Egyptians stress unity following cathedral bombing

Published December 11th, 2016 - 12:41 GMT
Emergency services respond to Friday's attack (Stringer/AFP)
Emergency services respond to Friday's attack (Stringer/AFP)

Following a deadly explosion this morning at Cairo’s Coptic Cathedral, Egyptian social media has been flooded with words of condemnation and unity from the country’s Muslim majority.

Christians make up around five percent of the Egyptian population, or around four million people. They have often been targets for terror in the country, most famously in the 2010 New Year’s Eve bombing in Alexandria which killed 23.

Many have emphasized the country’s long history of religious coexistence following the blast, which has killed at least 20 and injured 35, including many women and children.

Numerous tweets have condemned the killing of innocent people in the name of religious fanaticism, and stressed that the spectre of terrorism is one Egyptians must face together:

Every free Egyptian refuses to accept the killing of innocent people. Intelligence agences, enough explosions!! #Cathedral #ButrosiChurch #FanatacismItsAlwaysTheSame #OccupiedEgypt

Those who killed Muslims at #Giza are the very same who killed Christians in #al-Abasiya... The goal is to ignite the fire of sedition... Terrorism has no religion...

Comparisons were also drawn between today’s bombing and an attack in the west of Cairo on Friday, during the Friday prayers:

I seek refuge in God from the terror that did delivered neither mosque nor church

Many have used religious scripture to condemn the violence:

Our Prophet forbade the killing of women, children and elderly. He forbade the cutting down of trees. He forbade [the targeting of] places of worship. The heart bleeds. It is our responsibility as brothers within our homeland to mourn.

“Whoever kills a soul, unless in retribution for a soul or for corruption of the land, it is as if he had slain all of mankind” Believe in great God. 

Going beyond words of tolerance, there have been reports on social media of Muslims coming to the aid of the victims of the tragedy:

 
 
 
It is not yet known who is responsible for the attack. 
 

RA

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