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Palestinian
Christians Urge Israel Isolation
By Khalid Amayreh,
IOL Correspondent
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"Apartheid
can’t be wrong in South Africa and right in occupied
Palestine," Kassis told IOL.
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BETHLEHEM -- Christian
religious and community leaders in occupied Palestine have launched an
ecumenical campaign aimed at enlisting Christians around the world to help
end the Israeli military occupation.
"This document is the
Christian Palestinians’ word to the world about what is happening in
Palestine," says the 15-page document.
"We, Palestinian
Christians, declare in this historic document that the military occupation
of our land is a sin against God and humanity and that any theology that
legitimizes the occupation is far from Christian teachings because true
Christian theology is a theology of love and solidarity with the oppressed
and a call to justice and equality among peoples."
Initiators, who include
leaders of major churches in the Holy Land, said they had been working on
the document for over a year.
"We have not
encountered any real opposition to the document," Rifat Kassis, the
main spokesman of the initiative, told IslamOnline.net.
He expects as many as 32
Christian institutions, 200 community leaders as well as thousands of
intellectuals and intelligentsia to sign the document, themed Kairos
Paletine-2009: A Moment of Truth-A word of Truth, Hope, and Love from the
Heart of Palestinian suffering.
"In fact, all
religious leaders are backing the initiative wholeheartedly. Even some
evangelical leaders are endorsing the document."
Palestinian Christian
leaders say the situation in occupied Palestine has reached "the moment
of truth," or Kairos as the concept is called in Christian theological
lexicon.
"The decision-makers
content themselves with managing the crisis rather than committing
themselves to the serious task of finding a way to resolve it," says
the document.
"The problem is not
just a political one. It is a policy in which human beings are destroyed,
and this must be of concern to the Church."
Ugly Reality
The document describes an
extremely ugly reality in occupied Palestine under the yoke of the Israeli
occupation.
It lists the various
numerous disastrous effects of the occupation on Palestinian daily lives,
including the separation wall, continued Jewish settlement expansion and the
daily humiliation of Palestinians at military checkpoints.
"Religious liberty is
severely restricted; the freedom of access to the holy places is denied
under the pretext of security," it says.
"Jerusalem and its
holy places are out of bounds for many Christians and Muslims from the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip.
"Even Jerusalemites
face restrictions during the religious feasts. Some of our Arab clergy are
regularly barred from entering Jerusalem."
Israel captured and
occupied Al-Quds in the six-day 1967 war, then annexed it in a move not
recognized by the world community or UN resolutions.
The city is home to some
of the holiest Christian worship places including the ancient Jerusalem
Church and Greek Orthodox Church.
Al-Quds is also home to
Al-Haram Al-Sharif, which includes Islam's third holiest shrine Al-Aqsa
Mosque, and represents the heart of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Since its occupation,
Israel has adopted a series of oppressive measures to force the Palestinian
inhabitants of Al-Quds out, including systematic demolition of their homes.
"The shrinking number
of Christians, particularly in Palestine, is one of the dangerous
consequences, both of this conflict, and of the local international
paralysis and failure to find a comprehensive solution to the problem,"
says the document.
"Thus the land is
deprived of its most important and richest resource-educated youth."
World Support
The document is being
symbolically signed by dozens of Christian leaders in the West Bank, Al-Quds
(occupied East Jerusalem) and the rest of occupied Palestine.
The symbolic signing,
which started on Friday, December 11, will last for a few weeks.
Then special emissaries,
mostly clergymen, will carry the landmark document to churches in Europe and
North America for endorsement and adoption.
Initiators said they hoped
that the document would raise the conscience of Christians in the West and
around the world to end the Palestinian plight.
Some church leaders have
described it as an impassioned appeal or an SOS to Christians worldwide to
stand on the side of justice in Palestine.
"We are a peaceable
people, we are not terrorists if only because we are the victims of terror,
we love freedom, we love justice, we love our country, we love our Jerusalem
and we insist on living with human dignity," says Archbishop Atallah
Hanna, a prominent leader of the Orthodox Church of Jerusalem and one of the
initiators.
"This is why we feel
Christians worldwide have a paramount religious and human duty to stand on
our side. This is a moral and human responsibility that Churches and
Christians in general must not flinch from pursuing."
Kassis, the spokesman,
said local Christian leaders had been coordinating the initiative with the
World Council of churches and other Christian bodies around the world.
"Ultimately, we hope
that Christian institutions, including churches around the world, will
endorse this document and act on it the same way churches related to the
anti-apartheid South African regime back in 1985," he told IOL.
In 1985, a group of black
South African theologians based predominantly in the black townships of
Soweto issued a theological statement challenging the churches' response to
the vicious policies of the apartheid regime.
The Kairos Document evoked
strong reactions and furious debates world-wide.
"In the final
analysis, apartheid can’t be wrong in South Africa and right in occupied
Palestine," says Kassis.
Archbishop Hanna, an
outspoken critic of Israeli occupation and apartheid, believes the
unbearable situation in occupied Palestine must come to an end.
"Everything has a
beginning and an end. The Israeli occupation must have an end, and the end
must come now."
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