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Mali: Christian family endures daily persecution as a way of life

December 8, 2023

Around 90% of Malians are Muslim. About five percent adhere to traditional African religions. The other five percent are Christian; about two-thirds are Roman Catholic and the rest Protestant. 

For more ChristianPersecution.com coverage of the persecution of Christians in Mali, see here.

“Persecuted Christian in Mali tells of conversion, evangelism,” by Diana Chandler, Baptist Press, December 2, 2023:

BAMAKO, Mali (BP) – “Since you are a Christian,” the plumber told Charles Yabaga Diarra, “I can’t give you the same price to fix your stuff that I would do for a Muslim. There is a price for Muslims and there is a price for Christians.”

Such open disdain is as good as it gets for Christians in Mali, at least in the south. Since a 2012 military coup removed the country’s democratically elected leader, conditions are much more severe in northern Mali, where abductions, murder and sexual enslavement are common.

Diarra is internally displaced in the war-torn country where several al-Qaeda factions have united to control the entire Sahel region. Open Doors, an international religious freedom advocacy and humanitarian aid group helping Christians in 70 countries, ranks Mali as the 17th most difficult country for Christians.

“I think it’s important that Christians (in other parts of the world) know that being a Christian in Mali is not easy. There is very insidious persecution from your family, your friends, even the government,” said Diarra, a husband, father, educational administrator and preacher, in an interview with Baptist Press. “But I think they need to know there’s also hope. That churches are growing despite the persecution coming from every side. … They need to continue to pray for Mali, for the Sahel.”

Diarra grew up in a Muslim family where Christians were disparaged. Christians didn’t pray, he believed. Christians drink alcohol. They eat pork.

His father was a school headmaster, government employee and politician whose leadership Diarra considered too strict and regimented. Diarra ran away from his home in Léré, seeking refuge about 150 miles away at his uncle’s home.

There, he first heard the Gospel….

His uncle took him to Vacation Bible School for a week before advising him to return home. Still not a Christian, he shared the New Testament with his Muslim teenage friends, telling them he had met several praying Christians.

His father overheard. He forced Diarra to return to Quranic school – commonly attended by 5- to 7-year-olds – to be proselytized in Islam before enrolling him in high school.

Again in his uncle’s home, Diarra tried to convert the uncle to Islam. Diarra asked one of his schoolteachers what he could do to convert his Christian uncle to Islam.

“This is what he said to me. He said, ‘Listen young boy, you are not supposed to discuss with Christians, you are not supposed to eat their food, drink their water, otherwise you will get converted. I was staying with my uncle, eating his food and drinking his water,” Diarra said with amusement. “Maybe that’s why I got converted.”…

The most difficult days of his teen years followed. His father learned of his conversion, summoned him home and scheduled a “family talk.” He urged Diarra to recant.

An aunt, one of 30 or 40 relatives present, urged the family to give Diarra time. Diarra was only a child, she said, and would soon forget about Christianity.

Shouting ensued. The family was divided. Diarra doesn’t remember the exact sequence of events, but his father arranged for him to live elsewhere….

Diarra’s family endures daily persecution as a way of life. His children are called children of infidels, chided and insulted daily at school. Government and businesses work against them.

“Community members don’t want to come to your house,” he said. “They don’t want to greet you. They are doing everything they can to just make your life miserable; it’s very difficult.”…