Christians in Afghanistan.

Underground church thrives despite Taliban

From God Reports

When a church leader and his family were all killed by the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2014, it sent a shockwave of fear over the underground church.

“This fear affects people,” says Ramazan Rafee, an Afghan who became a Christian. “But at the same time when you’re thirsty, it is not matter what will happen. I know it is dangerous. I know it is it is hard for me and for my family. But it is worth it.”

Ramazan eventually escaped Afghanistan. His bears witness that the church under the iron grip of Islamic rule in his country thrives, deep underground, despite proclamations by the Taliban government that there is no Christianity in the nation.

Ramazan Rafee was born into a Hazara family who believed in the strictest application of Sharia law. His own father was a mullah, a Muslim scholar.

But Ramazan began to doubt Islam because 60% of the Hazaras have been killed by the Afghan authorities (for belonging to the Shia branch of Islam because Taliban is Sunni).

“In Islam, they give you a boundary. If you would walk other side of that red line, then they label you as infidel,” Ramazan says. “I had a lot of questions about the nature of God, human suffering and the suffering of my people. Around 60 to 62% of Hazara people were killed by the authorities. Those authorities they were Muslim as well.”

Ramazan found himself staring down the barrel of a rifle — and his dad was the on aiming it with his finger on the trigger.

“I will kill you,” his dad growled.

His mother jumped in.

“First kill me, then Ramazan,” she screamed.

Ramazan left his village for the city of Kabul. At the time, the U.S. armed forces were still in Afghanistan with the hopes of building a Westernized democracy. There was some freedom in Kabul while the U.S. was there.

Ramazan had rejected Islam but believed there was a Creator, so he embarked on a quest to learn about different world religions. The Bible was a banned book in public. But Hitler’s Mein Kampf was available. That seemed strange.

“Is the Bible that bad?” he wondered. The fact that Bible was banned made it seem like they wanted to keep the truth away from him. “I thought, there is something going on here.”

Eventually, Ramazan found a foreigner who gave him a Bible and proceeded to study it with him. Ramazan got saved in 2009. “I was on fire. I shared the gospel with my family, with friends and classmates. Within a year, we were 12 individuals and two families,” he says.

The foreigner left Afghanistan, and Ramazan was left alone with his group of Christians. He integrated in the underground church, a network of more believers. It was dangerous — especially for house church leaders.

In 2014, one friend was killed, with his family, by the Taliban, despite the U.S. supposedly controlling the city and setting up a Westernized government.

Then the U.S. left abruptly in 2021. The military withdrawal under Biden was a disaster, with much military hardware left abandoned in the country. But things were worse for the Christians. The Taliban swept in and took over Kabul.

“I woke up and everything was different. I kissed my wife and kids and said, ‘Ok, maybe today is our last day,’” Ramazan says. He and church members deleted every Christian resource on their phones and laptops. “The Taliban were here. It was chaos like in a movie.”

A pastor stopped by to pick him up with his family. He had no idea where they were going or what the future held. They didn’t make it out of the country. They were at the airport when a bomb blast prevented people from leaving. They tried leaving in car.

For 36 days, they were moving around, constantly changing their location, on the run from the authorities.

“When the last airplane left Afghanistan, I said, ‘Ok, it’s over. God wants us to die here,’” he says. “The only thing I was praying was that when the Taliban would take us, they would shoot all of us, not only shooting me and take my wife and children.”

Ramazan wrestled with God during these days of anxiety. Amazingly, God calmed him.

Finally after 36 days, a security team showed up and took Ramazan and his family in cars to the northern border. They crossed nine checkpoints. There were flown to Qatar. “When I landed in Doha, Qatar, I was reading Psalm 18 God, you are my rock.”

Many of his brothers and sisters in Christ also made it out of the country. Still others stayed and went deep underground. Not only are the Christians there, there are new converts among them too.

“It’s more dangerous than ever to be a Christian in Afghanistan, yet people are still coming to Christ,” says Jamie Dean, of Radical. “The Spirit just moves.”

Terror Under The Taliban

‘They Kill Believers on the Spot’: Frightened Afghan Christian Woman Shares Horrors From Inside Taliban Nightmare

Photo: Open Doors USA/YouTube

An Aghan woman speaking under a pseudonym for fear of retribution said the Taliban are going “door-to-door” in Afghanistan, snatching up young girls, and killing Christians “on the spot.”

A woman named Gulshan shared her harrowing experience in an interview with persecution watchdog Open Doors USA, revealing the dire state of affairs and the ongoing hunger plight that has raged since the Taliban took back power last August.

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“The Taliban are going door-to-door snatching young girls and destroying families,” she said in an emotional video. “They are conducting a door-to-door search to find us, and if they find us, they kill believers on the spot.”

Gulshan said Christians in Afghanistan “live in fear” that they will either be killed by the Taliban or “die of hunger.” To underscore the severity of the situation, she shared how she and her family have been forced to live on one bowl of lentils over a three-day period.

“Jesus has called us to bear much suffering,” she said. “But when I see my son and daughter, my heart sinks, and I lose courage. Dear Lord, do not let them lose hope in a better tomorrow.”

Gulshan said she and her fellow Christians cannot worship together and must meet in the “dead of night” so that neither the preacher nor Christ-followers can be identified.

