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By Watani –

In the latest development in the case of five-year-old Shenouda, Naguib Gabrail, member of the defence team who represent Farouq Fawzy Boulos, Shenouda’s adoptive father, announced that the DNA test result of Rania Fawzy turned out negative, meaning that she is not the biological mother of Shenouda, as alleged earlier. (..)

According to Mr Gabrail, the Public Attorney re-listened today to the testimonies of Shenouda’s foster parents Amal and Farouq. The fatwa recently issued by al-Azhar to the effect that if a child is found inside a church then he becomes Christian, was included to the case’s file, Mr Gabrail added.

Last week, a female relative of the adoptive father of five-year-old Shenouda announced that she knew who the boy’s biological parents are. That relative, Mariam Youssef, is the niece of Shenouda’s foster father Farouq Fawzy Boulos; it was she who had reported her uncle and his wife to the police for what she alleged was child trafficking.

Shenouda had been found as a two-day-old infant abandoned in a Cairo church, and the priest handed him to the childless Bouloses to care for him. The Bouloses adopted the baby, gave him their name and called him Shenouda, had him baptised and raised him as their son for four years in a warm, loving family.

Ms Youssef, however, realised that Shenouda’s legal name as the son of Mr Boulos made him her uncle’s inheritor, thus excluding her from the inheritance. She made a claim to the police that the boy was not Mr Boulos’s son but had been trafficked. Egyptian law outlaws adoption, in accordance with Islamic sharia, but allows takaful—literally “care”, in this case foster care—but children cannot be given their foster parents’ names nor can they legally inherit their money or belongings; they can only receive “gifts” to any amount from their foster parents.

DNA testing proved the child was not related to the Bouloses; in February 2022 he was taken from them and placed in an orphanage. They were not prosecuted because investigations proved beyond doubt their good will, but they were not allowed to keep Shenouda because he was of unknown origin and was thus—according to social norms—assumed to be Muslim; and no Muslim can be allowed to grow up in a Christian family.

The case caused heated public controversy, with overwhelming demand to waive the social norms and return the child to his foster parents. Egypt’s National Council for Human Rights strongly joined that demand, requesting that any legal obstacles standing in the way be reviewed. Shenouda’s adoptive parents took their case to court but, on 18 March 2023, the Administrative Court of Egypt’s State Council declined to rule in the lawsuit owing to lack of jurisdiction on the subject matter. It explained that it lacks the jurisdiction to rule on returning the boy to the Christian couple who had raised him as a two-day-old infant till he was four years old, or to reverse the decision by the authorities to assign him Islam as a religion.

On 22 March 2023, Egypt’s topmost Islamic institution, al-Azhar, issued a fatwa [fatwa is an Islamic legal opinion] that, “The Hanafi scholars declared in their books that: ‘If found in a village of Dhimmis [Dhimmi is a non-Muslim living under Muslim rule] or in a church, the one found is Dhimmi.’ The same reply applied in case the founder was Dhimmi.” Obviously, the fatwa should make it possible for a court of law to rule that Shenouda be handed to his Christian foster parents.

A day later, Ms Youssef appeared in video footage aired by a social media channel, claiming to uncover the truth about Shenouda’s biological mother who, Ms Youssef said, was a Muslim convert who had married a Muslim man, got pregnant with Shenouda, but left her husband before giving birth. She claimed the Church had abducted the mother-to-be, imprisoned her in a monastery till she delivered her baby, then gave the baby to a Christian couple who were childless. She said the biological mother was Rania Ramzy Fawzy Boulos, another niece of Mr Boulos, the daughter of his brother.

Rania Boulos, who goes by the name Rania Fawzy, responded by criticising Ms Youssef for unfounded allegations, stressing that Shenouda was no child of hers, and offering to take a DNA test to prove that. Ms Fawzy said that it was true she had at one point left her family owing to some harsh circumstances; she had converted to Islam, but realised she had made a mistake so she legally reverted to Christianity and went back to her husband and children. “I certainly committed a big error by leaving my home, but no man ever touched me nor did I ever become pregnant.”

Ms Fawzy is taking Ms Youssef to court for unsubstantiated defamation. Her lawyer, Michael Luqa, said on al-Karma satellite channel that Ms Youssef had made a number of legal violations by making unsubstantiated allegations that defamed his client Ms Fawzy who would take a DNA test to disprove them. He said Ms Youssef also made preposterous allegations against the Coptic Church, again with no evidence whatsoever. “If Ms Youssef is in possession of any marriage contract that proves Ms Fawzy was ever married to a Muslim man, let her produce it,” Mr Luqa said. “The same goes for if she possesses any divorce certificate.”

When Ms Fawzy decided to revert to Christianity, Mr Luqa explained, she had to get approvals from a number of State bodies to clear her of any political, religious, security, or criminal wrongdoing. The Civil Register thus decided in 2018 to register her as a Christian under her original name, he said. “Ms Fawzy could never have been given all these approvals had she been pregnant [explainer: any doubt of carrying a baby of a Muslim father would have directly halted her reversion to Christianity].

“We will also sue the social media channel that aired Ms Youssef’s video because it aired defamatory material without any proof of veracity.”

For their part, the two lawyers Karam Ghabrial and Naguib Gabrail who represent Farouq Fawzy Boulos, Shenouda’s adoptive father, submitted a claim on 25 March 2023 to the Public Attorney of North Cairo Prosecution against Ms Youssef. They requested an investigation into her claims of knowing that the biological mother of Shenouda is Rania Fawzy, and that she knew that his father was Muslim. “She aired the video once she learned of the al-Azhar fatwa that the child found in a church by a Christian person would be Christian,” the lawyers’ claim said.

The two lawyers also requested that Ms Youssef be investigated regarding her injurious, insulting, offensive allegations against the Coptic Church and monasteries by accusing them of imprisoning women and forging documents. They asked that she be prosecuted according to adequate charges, and the attached a copy of Ms Youssef’s video with their claim. The claim will be seen before the Misdemeanours Court on 6 May 2023.

On another front, the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of Cairo’s East of the Railway Churches, has submitted a written testimony signed by the Bishop Anba Martyros to the Administrative Court testifying that the infant “Shenouda” was found in the restrooms of the church of the Holy Virgin in Madinet al-Nour, al-Zawya al-Hamra, in the district of al-Sharabiya. The priest, who is now deceased, handed the infant to the couple Farouq Fawzy Boulos and his wife Amal Ibrahim Mikhail. The infants father and mother are unknown, the testimony said.

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