
Publishers Weekly Take us deep into the lives and churches of these Coptic believers, with Mosebach exhibiting an attention to detail befitting his novelistic gifts.We gain a rich impression of what shaped the lives and faith of these martyrs, and we witness how their martyrdom reverberates to this day through their families, churches, and communities. Through immersive scenes and finely drawn portraits of the people he meets, Mosebach exhibits a clear admiration for the Copts devotion on every page. Review Quotes A consuming work on the history and contemporary life of Coptic Christians. This book, then, is also an account of the spiritual life of an Arab country stretched between extremism and pluralism, between a rich biblical past and the shopping centers of New Cairo. As a religious minority in Muslim Egypt, the Copts find themselves caught in a clash of civilizations.

In twenty-one symbolic chapters, each preceded by a picture, Mosebach offers a travelogue of his encounter with a foreign culture and a church that has preserved the faith and liturgy of early Christianity - the Church of the Martyrs. A skeptical Westerner, Mosebach finds himself a stranger in this world in which everything is the reflection or fulfillment of biblical events, and facing persecution with courage is part of daily life. The 21 appear on icons crowned like kings, celebrated even as their community grieves. There is never any talk of revenge, but only the pride of having a martyr in the family, a saint in heaven. Mosebach is amazed time and again as, surrounded by children and goats, the bereaved replay the cruel propaganda video on an iPad. Portraits of Jesus and Mary hang on the walls along with roughhewn shrines to now-famous loved ones.

He finds himself welcomed into simple concrete homes through which swallows dart. Acclaimed literary writer Martin Mosebach traveled to the Egyptian village of El-Aour to meet their families and better understand the faith and culture that shaped such conviction. All but one were young Coptic Christian migrant workers from Egypt.

But not in the world from which the murdered came. In the West, daily reports of new atrocities may have displaced the memory of this particularly vile event. In a carefully choreographed propaganda video released in February 2015, ISIS militants behead twenty-one orange-clad Christian men on a Libyan beach. Book Synopsis Behind a gruesome ISIS beheading video lies the untold story of the men in orange and the faith community that formed these unlikely modern-day saints and heroes. Copyright 2018 by Rowohlt Verlag GmbH, Reinbek bei Hamburg, Germany-Copyright page. About the Book Originally published under the title Die 21: eine Reise ins Land der Koptischen Martyrer.
