Romania celebrated first national day of remembrance of persecuted Christians

The date commemorates the death of Constantin Brancoveanus, an 18th century prince executed by the Ottomans for refusing to convert to Islam.

    Evangelical Focus

    Pro Medien Magazin · BUCHAREST · 18 AUGUST 2020 · 11:30 CET

    A view of the Romanian Parliament, in Bucharest, by night. / <a target="_blank" href="https://unsplash.com/@catlyn05">Catalyna Apostol</a>, Unsplash, CC0,
    A view of the Romanian Parliament, in Bucharest, by night. / Catalyna Apostol, Unsplash, CC0

    Romania commemorated on 16 August its first national day of remembrance of persecuted Christians worldwide.

    The country’s parliament approved the implementation of this official commemoration after the initiative of Daniel Gheorghe, a Member of Parliament of the National Liberal Party.

    “Every year more Christians worldwide become victims of violence”, the politician told German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sontagszeitung. The authors of the attacks against religious freedom, he said, range from “Islamists and Jihadists to totalitarian regimes such as North Korea and China”.

    In Romania, the date commemorates the death of Constantin Brancoveanus, a prince of Wallachia, a region in the south of the country. He was executed by the Ottomans on August 15, 1714 with his sons and a confidante. They are said to have refused to convert to Islam. In the Romanian Orthodox Church, 16 August was already a day of remembrance for these martyrs since the early 90s.

    When asked about the state of religious freedom in Europe, Gheorge referred to the dangers of the “censorship of language”, restrictions of freedom of speech and the growth of “neo-Marxist” and “secular and nihilistic” ideologies.

    Hungary is another Eastern European country that holds official events to raise awareness about the persecution of Christians worldwide.

    The 2020 annual report of Open Doors concluded that Christians suffer “severe persecution” in 73 countries.

     

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    1 comments
    1 23/08/2020 · 12:16h
    Granville
    As an evangelical of reformed viewpoint in the USA it appears that Christians in Romania are far more willing to go against the postmodern globalist atheistic LGBTQ+ hegnomy than Christians here that criticize Pastor John McArthur for continuing to worship on the Lord's day despite the governors prohibition. USA Christians would rather obey the state than the Lord. Romanians have an historic example in Prince Constantin Brancoveanus of obedience to the Lord unto death. We might need that.