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Christians Discriminated
Against by Israel
Donald Neff
has been a journalist for forty years. He spent 16 years in service for Time
Magazine and is a regular contributor to Middle East International and the
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. He is the author of five excellent
books on the Middle East.
By Donald Neff
Former Israel Bureau Chief for Time Magazine
Excerpted from Fifty Years of Israel
On Dec. 29, 1977,
Christians in Israel and the occupied territories protested a new law passed by
the Israeli parliament making it illegal for missionaries to proselytize Jews.
Protestant churches charged that the law had been “hastily pushed through
parliament during the Christmas period when Christians were busily engaged in
preparing for and celebrating their major festival.” The law made missionaries
liable to five years’ imprisonment for attempting to persuade people to change
their religion, and three years’ imprisonment for any Jew who converted. The
United Christian Council complained that the law could be “misused in
restricting religious freedom in Israel.”
Nonetheless, it came into force on April
1, 1978, prohibiting the offering of “material inducement” for a person to
change his religion. A material inducement could be something as minor as the
giving of a Bible. Although the Likud government of Menachem Begin assured the
Christian community that the law applied equally to all religions and did not
specifically mention Christians, the United Christian Council of Israel charged
that it was biased and aimed specifically at Christians since only Christians
openly proselytized. Council representatives also cited anti-Christian speeches
made in the parliament during debate on the law. Parliament member Binyamin
Halevy had called missionaries “a cancer in the body of the nation.”
The next year Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef,
considered a political moderate, issued a religious ruling that copies of the
New Testament should be torn out of any edition of a Bible owned by a Jew.
Israeli scholar Yehoshafat Harkabi wrote that he was disturbed by “these
manifestations of hostility-the designation of Christians as idolaters, the
demand to invoke the ‘resident alien’ ordinances, and the burning of the New
Testament.” Observed Harkabi: “Outside of the Land of Israel Jews never dared
behave in this fashion. Has independence made the Jews take leave of their
senses?”
Desecration of Christian property and
churches—arson, window breaking, burning of the New Testament—had long marred
relations between the two communities. A small but fanatical group of Jews
wanted no Christians, whom they considered fallen Jews, in Israel. This virulent
strain of prejudice had been present since before the Jewish state was founded.
For instance, after the capture by
Jewish forces of Jaffa on May 13, 1948, two days before Israel’s birth, there
was desecration of Christian churches. Father Deleque, a Catholic priest,
reported: “Jewish soldiers broke down the doors of my church and robbed many
precious and sacred objects. Then they threw the statues of Christ down into a
nearby garden.” He added that Jewish leaders had reassured that religious
buildings would be respected, “but their deeds do not correspond to their
words.”
On May 31, 1948, a group of Christian
leaders comprising the Christian Union of Palestine publicly complained that
Jewish forces had used 10 Christian churches and humanitarian institutions in
Jerusalem as military bases and otherwise desecrated them. They added that a
total of 14 churches had suffered shell damage, which killed three priests and
made casualties of more than 100 women and children.
The group’s statement said Arab forces
had abided by their promise to respect Christian institutions, but that the Jews
had forcefully occupied Christian structures and been indiscriminate in shelling
churches. It said, among other charges, that “many children were killed or
wounded” by Jewish shells on the Convent of Orthodox Copts on May 19, 23 and 24;
that eight refugees were killed and about 120 wounded at the Orthodox Armenian
Convent at some unstated date; and that Father Pierre Somi, secretary to the
Bishop, had been killed and two wounded at the Orthodox Syrian Church of St.
Mark on May 16.
Churches were again desecrated during
the 1967 war when Israel captured East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza,
completing the occupation of all of Palestine. On July 21, 1967, the Reverend
James L. Kelso, a former moderator of the United Presbyterian Church and
long-time resident in Palestine, complained of extensive damage to churches
adding: “So significant was this third Jewish war against the Arabs that one of
the finest missionaries of the Near East called it ‘perhaps the most serious
setback that Christendom has had since the fall of Constantinople in 1453.’”
Kelso continued: “How did Israel respect
church property in the fighting...? They shot up the Episcopal Cathedral [in
Jerusalem], just as they had done in 1948. They smashed down the Episcopal
school for boys...The Israelis wrecked and looted the YMCA...They wrecked the
big Lutheran hospital...The Lutheran center for cripples also suffered...”
Nancy Nolan, wife of a physician at the
American University Hospital in Beirut, who was in Jerusalem during and after
the fighting, charged that “while the Israeli authorities proclaim to the world
that all religions will be respected and protected, and post notices identifying
the Holy Places, Israeli soldiers and youths are throwing stink bombs in the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher.
“The Church of St. Anne, who crypt marks
the birthplace of the Virgin Mary, has been severely damaged and the Church of
the Nativity in Bethlehem also was damaged. The wanton killing of the Warden of
the Garden Tomb followed by the shooting into the tomb itself, in an attempt to
kill the warden’s wife, was another instance that we knew first-hand which
illustrated the utter disregard shown by the occupation forces toward the Holy
Places and the religious sensibilities of the people in Jordan and in the rest
of the world.”
