United Nations Human Rights Council
Forum on Minority Issues - Sixth Session
“Beyond freedom of religion or belief: Guaranteeing the rights of religious minorities”
Geneva, November 26-27, 2013
Protecting Religious Minorities: A Human Imperative
Presentation of Rev. Majed El Shafie, One Free World International
Mister/Madam Chair,
Madam Independent Expert,
Distinguished delegates and colleagues,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
My name is Reverend Majed El Shafie, and I am the President and Founder of One Free World
International (OFWI), an international human rights organization based out of Toronto, Canada. I
would like to thank the Forum for the opportunity to present our comments and recommendations
on this most urgent issue of the rights of religious minorities.
Before I discuss our topic today, I beg your indulgence as I give you a little background. I was born in
Egypt to a prominent Muslim family of judges and lawyers and grew up with a vast library of books on
law, justice, and human rights, determined to become a human rights lawyer. During law school I was
persuaded by much personal study and reflection to accept the beliefs of Christianity and shortly
after my conversion began advocating equal rights for Egyptian Christians. For these reasons I was
detained and severely tortured by Egyptian authorities and sentenced to death. I fled Egypt and
finally settled in Canada in 2002, establishing OFWI to share a message of freedom, hope, and
tolerance for religious differences and to promote human rights in this area through advocacy and
public education.
Our mission and calling at OFWI is to stand up for religious minorities and individuals around the
world who are being persecuted because of their personal beliefs, regardless of religion or creed. We
advocate on behalf of religious minorities and individuals through direct interventions with foreign
governments, by educating our own politicians and citizens about religious freedom and abuses of
human rights in this area, and through humanitarian aid and rescue missions.
It is not necessary today to go into detail about the kinds of challenges and violations religious
minorities face around the world. Without wishing to oversimplify the matter, the vast majority of
challenges faced by religious minorities fall into three categories. Firstly, there are the threats from
secular authoritarian regimes, which monitor, regulate, and control religious practice and expression
within their boundaries and suppress any unauthorized practice. The second involve cases of religious
dominance; this may involve a state favouring a majority religion while discriminating against or
persecuting minority
religions or it could involve the actions of religious extremists often acting with the tacit support of
state