Egyptian Pastor, Majed Shafie Details How He Was Tortured for Christ, Used Jet Ski to Escape
Egyptian Pastor, Majed Shafie Details How He Was Tortured for Christ, Used Jet Ski to Escape
By CNP
“I Almost Died”
Shafie wasn’t crucified with nails, but rather had his hands tied to a cross. At the end of the two days, Safie’s hands were untied and he was subjected to another form of torment.“They made a cut on the back of my left shoulder to the bones and they rubbed salt in my open wound. I almost died,” he recalled. “I was in the police hospital for three months. They didn’t want me to die right away because that would have made me a martyr. What they do is they destroy your reputation first.”After his three months in the police hospital, Shafie was subjected to house arrest for a period of eight to nine months. He said that he was convicted on three charges: arranging revocation against the Egyptian authority, trying to change the official religion of Egypt from Islam to Christianity and loving and worshiping Christ.“My statement was ‘If loving and worshiping Christ is a crime, I am guilty as charged,'” Shafie said.According to the court, those were crimes that warranted the death penalty. Shafie’s team found out about the sentence and warned him. He escaped his home imprisonment and went to Alexandria.The Escape
There were really only two options for Shafie to escape the country since he was blacklisted and would be detained if he tried to leave on an airplane. He had to either cross over the mountains or go by sea to Israel.“Egypt is surrounded by other Muslim countries. You go to any of them, you face the same situation,” Shafie explained. “The only way was to escape to Israel. So I stole jet ski and crossed from Taba to Eilat.”He rented a jet ski and waited for the perfect time of the day to jet past two military ships  one Israeli and one Egyptian  that were guarding the border. Shafie decided that he was going to cross between the two boats because that was the only spot where troops on both boats could not shoot at him without aiming toward the other military ship.“I waited until 5:50 p.m. with the sun behind me. Whoever looking at you would be blinded for a few seconds or two. I just bolted between the two boats. When I bolted between the two boats, the Egyptians and the Israelis aimed at me but that was when they realized that they were actually aiming at each other. That is called crossfire,” Shafie detailed. “The last thing they want to do is start a new war in the Middle East just because of a guy crossing on a jet ski. Now when you go to Sinai and you go to the same point where I escaped, the boats do not stand against each other anymore. That is because my escape. They changed the whole system because of that.”Although he was arrested in Israel, he was eventually released thanks to pressure from the United Nations and human rights groups.With the help of Amnesty International and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, he was relocated as an asylum seeker to Canada in 2002. He became a Canadian citizen in 2006.“I started One Free World International. I started to defend people that used to be in the same position like myself,” Shafie, who was the focus of the 2012 documentary “Freedom Fighter,” said.Among those that his organization has helped are over 600 women and children who were held hostage by the Islamic State terrorist organization in Iraq as sex slaves. One Free World International has been heavily involved in helping finance rescue missions for Christians and Yazidis held by the jihadi death cult. Shafie said that they have spent nearly $3 million toward that effort.
The Ministerial
Shafie said he was honored to take part in the first-ever State Department Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom. With delegations from over 80 countries around the world in attendance, he felt it was a much-needed gathering that he hopes will grow and improve each year to advance the cause of religious freedom worldwide.The ministerial came as about three-quarters of the world’s population lives in a religiously repressive country.“I think this is an important event because this is the first time in history,” he commented. “For them to try something like this, it is absolutely amazing. It is something we didn’t see from the previous administration.”Shafie recalled that the first American politician he ever met when he first came to North America was then-U.S. Senator and current Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback, who chaired the ministerial.“I was 25 years old. First thing I see in his office is [a sign that reads] ‘Sam Brownback  Not for Sale or Rent,'” Shafie said. “He took me and embraced me.”Over 16 years later, he believes that Brownback’s legacy will come in the form of bringing more “muscles and teeth” to the State Department’s International Religious Freedom Office that will allow the office to truly influence American foreign policy.“This position where he is right now is his legacy,” Shafie contended. “It is not that he used to be a senator. It is not the fact that he used to be a governor. But now that he is the ambassador for the freedom of religion office. I think that is his true calling.”Discover more from Church News
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