ABSTRACT
The Arab Spring ushered in by the revolutions of early 2011 mobilised numerous communities against the authoritarian governments of the Middle East. For Egyptian Christians, known as Copts, participation in the protests that deposed Hosni Mubarak represented not just a challenge to the government, but to the Coptic Orthodox Church that had sided with the regime for more than two decades. The successful protests marked the victory of the street over the regime, and a challenge for the traditional Church leadership. Over the next two years, lay initiatives challenged the special role of the Church while Egypt experimented with democracy. However, ultimately the various challenges of Islamist majoritarianism, the power of the military, and internal divisions in the community demonstrated the enduring power of the Coptic Orthodox Church as the representative of Coptic interests. The restoration of military dominance solidified the neo-millet alliance between the Church and the regime. The current military regime has increased its repression of rival poles of authority. At the same time, the Coptic Orthodox Church has deepened its own efforts to control Coptic representation. Coptic interest representation in the age of Sisi represents a parallel triumph of the barracks and the Church over the streets.
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Paul S. Rowe
Paul S. Rowe is Professor of Political and International Studies at Trinity Western University, Langley BC, Canada. His research focuses on minority religious groups in the Middle East and South Asia, church-state relations and the global dynamics of religion and politics. He is the editor of The Routledge Handbook of Minorities in the Middle East (2019), co-editor of Whose Will be Done? Essays on Sovereignty and Religion (Lexington, 2015), and Christians and the Middle East Conflict (Routledge, 2011). He is also the author of Religion and Global Politics (Oxford University Press Canada, 2012).