“The desecration of churches...includes
smoking in the churches, littering the churches, taking dogs inside and entering
in inappropriate manner of dress. Behavior such as this cannot be construed
other than as a direct insult to the whole Christian world.”
Desecration has occurred not only in
times of war. As recently as 1995, an Israeli soldier, Daniel Koren, 22, entered
St. Anthony Catholic Church in Jaffa and went on a shooting rampage, firing more
than 100 bullets in the altar and the cross above it but causing no injuries.
Koren said his Judaic convictions forced him to destroy all physical images of
God, and admitted that he had staged a prior attack in Jerusalem’s Gethsemane
Church.
Perhaps the worst outbreak of organized
desecration of Christian institutions came on Sept. 10, 1963, when hundreds of
ultra-orthodox Jews simultaneously attacked Christian missions in Jaffa, Haifa
and Jerusalem. (One has to say “perhaps because reporting on this sensitive
subject in the U.S. media has been so poor over the decades.) At any rate, the
attacks were a concerted effort to intimidate Christians in Israel by a
religious vigilante group called Hever Peelei Hamahane Hatorati, the Society of
Activists of the Torah Camp. In an attack on the Church of Scotland school in
Jaffa, Christian children were beaten and considerable damage was caused to the
school by at least 200 rampaging Jews.
Other attacks occurred at two nearby
church schools, the Greek Catholic missionary school of St. Joseph and a
Christian Brothers school. In Jerusalem, attacks occurred at the St. Joseph
convent and the Finnish Lutheran mission school. In Haifa, the American-European
Beth El Messianic Mission Children’s Hostel and School was attacked. No serious
damage occurred in any of the attacks except at the Scotland school. More than
100 Jews were convicted in the attacks, none of them receiving more than small
fines and suspended sentences.
The first half of the 1980s, with Likud
governments in control, was a particularly active period for Jewish bigots. On
Oct. 8, 1982, the Baptist Church in Jerusalem was burned down. Kerosene had been
sprinkled on the church’s wooden chapel, constructed in 1933. Although no one
was ever charged in the arson, the Baptist Center’s bookstore had been
vandalized a dozen times in previous years, and Jews were suspected. When the
Baptists sought to rebuild the church, Jews demonstrated against the project and
the Jewish district planning commission refused to grant a building permit. In
1985, the Israeli Supreme Court advised the Baptists to leave the all-Jewish
area.
On Christmas Day in 1983, a hotel in
Tiberias where Christians held meetings was set afire, the latest in a series of
attacks on a small group of about 50 Christians. Two Jews were arrested in the
arson incident. Other attacks included stones thrown through windows at the
hotel while the group was meeting and break-ins at the homes of members of the
group. The anti-missionary group Yad Le’Achim complained that Christian
missionaries were offering money, clothes, jewelry and tennis shoes to listen to
Christian lectures.
Just over a fortnight later, on Jan. 11,
1984, suspected Jewish extremists stacked hymnals on a piano in a Christian
prayer room in Jerusalem and set them afire. Also in the same week angry Jews
protesting Christian proselytizing caused Beth Shalom, a Christian evangelical
group, to withdraw its plans to build a multimillion-dollar hotel in Jerusalem.
Beth Shalom took its action after about 150 Jews showed up at a city council
meeting with placards reading “You can’t buy me” and “I didn’t immigrate to live
next door to missionaries.” A leader of the protest, Rabbi Moshe Berlinger,
compared Christian missionaries to Trojan horses.
Jewish infringements on Christian rights
became so bad by 1990 that on Dec. 20 the leaders of Christian churches in
Jerusalem took the extraordinary decision to restrict Christmas celebrations to
protest “the continuing sad state of affairs in our land,” including
encroachment by Israel on traditional Christian institutions. Among concerns
expressed by the patriarchs and heads of churches were attempts by Jewish
settlers to move into the Old City and an “erosion of the traditional rights and
centuries-old privileges of the churches,” including imposition by Israel of
municipal and state taxes on the churches.
The statement added: “We express our
deep concern over new problems confronting the local church. They interfere with
the proper functioning of our religious institutions, and we call upon the civil
authorities in the country to safeguard our historic rights and status honored
by all governments.”
Anti-Christian prejudice helps account
for the fact that the number of Christian Palestinians in all of former
Palestine had dwindled to only 50,000 in 1995. They no longer were a major
presence in either Jerusalem or Ramallah, and they were fast losing their
majority status in Bethlehem.
When Israel was established in 1948, the
Palestinian Christian community had numbered 200,000, compared to roughly
600,000 Jews in Palestine at the time. Now the Christians are not even one
percent of the population of Israel/Palestine. Of today’s estimated total
400,000 Christian Palestinians, most now are living in their own diaspora,
mainly in the Americas.
Reproduced from:
http://ifamericansknew.org/history/rel-christians.html
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