum on the new draft constitution slated for Saturday.

    An Egyptian flag is waved as thousands of Egyptian Copts attend a Mass in the Cave Cathedral, or St Sama'ans, in the Manshiet Nasser district of Cairo on Dec. 13, 2012, where they prayed for Egypt ahead of the disputed referendum on the new draft constitution slated for Saturday. President Mohammed Morsi and his Islamist allies support the charter while a wide spectrum of liberals, youth groups and others see both the process and the draft as flawed.

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    Egyptian Copts attend a Mass in the Cave Cathedral or St Sama'ans in Cairo on Dec. 13.

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    An Egyptian man prays as thousands of Egyptian Copts attend a Mass in the Cave Cathedral in Cairo on Dec. 13

    Related content:

    Egypt's ElBaradei pleas for vote postponement

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Protests in Egypt continue despite Morsi's concession
    • Morsi leaves presidential palace in Cairo amid protests
    • A blindfolded child's weighty task: Pick a new pope

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    6 comments

    The Muslims are acting in their typical aggressive manner. A secular pluralistc Egypt is needed.Send the Brothethood back to prison where they were before.They support terrorism both internally and abroad.This Morsi guy doesn´t even bother to hide his devil´s tail anymore.Super bad news  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: egypt, middle-east, religion, world-news, christian, coptic
  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    1:55pm, EST

    Coptic Christians seek solace in their faith, while facing turmoil in Egypt

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Coptics participate in a mass at the Cave Cathedral or St . Sama'ans Church in the Moqattam area, Cairo, Egypt, on Nov. 8. Egypt's Christian minority, about 10 percent of the population of more than 80 million, has long complained of discrimination. But Christians fear things are reaching a crisis point since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak nearly two years ago and the subsequent rise to power of Islamists. The Church itself is undergoing a major transition: A new pope, Tawadros II, is to be enthroned in Cairo on Sunday, succeeding Shenouda III, the man who led the Church for 40 years and was revered by Copts as their protector until his death in March. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Coptic woman shops for vegetables in the Moqattam area, Cairo, Egypt, on Nov. 11.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Coptic pilgrim prays during a ceremony at Mar Girgis Monastery, near Luxor, Egypt.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Coptic girl prays during a mass at the Cave Cathedral or St. Sama'ans Church in the Moqattam area, Cairo, Egypt, on Nov. 8.

    AP reports -- There was no mention of churches torched or Christians killed, but the prayer neatly written on a tiny piece of paper and placed atop an icon of St. George in the chapel of a desert monastery left no doubt about the growing fear and despair of Egypt's Coptic Christians.

    "Oh Lord, for the sake of all the saints of the church, raise high the banner of the cross and vanquish our enemies, the enemies of the church," it read. "Make our enemies realize their weakness, foil their actions against us, bring joy to our hearts, increase our profit and make us victorious."

    There were folded slips of paper all over the icon of the Christian knight rearing on his steed and skewering a dragon with his spear. Tucked into its frame, piled on a small table below it, spilling on the floor around it, all pleas to God for health, fertility, wealth, happiness — and protection. Copts stood motionless in prayer before the image. Others broke into hymns praising his valor. Wanting to linger in the saint's presence, families picnicked on the chapel floor, gossiping and eating sandwiches.

    A blindfolded child's weighty task: Pick a new pope

    The past week, hundreds of thousands of Copts from across the country flocked to the monastery of Mar Girgis, as St. George is known in Arabic, in one of the biggest and most exuberant events of the year for Egypt's Christians. The annual pilgrimage at the walled monastery in the deserts of southern Egypt overlooking the Nile is a festival of faith, a time to pay homage to the 3rd Century saint who is one of the most revered figures of Christianity's oldest Church.

    It is also an opportunity for Christians to exult in their identity in an atmosphere away from the daily discrimination — large and small, subtle and blatant — that they say they increasingly face in this nation where the Muslim majority has been growing more conservative for decades.

    Continue reading.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Coptic pilgrim holds a candle during a ceremony at Mar Girgis Monastery, near Luxor, Egypt, on Nov. 12.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A woman who believes she is possessed by the devil, reacts while waiting to be exorcised by Coptic priest father Makari, not pictured, during an evening mass in a church in Cairo, Egypt, on Nov. 9.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A young Coptic young girl pilgrim gets a tattoo during a ceremony at Mar Girgis Monastery, near Luxor, Egypt, on Nov. 13.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Coptics participate in a mass at the Cave Cathedral or St. Sama'ans Church in the Moqattam area, Cairo, Egypt.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A Coptic vendor waits for customers near Mar Girgis Monastery, near Luxor, Egypt, on Nov. 12.

