Hate crimes against Christians surge in Europe: report

From Christian Post

European national flags in front of European Parliament building in Brussels, Belgium.
European national flags in front of European Parliament building in Brussels, Belgium. | Getty Images

Arson attacks were prevalent among a surge in anti-Christian hate crimes in May, according to the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians in Europe (OIDAC Europe).

The watchdog’s May report shows 37 verified anti-Christian hate crimes across 11 European countries. The crimes include 13 arson attacks, 10 acts of vandalism, three cases of desecration, three incidents of physical violence, three thefts targeting religious objects, three cases of vandalism and violence, one case of incitement and one disrupted worship service.

“This continued prevalence of fire-setting against Christian sites remains one of the most serious patterns documented during the year,” the report stated.

The 13 verified arson incidents represent the highest monthly total that investigators have recorded this year. The report dubbed the monthly figure “exceptionally high” as blazes hit properties across multiple countries, including attacks on church buildings, chapels, parish buildings and other Christian property.

In Germany, four arson attacks damaged properties in Marbach, Munich, Delmenhorst and Gladbeck. The country also saw severe property violations; in Knittelsheim, assailants scattered consecrated communion hosts across a church altar, while unknown persons daubed satanic graffiti inside the Barbara Chapel in Penzberg. Vandals in Bad Oeynhausen deliberately damaged church bells and live power lines, creating potential physical harm for the community.

In Italy, authorities recorded eight hate crimes, including four cases that carried an explicit ideological link. In Genoa, attackers defaced the Basilica of San Siro with anti-clerical and anarchist graffiti demanding that perpetrators “burn churches.”

Italian monitors also recorded a desecration at the parish of San Paolo della Croce in Rome, and heavy vandalism at the Church of Sant’Angelo Magno in Ascoli Piceno, where attackers destroyed a crucifix, sacred statues and a historic 17th-century organ.

Three arson cases in France included an attack at the Church of Notre-Dame de l’Assomption in Lentigny, alongside a highly dangerous suspected arson at a parish hall in Tergnier while children were inside the building.

French vandals also ransacked the Church of Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens during Pentecost at Pont-du-Casse near Agen. In Paris, thieves broke a crucifix and stole a figurine of Christ from Saint-Germain-des-Prés. In South Gironde, a wave of burglaries targeted several churches, resulting in altar desecration and tabernacle profanation. Assailants in Saint-Martin-la-Sauveté tore Christian statues from graves, while attackers in Poleymieux-au-Mont-d’Or near Lyon beheaded a statue of Mary holding the infant Jesus.

In Krosno, Poland, an attempted arson damaged an image of Our Lady of Perpetual Help inside a desecrated chapel, while vandals in Kalwaria Zebrzydowska defaced several chapels with physical damage and satanic inscriptions.

Arsonists and vandals also targeted two churches in Ireland. In Warrington, England, police launched an arson investigation after discovering fires inside a disused church building.

Violent crime targeted clergy as well, as robbers held a Portuguese priest hostage for 90 minutes while they looted a church building and parish house in Cantanhede. In Chania, Greece, a shotgun attack damaged a historic church bell tower. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, criminals forced entry into the Serbian Orthodox Church of St. George in Tuzla, marking another repeated act of vandalism against the site.

In Leipzig, Germany, a Christian-run café announced its permanent closure after organized harassment campaigns by left-wing extremists. The operators reported 26 attacks over the past two-and-a-half years, which included repeated vandalism, graffiti, and butyric acid attacks, making continued business financially impossible.

The report cited the closure as evidence of “the persistence of repeated and sustained campaigns targeting Christian institutions.”

“According to the operators, the attacks were carried out by individuals associated with the far-left extremist scene and ultimately made the continued operation of the café financially impossible,” OIDAC Europe stated.

Left-wing extremists reportedly also assaulted and seriously injured two Catholic fraternity students in Innsbruck, Austria. In Bielsk Podlaski, Poland, an assailant insulted and attacked a nun at a bus stop, tearing a cross necklace from her neck.

Perpetrators also fired steel and plastic balls during a Mass that approximately 200 worshippers attended at the Holy Spirit Church in Hanau, Germany. The projectiles shattered windows, and the report noted that the attack placed the congregation in immediate danger.

“The incidents recorded this month … illustrate that anti-Christian hostility is not limited to attacks against church buildings,” the report stated. “Several cases targeted Christian individuals, religious communities, and organizations directly, demonstrating that visible expressions of Christian faith and Christian presence in public life can themselves become targets of aggression or intimidation.”

The overall dataset includes widespread vandalism, desecration, physical assaults, and thefts targeting religious spaces and individuals. Germany led the continent with 10 reported incidents, followed closely by Italy and France with eight cases each. Poland recorded three cases, Ireland reported two, while Austria, Portugal, Spain, Greece, the United Kingdom, and Bosnia and Herzegovina each documented one verified incident.

“Germany also recorded numerous additional non-counted thefts, break-ins, damage incidents, and fires under investigation,” noted the report.

OIDAC Europe also noted widespread property damage that fell outside the official statistics due to unverified bias. This additional data included local authorities investigating nine church building fires alongside 14 unverified acts of vandalism, 24 break-ins, and dozens of thefts.

Separate figures confirmed last month to the Greek Parliament by the Ministry of Education, Religious Affairs and Sports reported 4,409 incidents involving Orthodox Church properties in the country between 2015 and 2024. This accounted for 96.05% of all recorded incidents involving religious sites in Greece over that 10-year period, covering attacks, vandalism, thefts, desecrations, and burglaries.

