Monastery of Santo Espíritu del Monte in Gilet, Spain, where a 76-year-old friar was killed on Nov. 9, 2024. Juan Emilio Prades Bel, Creative Commons
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By Chris Eyte Nov 19, 2025
Violence against European Christians increased in 2024 over the prior
year, and the surge included cases of murder, according to a new report.
The Vienna, Austria-based Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination
against Christians in Europe (OIDAC Europe) found 274 personal attacks on
Christians, up from 232 in 2023. Most of the 2,211 anti-Christian hate crimes
in 2024 occurred against places of worship in France, the U.K., Germany and
Spain.
Anja Tang (formerly Hoffmann), director of OIDAC Europe, presented the
latest figures at a meeting of the Intergroup on Freedom of Religion, Belief
and Conscience in the European Parliament on Tuesday (Nov. 18). Tang recalled
violent incidents, including murders, to some members of the European
Parliament (MEPs) at the meeting.
“Not only do we observe a worrying number of attacks against Christians,
but we also find that increasing intolerance within broader society confronts
Christians,” Tang said. “Moreover, a growing number of people in Europe
prosecute Christians for peacefully expressing their beliefs – among them
Finnish politician Päivi Räsanen, who has stood trial for more than six years
after tweeting a Bible verse in 2019.”
The report cited examples of murders, including the death of a
76-year-old friar in Spain on Nov. 9 last year. A man claiming to be Jesus
Christ entered the Monastery of Santo Espíritu del Monte in Gilet, north of
Valencia, and attacked the monks, leaving several others injured.
An assailant stabbed an Iraqi Christian to death on Sept. 10, 2025 while
he livestreamed on TikTok about his faith outside his apartment in Lyon,
France. Ashur Sarnaya, a disabled Assyrian Christian who used a
wheelchair, had fled persecution from terrorist group Islamic State (IS) in
Iraq and had reportedly stated that he received threats in online comments and
anonymous phone calls. He was 45.
The attack reportedly happened before 10:30 p.m. near his apartment at
53 Rue Sergent Michel Berthet in the 9th arrondissement. Witnesses at the time
reported that the assailant waited for Sarnaya and stabbed him in the neck.
In another reported incident this year, an Islamic State-related
attacker shot a man dead during Sunday Mass at a Catholic church in Istanbul in
January.
The report stated that aggression against clergy in Poland and Spain has
been significantly underreported.
“In Poland, nearly half of priests surveyed reported experiencing
aggression in the past year – yet over 80 percent did not report the incidents
to the police,” it stated.
Multiple restrictions on religious freedom on the continent include bans
on public prayer and religious manifestation, prosecutions for expressing
religious beliefs, infringements on religious autonomy and parental rights, and
limitations on conscientious objection, according to OIDAC Europe.
In March of this year, a Finnish court convicted an elderly Christian
couple of “assault” after they prayed with a young man struggling with his
sexuality.
“The young man had voluntarily sought their support and participated in
the prayer, yet the court upheld his claim that the prayers caused
psychological harm,” stated the report.
A continuing trend from previous years continued as several authorities
across Europe charged Christians for silently praying or offering voluntary
conversations at “buffer zones” near abortion clinics.
In Spain, at least 20 individuals have faced prosecution since 2022 for
peacefully praying near abortion clinics.
“Others faced prosecution for peacefully expressing their religious
beliefs or historic Christian teachings on issues related to sexual ethics,”
the report noted.
France recorded the highest number of anti-Christian hate crimes in
Europe. Incidents arose by 13 percent in the first half of 2025 compared with
the previous year.
Examples included the arrest of an Islamist suspect linked to a planned
IS-inspired terrorist attack on Notre-Dame Cathedral of Paris. Another involved
the destruction of 50 graves in southern France. Graffiti slogans on the graves
and a nearby church carried messages such as “Submit to Islam.”
In Germany, hate crimes against Christians in 2024 increased by 22
percent, from 277 to 337 incidents. This data follows a 105 percent increase in
the previous year. The country also had the highest number of arson attacks
with 33 incidents against Christians.
The report noted that those numbers only include hate crimes with a
political motive, thereby overlooking many anti-Christian attacks with other
motives.
Violent attacks against Christians doubled in Spain, and vandalism of
church buildings and symbols increased by 12 percent.
The U.K. Commission of Inquiry into Discrimination Against Christians
(CIDAC) issued a June 2024 report asserting that 56 percent of Christians
surveyed reported experiencing hostility or ridicule for expressing their
beliefs, especially in a workplace.
Further hearings by the commission this year, however, found that many
Christian victims of discrimination chose not to participate in the study, even
anonymously, fearing stigmatization or personal consequences.
“Christians self-reportedly feel marginalized in what they regard as an
increasingly hostile and discriminatory environment,” the commission noted,
according to the OIDAC Europe report.
The report also cited concerns about media prejudice against Christians
in Europe and highlighted violations of religious freedom in Ukrainian areas
that Russia occupied.
Intergroup co-chairs MEP Bert-Jan Ruissen and MEP Miriam Lexmann
underlined the importance of concrete EU action about the issues contained in
the report.
“Attacks on Christians and discrimination against Christians in Europe
receive little attention, but the figures alarm us,” Ruissen said. “As an
Intergroup of 30 concerned MEPs, we call on the EU and its member states to
finally take action.”
The Intergroup of MEPs published a demand for three “concrete measures
from the European Commission to address this problem,” the OPIDAC Europe noted.
Firstly, they demanded the European Commission appoint a European
Coordinator to combat attacks and discrimination against Christians, as similar
coordinators for combating antisemitism and anti-Muslim hatred exist.
The MEPs previously requested this appointment of a coordinator in a
letter (April 4) to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission,
and Magnus Brunner, commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration, saying,
“It is now high time that the incidents against Christians receive proper
address.”
Secondly, they asked EU member states to collect and report data on
attacks and discrimination against Christians. Thirdly, they requested EU
funding to combat attacks and discrimination against Christians, with
comparable funding available to combat antisemitism and anti-Muslim hatred.
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