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    1 comment

    Egypt needs to show more religious tolerance if it wants to be considered one of the leading nations of the world!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: egypt, religion, world-news, christian, north-africa, coptic
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    6:38am, EST

    A blindfolded child's weighty task: Pick a new pope

    Mohammed Abu Zeid / AP

    Young boys wait anxiously to hear which one of them will be selected to choose the new pope of Egypt's ancient Coptic Christian church, in Cairo on Nov. 3, 2012.

    Nasser Nasser / AP

    A blindfolded boy draws the name of the next pope from a crystal chalice next to acting Coptic Pope Pachomios, center, during the papal election ceremony at the Coptic Cathedral in Cairo on Nov. 4, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports from Cairo — A blindfolded child reached into a crystal chalice and pulled out a slip of paper — and Egypt's Coptic Christians had a new pope.

    The colorful but solemn ceremony at the Cairo cathedral of the troubled minority reflected none of the tensions outside. It was the end of a complicated process that began when the church's charismatic leader for four decades, Pope Shenouda III, died in March at the age of 88.

    Roger Anis / AP

    Egyptian Copts crowded into the cathedral for the papal election ceremony on Nov. 4, 2012.

    At the Coptic Cathedral, there was a moment of silence. Then a boy, himself chosen by lottery, his face covered by a dark blue cloth decorated with religious images, was led to the chalice. Copts believe that his hand would be guided by God. He reached into the vessel and pulled out the name of Bishop Tawadros, who will be the next spiritual leader of the Copts.

    Read more about how the new Coptic pope was selected.

    Nasser Nasser / AP

    Acting Pope Pachomios, center, displays the name of 60-year-old Bishop Tawadros, soon to be Pope Tawadros II, while another clergyman displays the names of the remaining two candidates, Bishop Raphael and Father Raphael Ava Mina, during the papal election ceremony on Nov. 4, 2012.

    Khaled Elfiqi / EPA

    Bishoy Gerges waves to the audience after he picked out the name of Bishop Tawadros from a glass urn on Nov. 4, 2012.

    Roger Anis / El Shorouk via AP

    Bishop Tawadros, 60, soon to be Pope Tawadros II, greets well-wishers, not shown, after being named the 118th Coptic Pope on Nov. 4, 2012.

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    28 comments

    How quaint and medieval. I wonder how many of them are aware that the Earth is round, that Jupiter has lots of big moons, and that we have a heliocentric solar system. If only 10% of them know that, then they'll still be ahead of the US evangelical voters.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: egypt, religion, pope, world-news, christian, north-africa, featured, coptic, pope-tawadros
  • 4
    Oct
    2012
    4:35am, EDT

    Coptic Christian boys in Egypt accused of urinating on Quran

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    CAIRO -- Two Coptic Christian boys in Egypt accused of tearing up a copy of the Quran and urinating on it have been placed in juvenile detention, a lawyer for the children told Reuters on Wednesday.

    Residents of Marco village in the province of Beni Suef south of Cairo filed complaints against the two brothers, Mina Nadi, 9, and Nabil Nadi, 10, who were then detained on Tuesday and charged with blasphemy, lawyer Gamal Eid said.

    NBC News' Richard Engel spoke with former Arab League chief and former Egyptian foreign minister, Amr Moussa, to ask why there has been so much anti-American violence despite U.S. support of the Arab Spring.

    It is the latest in a series of incidents involving religious insults, including protests last month over a film made in California that mocked the Prophet Muhammad, that have increased tensions between Muslims and Christians in Egypt and around the world.

    Egypt issues arrest warrants for Terry Jones, Coptic Christians over anti-Islam video

    Residents of the village and reporters said a passerby had on Monday seen the children ripping up pages of a copy of the Quran and urinating on it in front of the local mosque, Reuters said.

    The passerby took the two boys to the local priest to condemn them for the incident, the residents said, but he was not satisfied with what he viewed as the priest's insufficient reprimand and decided to file a complaint to the police.

    Slideshow: Anger over film spreads throughout Muslim world

    Protests ignited by a controversial film that ridicules Islam's Prophet Muhammad spread throughout Muslim world.

    Launch slideshow

    It was not immediately clear why the children had desecrated the Quran, but some residents said the boys were playing and were not incited by anyone to conduct the act.

    Ishak Ibrahim, a researcher with the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), was quoted by the English-language newspaper Daily News Egypt as saying that the children denied the incident and that one of them is illiterate.

    Residents said that prosecutors had ordered that the boys be detained for seven days pending an investigation.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Security was stepped up around the village on Tuesday to prevent a potential flare-up of sectarian violence after a group of Muslims gathered around the police station where the children were being held to demand their prosecution, residents said.

