On 15 February 2015, a video was released depicting masked ISIS
militants dressed in black marching 21 Coptic Christians in orange
jumpsuits along a beach in Libya.
The captives were forced to kneel on the seafront, each with a jihadist standing behind them.
And then they were beheaded.
It remains one of the most shocking sights of ISIS' growing catalogue
of atrocities. However a year on, the General Bishop of the Coptic
Church reported a message of forgiveness and strength had
trumped the video's attempt to instil fear and hatred.
"The same tool used to try and magnify violence and division actually
became a platform for everyone to see the strength of their faith,"
said Bishop Angaelos.
On receiving confirmation, Angaelos sent out a tweet to officially announce the deaths with the hashtag, "Father forgive".
"That hashtag has really set the tone for how Coptics have responded," Angaelos said.
"From own community I haven't heard a single message of vengeance or anger used."
"An even stronger and more inconceivable message of forgiveness came
from their families and communities," said Angaelos in a statement to
commemorate the anniversary.
"They rejected the temptation to become bitter, angry and vengeful,
and inspired the world with their gracious and courageous sentiment.
Speaking proudly of the resilience of their fathers, brothers, and sons,
who had captured the attention of the whole world, they also uttered
their forgiveness for those who had so brutally and needlessly taken
their lives, and who sought to rob them of their dignity."
Angaelos was speaking shortly after an announcement of an upcoming ceasefire in Syria which he said was welcome.
"We don't want any more people dying, whoever they are," he stated, reiterating his message of forgiveness.
Military action has had its place in Syria, he said but "it is not going to be a long term solution".
"The more we place hope on military action to solve the problem, the longer we will be drawn into to conflict."
However he said he wished western governments had not waited as long
as they did before standing up for minorities in the Middle East.
"What we are now seeing played out in the Middle East has not
happened overnight, but has come after generations of the alienation,
marginalisation and persecution of Christians and minority groups
throughout the region," he said.
"Boundaries are challenged and pushed and when there is no repercussion they are pushed further.
"The phenomenon starts with people being denied daily justice and
equality in society, they are then deemed irrelevant and inconsistent,
in the eyes of some, with what the region should be, and finally they
are persecuted, displaced and sometimes even killed."
Instead, he said "we should not have waited until western intervention was necessary" before we acted.
"If we had held state actors to account and demonstrated that
God-given human rights should be violated I think there would have been a
great deal less violence.
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