The Changing Faiths Of The Gulf

July 19, 2008

Author: Edward Pentin

Source: Newsweek

http://www.newsweek.com/id/147705

The Persian Gulf is not an obvious destination for the head of the Roman Catholic Church. Yet when Bahrain's King Hamad met with Pope Benedict earlier this month in Rome, he extended a personal invitation to visit. If Benedict takes him up on the offer, he'll become the first pontiff to set foot in Arabia.

What would make that trip so dramatic is the region's reputation for religious intolerance. Bahrain's new hospitality shows that attitudes are changing. And the explanation lies in demographics. The kingdom and its neighbors are hosts to booming new Christian populations, thanks to the region's insatiable hunger for guest workers. Foreign laborers now represent 35 percent of Bahrain's inhabitants. The number is 60 percent in Kuwait and 80 percent in the United Arab Emirates, and almost half of the 35 million people on the Arabian Peninsula are now foreign-born. A large proportion of them hail from Christian areas such as the Philippines and southern India. As a result, Christians now constitute roughly 9 percent of Bahrain's population. In Saudi Arabia, the Catholic Church estimates there are 1.2 million Filipino faithful alone, making them the country's third largest immigrant group.

Until now, such workers have had to worship in private. Parishes in the area are few and far between: the Catholic Church has just 20 serving the entire Arabian peninsula. Some, such as St. Mary's in Dubai, employ teams of priests who care for hundreds of thousands. Yet as the numbers of Christians increase, their leaders are starting to press the Gulf's rulers to allow more churches and places of worship to set up shop. And the monarchs are slowly responding: according to Bishop Paul Hinder, the pope's representative in Arabia, the region's governments are even "competing" with each other to launch interfaith initiatives.