The publication of the data comes as the FIFA World Cup kicked off across 16 cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico on Thursday. Anja Tang, the executive director for OIDAC Europe, wrote an introduction to the report noting a negative reaction to sports personalities expressing their faith in the public sphere in the run-up to the matches.

“With the beginning of the World Cup, debates surrounding Christian football players have once again highlighted how expressions of faith continue to attract public scrutiny,” Tang wrote. “While athletes are increasingly encouraged to bring their identities into the public sphere, openly expressing traditional Christian beliefs can still provoke disproportionate criticism and controversy.”

The organization stressed that the official numbers represent only a baseline of the issue across the continent.

“The figures presented in this report reflect only documented cases known to OIDAC Europe and therefore cannot capture the full extent of anti-Christian hostility in Europe,” the report noted. “Nevertheless, the incidents recorded during May point to a continuing pattern of attacks affecting Christian places of worship, religious symbols, and Christian organizations across a broad range of European countries.”

European Parliament Names ‘Christianophobia’ in Formal Resolution for First Time

From the Daily Declaration by Kurt Mahlburg

Christianity is the world’s most persecuted religion, the European Parliament recently declared, using the term ‘Christianophobia’ in a formal resolution for the first time.

The European Parliament has used the term ‘Christianophobia’ in a formal resolution for the first time, declaring Christianity the most persecuted religion in the world and calling out the EU’s failure to appoint a coordinator to combat anti-Christian hatred — a position that already exists for Islamophobia.

The resolution, adopted in Strasbourg earlier this year, stated in Paragraph 84: “Christianity remains the most persecuted religion in the world today, with more than 380 million people affected.”

“There is no European coordinator responsible for combating Christianophobia, even though a coordinator has been appointed to combat Islamophobia,” it added.

The Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union (COMECE) welcomed the resolution and urged the European Commission to act on it.

“Taking note of this important statement by the European Parliament, COMECE encourages the European Commission to give serious consideration to the appointment of an EU Coordinator responsible for this field,” the bishops’ body said in a statement last month.

The resolution — formally titled the Annual Human Rights Report 2025 and adopted under reference TA-10-2026-0014 — also condemned the persecution of Christian communities in the Middle East.

It described Christian communities from the Middle East as “among the oldest in the world,” noting they continue to face “severe persecution, discrimination, forced displacement and restrictions on their freedom of religion or belief.”

In January, Pope Leo XIV had raised the same concern. “We must not forget a subtle form of religious discrimination against Christians,” he said, “which is spreading even in countries where they are in the majority, such as in Europe.”

Coalition and Pushback

The specific language of Christianophobia was the result of sustained amendment work by centre-right and conservative MEPs.

The European People’s Party (EPP) and the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) drove the provisions, with Dutch MEP Bert-Jan Ruissen (ECR) and Croatian MEP Davor Stier (EPP) leading the effort in coordination with Aid to the Church in Need. The Patriots for Europe group also supported the text.

The final vote drew backing from a cross-partisan majority that included a significant portion of the Renew Europe group, whose members argued religious freedom is an indivisible pillar of human rights.

Radical left groupings and some Greens opposed the specific mention, reportedly concerned it would create a hierarchy among victims of religious hatred.

The Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in Europe (OIDAC) welcomed the result, noting the Parliament “not only acknowledges the global scale of anti-Christian persecution but also highlights an institutional asymmetry within the EU’s existing anti-discrimination architecture.”

The Coordinator Question

COMECE proposed that the future coordinator’s title refer to “anti-Christian hatred” rather than ‘Christianophobia’, to align with existing EU positions on other communities and to avoid a term built on the contested concept of ‘phobia’.

The bishops’ body also called for dedicated funding through the EU’s forthcoming AgoraEU instrument.

The push for the role has been building for over a year. In December 2024, COMECE adviser Alessandro Calcagno told a European Parliament conference: “The time is ripe for the appointment of an EU Coordinator to combat anti-Christian hatred.”

In November 2025, COMECE Vice-President Mgr Czeslaw Kozon raised the same call directly with EU Commissioner Magnus Brunner.

The resolution also called for the timely appointment of an EU Special Envoy for Freedom of Religion or Belief — a post that has remained vacant for more than a year.

A Framework for Action

The resolution is political in nature and does not bind the European Commission to act. Whether the Commission appoints a coordinator — and on what timeline — remains to be seen.

The text of the resolution notes that the EU’s post for combating Islamophobia already exists as a standing institutional position.

COMECE’s statement drew a direct line: the protection of Christian communities in Europe “must become tangible” through both a dedicated coordinator and financial support.

The resolution, COMECE said, marks a point at which the European Parliament has moved beyond recording statistics toward providing “a legal and political framework for action.”

Polish March For Freedom

People send me stuff. This one is quite good.

Poland has suffered many invasions over the years, but it has also been at the forefront of massive revolutions for  freedom, especially in the 1980’s when it was the catalyst for the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe.

In this march in 2015, millions of Poles demonstrated against radical islamism. In the coming decline of Western civilisation, which I now believe is almost inevitable, Poland could be the one hope in Europe for a renaissance of Christianity and civility. In the Dark Ages, it was Irish monks who kept the flames of faith and knowledge burning. In the coming dark age it could be Polish Christians who stand firm.