St. Catherine's Monastery in Egypt / Adobe Stock
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McKenna Snow on August 19, 2025
Though an Egyptian court only recently ruled to remove the legal
authority of monks living at the world’s oldest Christian monastery and give
the state extensive control over the property, Cairo’s efforts to strip the
monastery of its autonomy have actually been underway for the past decade,
according to Coptic Christian and research analyst Mariam Wahba.
“I grew up in Egypt’s Coptic Christian community; once a year my church
would pile us into a bus for our annual pilgrimage to the [St. Catherine’s
Monastery],” Wahba wrote in an Aug. 17 Free Press article. “But the
standing of this holy place is now at grave risk.”
The struggle sparked a meeting in June between the Greek and
Egyptian foreign ministers to secure the monastery’s rights, and its resolution
bears crucial implications not only for the monastery, its Greek Orthodox
monks, and the historic manuscripts they protect, but also for US-Egypt policy
and minority religious institutions across Egypt, according to Wahba.
“The outcome of this fight will signal whether Egypt still makes room
for religion that is outside state control,” Wahba wrote. “Over the last
decade, Cairo has steadily chipped away at St. Catherine’s autonomy — a
microcosm of Egypt’s broader campaign against the country’s estimated 10 to 15
million Christians in the majority Sunni Muslim nation.”
Wahba, a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies,
explained that Egyptian authorities canceled a project to digitize the
monastery’s manuscript collection. In 2024, they denied visiting scholars entry
to the monastery library without explanation.
Additionally, for years, “researchers have been able to study its
manuscripts with approval from the monks,” Wahba explained. “The government,
however, seized control over academic access to the site in 2023, revoking the
monastery’s long-standing authority to oversee the research.”
The government-run system has not approved a research request since,
according to Wahba.
Though Badr Abelatty, Egypt’s minister of foreign affairs, insisted that
the ruling does not infringe on the monastery’s religious freedom, “that’s
hardly the point,” Wahba wrote.
“The state does not need to evict monks or fully ban prayer to undermine
Christians’ religious freedom,” Wahba wrote. “By nationalizing the site and
cutting it off from the global research and religious communities that have
long sustained it, the government is effectively severing the monastery from
its identity and function. The stakes here go well beyond a specific holy
site.”
“St. Catherine’s is a bellwether for a broader trend in Egypt — one in
which the state gradually subsumes non-Sunni religious institutions,” she
continued. “If the government can absorb a monastery with this much history,
international standing, and religious significance, then no independent
religious institution is safe.”
Wahba emphasized that though Christianity is technically a legally
protected religion, Cairo has for years allowed “a culture of impunity” to grow
as Christians suffer attacks and perpetrators are not held accountable;
further, there is an epidemic of kidnappings of Coptic women and girls that
Egyptian officials routinely ignore, according to Wahba.
She also pointed to a February 2025 report of State
Restrictions on Religious Freedom in Egypt published by the US Commission on
International Religious Freedom.
“Egypt continues to impose systematic and ongoing obstacles to
freedom of religion or belief on religious minority communities,” the report
states.”
Elaborating on the risk that the outcome of the monastery’s struggle
bears for the US, Wahba noted that partnerships between American scholars and
institutions working with the monastery “are now in limbo.”
“According to Egyptian law, if the monastery is no longer a recognized
legal entity, it cannot contract or partner with foreign institutions,” she
explained. “Centuries of intellectual and religious heritage are at risk of
being lost.”
Positing about factors that could pressure Egypt to reverse course,
Wahba noted that the US provides Egypt $1.4 billion in military aid annually, a
portion of which is contingent on Egypt advancing human rights. It is also
based on an agreement that stipulates that the US government will assess
whether Egypt is protecting religious freedom and minority groups.
“These obligations are not symbolic, but codified law meant to reflect
U.S. values in foreign assistance,” Wahba wrote. “Quietly nationalizing one of
Christianity’s most sacred sites without consequence calls into question how
seriously both Cairo and Washington take those conditions.”
Wahba also wrote that many Christian so-called commentators and pundits
have spoken out against discrimination of Christian communities in Gaza and the
West Bank, but “most of them remain utterly silent on these brazen attacks on
Christianity taking place in Egypt and across the Arab Middle East.”
“Religious freedom does not vanish overnight,” she concluded. “It erodes
gradually until sacred spaces become footnotes to state power. That is the
danger at St. Catherine’s. If the United States is serious about protecting
religious pluralism and preserving Christian cultural heritage, then now is a
moment to act. Not to mourn what is lost, but to defend what remains.”
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