    At least 20 suspected Islamic militants have been killed in a major security crackdown by Egypt near the border with Israel. Security forces on both sides of the border are on high alert. NBC News' John Ray reports.

    Around 10 percent of Egypt's 83 million people are Christian, many of whom have been concerned about the political rise of Islamists after a popular uprising ousted Hosni Mubarak last year.

    Q&A: Coptic Christians on film sparking protests

    Ibrahim told Daily News Egypt that there had recently been a rapid increase in charges of blasphemy, or 'contempt of religion'.

    "These incidents are on the rise and we are seeing an increase in contempt of religion cases and unfortunately most of the cases end up with jail sentences," he told the newspaper.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    331 comments

    The Quran is Blasphemy!!!

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  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    12:59pm, EDT

    Americans kidnapped in Egypt on church bus trip released

    Rev. Michel Louis was on a church group trip when he was abducted in Egypt, along with woman in the group and a tour guide. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    By Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News

    CAIRO -- Two American tourists abducted in Egypt's Sinai region while on a church bus tour of the Middle East were released on Monday after three days in captivity, officials told NBC News.

    Pastor Rev. Michel Louis, 61 and another woman, 39 – both from Boston – were kidnapped on Friday by a Bedouin tribesman who was angry at the jailing of his uncle on drug charges.


    It was not immediately clear if their Egyptian tour guide, who was also taken hostage, had been released.

    Egyptian authorities had sought help from local tribal leaders to mediate with the tribesman.

    The abduction took place along the road linking Cairo to the sixth-century St. Catherine's Monastery, located at the foot of Mount Sinai where the Old Testament says Moses received the stone tablets with the Ten Commandments.

    The route is a frequent target by Bedouins who abduct tourists to pressure police to meet their demands, which is usually to release a detained relative they say has been unjustly arrested.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Red Cross: Syria is now in civil war, humanitarian law applies
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    Follow World News on msnbc.com on Twitter 

     

    62 comments

    I used to want to travel to far away places like Egypt but I think I am going to wait. The United States is so diverse, why not just travel and see the various beautiful views on the home field right? They don't like me, they don't want me and I am ok with that.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: egypt, church, kidnap, embassy, christian, featured, coptic, bedouin
  • 20
    Mar
    2012
    11:43am, EDT

    Father to 'all Arabs': Egyptians mourn death of Coptic pope

    Gianluigi Guercia / AFP - Getty Images

    Pallbearers carry the coffin of Pope Shenouda III out of Saint Mark's cathedral during his funeral service in Cairo on Tuesday.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com and news services

    CAIRO – Thousands of mourners dressed in black gathered in Cairo on Tuesday for the funeral of Egypt's Orthodox Christian Pope Shenouda, who was revered my millions throughout the country as a leader for all Egyptians.

    Copts felt like "they were nobodies" after Shenouda's death, mourner Mina Hany Naeem, 17, told NBC News.

    "With him I felt like I was wearing white and everyone looked at me, and without him I feel naked and everyone is looking at me," he said. "When he was Pope nobody ever said Muslim and Christian – we were all Egyptians."


    Shenouda, who died on Saturday at age 88, promoted religious harmony, winning respect among the Muslim majority, but his last years witnessed a growth in sectarian tension that worsened with the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak last year.

    "Pope Shenouda was a father to us all, to all Arabs, a very patriotic person," mourner Saber Farag Saleh, a 50-year-old construction engineer, told NBC News. "He protected us from divisions. He taught us to love the other and all religions."

    Taha Belal / NBC News

    "The Pope was loved by everyone, we were all nobodies without him," Mina Hany Naeen, a 17-year-old student, told NBC in Cairo on Tuesday.

    Religious figures from several countries, including a Catholic delegation from the Vatican, and foreign ambassadors massed in the Orthodox Cathedral as long-bearded Coptic priests wearing bulbous black miters prayed over Shenouda's body lying in an open coffin, a golden miter upon his head and a gold-tipped staff in his hand.

    Christians gather to bid farewell to Egypt's Pope Shenouda III

    A delegation from the ruling military council and several candidates for Egypt's upcoming presidential elections attended the funeral. Security was tight, with dozens of police and army trucks scattered around the cathedral and plainclothes police posted on bridges and in streets nearby.

    The prayers were led by Bishop Bakhomious, head of the church of Bahaira, a district in the Nile Delta north of Cairo, who will temporally hold the post of pope for two months until a new leader is elected.

    'Fix all problems with prayer'
    Some mourners worried who would follow Shenouda, who spent his final years trying to comfort a community disturbed by the rise of political Islam.

