Religious Freedom Scholar

Paul Marshall

25 articles 2001–2017

Paul Marshall is a religious freedom scholar and author known for his extensive work on international religious persecution, with particular focus on Islam, apostasy, and the treatment of religious minorities worldwide. He is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom. His contributions to The Weekly Standard, spanning from 2001 to 2017, covered religious liberty issues across the Muslim world, including forced conversions, blasphemy laws, and persecution of Christians and religious dissidents.

Political Islam in Indonesia

June 5, 2017 · magazine_repost, Indonesia, Blog

Despite having the largest Muslim population in the world, Indonesia seldom troubles others and so draws little attention in the West. But last month's imprisonment of the governor of the capital, Jakarta, on charges of blasphemy has properly brought it to the front pages. It may signal that the…

Political Islam in Indonesia

June 2, 2017 · Indonesia, Magazine, Islam

Despite having the largest Muslim population in the world, Indonesia seldom troubles others and so draws little attention in the West. But last month's imprisonment of the governor of the capital, Jakarta, on charges of blasphemy has properly brought it to the front pages. It may signal that the…

The War on Christians

June 23, 2014 · Features, Magazine, Paul Marshall

For at least three reasons, the contemporary persecution of Christians demands attention: It is occurring on a massive scale, it is underreported, and in many parts of the world it is rapidly growing.

Deadly Diversity

March 19, 2012 · Nigeria, Islamist, Christianity

In Nigeria, thousands of people have been killed in recent months, and tens of thousands in the last decade. It is a fissiparous country whose conflicts have been exacerbated by the increased influence of radical Islam​—​beginning with attempts to apply Islamic law, then the growth of militias, and…

Egypt’s Other Extremists

May 16, 2011 · Arab Spring, Magazine, Egypt

Judging the likely trajectory of post-Mubarak Egypt requires assessing the depth of public support for Islamism, and usually this has meant assessing the strength and intentions of the Muslim Brotherhood. While the Brotherhood remains central, however, the country is also facing a frequently…

Another Long March Through The UN

April 16, 2009 · Blog, Paul Marshall

In the April 4-5 NATO meetings in Europe, most European nations backed former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen for the new head of NATO. Turkey, however, objected -- so strongly that it took President Obama's personal intervention with Turkey's President, Abdullah Gul, to have Rasmussen…

God Looked East

April 13, 2009 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Paul Marshall

The Lost History of Christianity

Egypt's Identity Crisis

March 3, 2008 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

When the newly nominated American ambassador to Cairo, Margaret Scobey, testified at her Senate confirmation hearing on February 6, she listed many current problems in Egypt and pledged to do work to advance civil and political liberties there. Apart from a reference to including religious leaders…

Do They Know It's Christmas?

December 31, 2007 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

For Christians--and many Muslims--the main reason to celebrate this Christmas is, of course, Jesus' birth. But there are also trends in the church worldwide that make this Advent season at once a time of especial hope and a time of great suffering and darkness.

"Murder with Impunity"

November 5, 2007 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

The Iranian government is currently intensifying its persecution of its largest religious minority, the Baha'is. This reveals something of the government's nature, and also sheds light on the hotly debated question: Does the regime remain a revolutionary one, or has it become instead a "normal…

Endangered Salman

July 9, 2007 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

On June 16, Queen Elizabeth announced in the annual birthday honors list that author Salman Rushdie, previously accused of "insulting Islam," would be knighted. At the same time, five Egyptian Muslims, also accused of "insulting Islam," languished in the jails and interrogation rooms of Egyptian…

A ConversionYou Can't Refuse

September 11, 2006 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE KIDNAPPING in Gaza of two Fox News reporters, and the significance of their subsequent "conversion" to Islam at gunpoint, vanished from the front pages after their August 27 release. But their story shows three things--that we cannot trust much "news" from the Levant, that much of the media is…

Apostates from Islam

April 10, 2006 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE NEWS THAT, DESPITE the Afghan parliament's last-minute attempts to prevent him from leaving, Abdul Rahman has been given asylum in Italy has drawn a global sigh of relief. But now is not the time to forget the issue. The case of Rahman--an Afghan Christian tried for the capital crime of…

The Evil of Two Lessers

February 27, 2006 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE SHOCKWAVES OF HAMAS'S ELECTORAL victory were felt keenly by everyone in the Middle East, not just the Israelis. In fact, few people watched the Palestinian election returns with more hope, trepidation, or calculation than the Egyptians.

The Mohammed Cartoons

February 13, 2006 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

AS MOST OF THE WORLD now knows, on September 30, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published twelve cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad. Subsequent disputes have drawn in the Arab League, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, the Council of Europe, the European Union, the World Trade…

While the Prince Is Away . . .

June 13, 2005 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

SINCE MAY 27, THE Saudis have arrested eight Christians from India and seized documents naming others. One of those arrested, Chittirical John Thomas, was pulled away from work and beaten in front of his five-year-old son. He is reportedly in the Shemaissy Detention Center.

Saudis and Tsunamis

January 17, 2005 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

DESPITE A FEW PLAYS FOR political advantage, here and abroad, the world's response to the Indian Ocean tsunami has been heartening. With few exceptions, the vast majority of people, countries, and religions are working together to alleviate human suffering. The big exception is radical Islamists,…

Fundamentalists & Other Fun People

November 22, 2004 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE AFTERMATH of the election brought a belated realization that President Bush's victory was based in large part on increased evangelical turnout. Hence, predictably, committed religion is again an incendiary political topic, and again it is mindlessly stereotyped as "fundamentalism" and…

War Againstthe Infidels

July 5, 2004 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE BEHEADING of American Paul Johnson in Saudi Arabia was terrible enough in itself, but for me it struck strangely close to home.

The Southeast Asian Front

April 5, 2004 · Features, Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE STRUGGLE AGAINST extremist Islam is not only military and diplomatic, it is also a war of ideas. In this battle there are few more important countries than Indonesia, whose 230 million people make it by far the largest Muslim country and democracy. It is also home to the largest concentration…

Misunderstanding al Qaeda

December 1, 2003 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

AMERICAN REACTIONS to the recent bombing of a foreign workers' compound in Riyadh reveal multiple misreadings of the Arab world and--more dangerously--of both al Qaeda and the Saudis. The media seem to equate Arab with Muslim and, along with some in the administration, think that al Qaeda's war is…

Radical Islam in Nigeria

April 15, 2002 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

AFTER SAFIYA HUSEINI was sentenced to death by stoning last October 9 by an Islamic sharia court in northern Nigeria, her case drew international attention. The New York Times Magazine profiled her, and European members of parliament protested to Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo. When, in…

Jihad Comes to Indonesia

December 31, 2001 · Magazine, Paul Marshall

THE ROAD BETWEEN Poso and Tentena on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi runs past burned-out homes, stores, and churches, and is blocked by checkpoints adorned with pictures of Osama bin Laden. Some have signs proclaiming him "our leader." Islamic militias stop vehicles and check identity papers.…