The grieving woman spoke about how her faith — and the beliefs of Christian Americans — are the same.

“I know that my Jesus and yours is one,” Gulshan said, speaking to American viewers.

The tragic interview comes as Afghanistan is now rated the worst nation in the world for Christian persecution, according to Open Doors USA’s 2022 World Watch List.

The shocking development is undoubtedly the “biggest seismic shift” in decades, as North Korea, the reclusive and oppressive East Asian country, was bumped from the top spot it had occupied for 20 years.

“This year’s 2022 World Watch List, we think, is the biggest seismic shift in over 20 years because Afghanistan is now the No. 1 country on the World Watch List, supplanting North Korea,” Open Doors USA CEO David Curry recently told Faithwire.

It also comes as women’s rights are reportedly under attack in Afghanistan. And The Associated Press reported In December that Afghanistan, which has lost the support of international funding, is slipping “deeper into desperate times.” Food lines, cold, and a lack of resources abound, as millions live in temporary camps, and nearly 97% could soon be living below the poverty line.

Continue to pray for the Afghan people as poverty and chaos rage inside the nation’s borders. To find out more about how you can help, visit Open Doors USA.

‘Biggest Seismic Shift’ in Christian Persecution: Watchdog Reveals Major Shakeup Involving Afghanistan, North Korea

AP Photo/Rahmat Gul

Afghanistan is now the worst nation in the world for Christian persecution, according to Open Doors USA, an organization that tracks global religious maltreatment.

The shocking development is undoubtedly the “biggest seismic shift” in decades, as North Korea, the reclusive and oppressive East Asian country, was bumped from the top spot it had occupied for 20 years.

“This year’s 2022 World Watch List, we think, is the biggest seismic shift in over 20 years because Afghanistan is now the No. 1 country on the World Watch List, supplanting North Korea,” Open Doors USA CEO David Curry told Faithwire.

The Dire Situation in Afghanistan

Afghanistan has long been embroiled in chaos, but the situation devolved further when the U.S. undertook a chaotic withdrawal last August — a retreat that carried with it serious consequences.

“Many people are aware of what’s happened since August in Afghanistan,” Curry said, citing the chaos and uncertainty. “It has emboldened Islamic extremists in other parts of the world. We believe it’s going to have a ripple effect.”

Christians in Afghanistan face intensifying persecution at the hands of the resurgent Taliban, with militants purportedly arresting and possibly seeking to kill believers. Christians and Christian women, in particular, are especially vulnerable and are seen as ideological enemies.

“They are going to be targeted,” Curry said.

North Korea’s Continued Christian Persecution

Though dethroned as the top stronghold of persecution, North Korea still occupies the second spot, and there’s no sign the chaos and targeted hatred perpetuated by leader Kim Jong-un and his restrictive government will dissipate.

“For 20 years, North Korea was number one. They have a post-communist … system that has been generational,” Curry said. “They have lifted now Kim Jung Un as the dictator. People are forced to worship him.”

He continued, “It’s clear that they don’t want any other faith except the worship of their leader and the communist system…they control all the means of life.”

Government control persists over necessities like food and medical care. This systematic control has led to mass starvation for the general populace. Christians are many times the last people to get food and are sometimes put in labor camps or relegated to remote areas because of their faith in Jesus.

Curry said the “2022 World Watch List” shows, from a large scale, the “strength of extremism around the world.”

“When you look at the top 10 countries, places like Afghanistan, Somalia, Yemen, you have even India [which is] number 10,” he said. “These are there on the ‘World Watch List’ because these countries have extremist groups, which are either running the government or are influencing the government and culture in these countries in such a way that it is not safe to practice your faith.”

Read the rest of the article at faithwire.com

God Reports: Bold Afghan Christians sharing the Gospel with Taliban

In the rural villages of Afghanistan, especially among known Christians, the Taliban are taking young women and girls and giving them away as plunder to their fighters.

“In young families, the husbands are being executed and the women are being taken, raped, etc.,” says Joel Richardson, a teacher and author affiliated with Global Catalytic Ministries.

Some believers are fleeing to the countryside. “They are going to the mountains, the ravines, sleeping out with their sleeping bags and blankets, trying to weather the intensity of this moment, assuming they can eventually go back to their villages.”

Incredibly, many believe the country of Afghanistan has the second-fastest growing church in the world, next to Iran. “Christians are aware of what’s coming. Some are saying they will stand firm. Some are still sharing the Gospel – it’s amazing.”

Richardson has received reports of Afghan Christians who are choosing to stay and share the gospel. “They say, ‘we don’t care, we’re here because we love this nation, we love our people, and we’re going to share the gospel regardless, even if it means losing our lives.’

“In one village that had been taken over a few weeks ago, the Christians started sharing Bible stories with the Taliban and the Taliban in their village have been studying the Bible and praying.

“They are actually studying the Bible with the Taliban! They haven’t made a confession of faith yet, but seem very interested.”

The fearless nature of these believers reminds Richardson of the character of the believers in the Book of Revelation. “They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony. They did not love their lives unto death. We are seeing that in real time.

“Our brothers and sisters are demonstrating the character that will be required to navigate the days ahead, as we approach the Last Days. Jesus made it clear, the gates of hell will not prevail against the kingdom of God!”