    "It's a big loss, he looked after us all, it's a big loss for all Christians and Muslims," teacher Jaqueleen Mikhail, 25, told NBC News. "Nobody will ever be like the Pope Shenouda, he was humble and full of love and wise. He would fix all problems with prayer."

    Egypt has seen less of the religious violence and discrimination that prompted members of ancient Christian communities to migrate from Iraq and other Arab countries.

    But Coptic Christians, who comprise about a tenth of Egypt's 80 million people, have long complained of discrimination and in the past year stepped up protests, which included calls for new rules that would make it as easy to build a church as a mosque.

    Taha Belal / NBC News

    "Pope Shenouda was a father to us all, to all Arabs, a very patriotic person," mourner Saber Farag Saleh, a 50-year-old construction engineer, told NBC News in Cairo on Tuesday.

    Shenouda strongly opposed Islamic militancy but strove to quell growing anger among Copts at Islamic extremism, attacks on churches and sectarian clashes often sparked by inter-faith romances and church building permits.

    Photo blog: Egypt's Coptic Christians mourn the death of Pope Shenouda III

    Many Muslims were among the mourners. He was a familiar figure for generations of Egyptians and Muslim Egyptians respected him as a staunch nationalist, an outspoken critic of Israel and a social conservative.

    Dr. Essam Arian,  a member of parliament and the deputy of the Freedom and Justice Party (the Muslim Brotherhood's political party) said that he was planning to attend the funeral. "We hope the next pope can continue in the path of  reconciliation.  History will judge him.”

    Sheikh Zachariah Mohammed Marzouq, the second Imam of Al Azhar Mosque, echoed those comments. 

    “He was a wise man and a national figure.... He managed by his wisdom to dissolve any kind of conflict between the sects of the nation, the Christians and the masses of Muslims," said Marzouq. "He was a man inviting peace and love and brotherhood.  We send our condolences to our brothers the Copts on the loss of Pope Shenouda."

    Thousands have paid their respects at the cathedral since he died. For much of the time, Shenouda's body was put in a seated position on a ceremonial throne dressed in gold and red embroidered vestments.

    On Sunday, the cathedral had to close its doors several times in an attempt to contain the crowds. Two mourners died killed in the crush, medical sources said.

    The burial is expected to take place at the Wadi el Natrun monastery in the desert northwest of Cairo, where the late pope had requested he be interred.

    NBC News' Charlene Gusbash and Taha Belal, msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    32 comments

    Wish we had more of such inclusive and tolerant religious leaders here in the US... instead of bigoted, bile spewing, fundamentalist, women-hating a**holes.

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  • 18
    Mar
    2012
    1:15pm, EDT

    Christians gather to bid farewell to Egypt's Pope Shenouda III

    Khaled Desouki / AFP - Getty Images

    A Coptic Christian mourns the death of Pope Shenouda III, the spiritual leader of the Middle East's largest Christian minority on March 18.

    Khaled Desouki / AFP - Getty Images

    An Egyptian Christian Copt mourns the death of Pope Shenouda III, spiritual leader of the Middle East's largest Christian minority, in Saint Mark Cathedral in Cairo.

    Christians gathered on Sunday to pay final respects to Pope Shenouda III, who sought to soothe sectarian tension in his four decades atop Egypt's Orthodox Church but saw increasing flare-ups in the majority Muslim nation in the last months of his life.

    Friction has worsened since President Hosni Mubarak, who suppressed Islamists, was ousted last year. Since then Shenouda, who died on Saturday aged 88, often called for harmony and regularly met Muslim and other leaders.

    Christians, who comprise about a tenth of Egypt's 80 million people, have long complained of discrimination and in the past year stepped up protests, which included calls for new rules that would make it as easy to build a church as a mosque.

    Shenouda had served as the 117th Pope of Alexandria since November 1971, leading the Orthodox community who make up most of Egypt's Christians. His funeral will be held on Tuesday, Egyptian state media reported. 

    -- Reuters contributed to this blog post

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    Related links:

    • Christians gather to bid farewell to Egypt's Pope 
    • Pope Shenouda, religious peacemaker and Mubarak ally 
    • Pope of Egypt's Coptic Christian Church dies

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori / Reuters

    Egyptian Christians gather to mourn the death of Pope Shenouda III, the head of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox Church, outside the Abbasiya Cathedral in Cairo on March 18.

    Ammar Awad / Reuters

    A Coptic Christian priest holds candles next to a picture of Egyptian Coptic Christian Pope Shenouda III in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem's Old City on March 18.

    16 comments

    The christians have an uphill fight now just to survive. 9 to 1 odds against the most violent religion ever.

    Show more
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