Europe Sees Alarming Rise in Anti-Christian Persecution
“If, in a predominantly Catholic country, half of all priests experience abuse, hostility toward Christians can no longer be dismissed as a marginal issue.”
The number of anti-Christian arson attacks on churches in Germany has surged to a record high amid a “climate of growing intolerance,” a report from the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians in Europe (OIDAC Europe) found. In its annual report published this week, based on data collected from European police forces, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), and various civil society groups, OIDAC Europe reported that there were 33 arson attacks against German churches in 2024.
This represented a record high for the country and stood as the most of any country in Europe last year,
– Die Welt reported.
In August, the German Bishops’ Conference (DBK) warned that attacks on churches have been escalating and that “all taboos have now been broken.” A DBK spokesman said at the time:
“For several years now, we have been dealing with an escalating problem: excrement in holy water fonts and confessionals, decapitated statues of Christ and saints, cigarette butts and other litter in front of devotional images, damaged prayer and hymn books, overturned pews, smashed windows, altarpieces and entire altars destroyed by arson.”
In addition to arson attacks, the OIDAC report found that police recorded anti-Christian hate crimes in Germany rose by 22 per cent last year to 337. This followed a 105 per cent increase in 2023, which saw 277 such attacks.
Christenfeindliche Gewalt – Deutschland verzeichnet am meisten Brandstiftungen an Kirchen https://t.co/E6z749Dcw9 pic.twitter.com/pff3JI3b4B
— WELT (@welt) November 17, 2025
Meanwhile, France experienced the most anti-Christian hate crimes of any European country, according to the report, which identified 770 police recorded incidents and a further 139 reported by civil society groups. While this represented a “modest decrease” over the previous year, OIDAC Europe noted that this trend appears to have been short-lived,
with 2025 already outpacing last year by 13 per cent.
France, the report said, experienced a “disproportionately high number of incidents with an Islamist background,” including the desecration of a cemetery in southern France, which saw over 50 graves and the church vandalised with slogans such as “Submit to Islam.”
According to The European Conservative news site, in September, Iraqi Christian Ashur Sarnaya, who had fled ISIS persecution was brutally murdered in Lyon. According to a member of France’s Assyrian Christian community, Ashur was targeted for his criticism of Islam. But Ashur is not the only victim of Islamic violence in the West.
Christians who have fled the Middle East due to its Islamic violence are increasingly facing the same type of violence in Europe.
Across Europe, Christians have also faced criminal charges for publicly expressing beliefs, praying near abortion clinics, or peacefully discussing Bible verses. Just last month, the Supreme Court of Finland heard the landmark case of Finnish parliamentarian Dr. Päivi Räsänen, who was accused of “hate speech” for referencing Romans 1:24-27 while questioning her church’s participation in an LGBT Pride event.
Among attacks where motives could be verified, OIDAC Europe found links to radical Islamist ideology, radical left-wing ideology, other political factors, and 15 incidents that included satanic symbols or references.
🇫🇷🇬🇧🇩🇪 France, the UK, and Germany record the highest number of anti-Christian hate crimes in Europe
The Vienna-based Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians (OIDAC) Europe Report 2025 identified 2,211 anti-Christian hate crimes across Europe last year.… pic.twitter.com/Br1z4IDc6U
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) November 19, 2025
As V4NA has higlighted in a previous article, a total of 2,211 anti-Christian crimes were committed in Europe last year, which again represents a slight decrease compared to 2023, when 2,444 such crimes were recorded. However, the group noted that this is more likely due to the fact that reporting on these crimes is weak in some European countries, and also because many police forces record only politically motivated anti-Christian hate crimes, while ignoring anti-Christian attacks driven by other motives.
OIDAC director Anja Tang told Die Welt: “Behind this number are concrete cases of church vandalism, arson, and physical violence that have real consequences for the lives of local communities.” Tang also noted that there are indications of many more cases that go unreported, saying that a survey of around 1,000 priests in Poland said they had faced anti-Christian aggression over the past year, but less than 20 per cent reported such incidents to the police.
“When half the priests in a predominantly Catholic country experience abuse, hostile attitudes towards Christians can no longer be dismissed as a fringe issue,”
– Tang warned, according to Breitbart.
🚨Our Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians in Europe Report 2025 is out!
More than 2,200 anti-Christian hate crimes were recorded in Europe in 2024.
Attacks on persons rose to 274.
We also found increased legal restrictions.
Read now:
🔗https://t.co/4yzBbVSFpg pic.twitter.com/9g3cG6doM2— Observatory on Intolerance against Christians EU (@OIDACEurope) November 18, 2025