Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November/December
1996, page 47
Christianity in the Middle East
Ecumenical Peace Service and March Held in Jerusalem
by Rev. L. Humphrey Walz
The Christian community in Jerusalem represented by
patriarchs, bishops, clergy, and lay people, both indigenous and
international, came together in an unprecedented ecumenical service
of prayer and peace march on Sunday afternoon, Sept. 29, 1996.
Approximately 1,500 people (some estimates are much
higher) gathered at St. Annes Church near Lions Gate,
inside the Old City of Jerusalem. The program included prayers,
Bible readings, and hymns led by representatives from all the Christian
churches in Jerusalem. With the exception of a few prayers said
by some international clergy (French, German, English, Portuguese,
Swahili and Malayalam), the service was conducted in Arabic. Latin
Patriarch Michel Sabbah presided. The sermon was delivered by Archimandrite
Atallah Hanna of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in Jerusalem on
behalf of the patriarchs, bishops, clergy and people of Jerusalem
and the whole of the Christian community in the land. It was a strong
and clear statement expressing the faith and position of the whole
Palestinian Christian community vis-a-vis the political situation
in Jerusalem and the rest of the occupied territories.
After the service, the worshippers, with candles in
hand, took part in a silent peace march from St. Annes to
the Chapel of the Flagellation. The march ended with a final prayer
at the entrance to the chapel, exactly opposite the door of the
recently opened tunnel which sparked off Septembers tragic
incidents.
The people returned quietly, daring to hope they might
have nudged the government toward honoring its agreements.
A number of Palestinian Christian and Muslim ministers
and Legislative Council members were among the participants in the
prayers and the peace march, including Faisal Husseini, Hanan Ashrawi
and the minister of Waqf and Religious Affairs, Hassan Tahboob.
(Ask any Muslim about Waqf charities.)
Jerusalem Christian Schools Want Travel Permits for
Staff
In September, when children went back to classes for
the new academic year in Jerusalems private Christian schools,
many of their teachers were absent. Father Halim Noujaim, chairman
of the Ecumenical Christian Schools in Jerusalem, has reported to
Ecumenical News International that the closure of the occupied West
Bank has made it impossible for 150 teachers and essential staff
of Protestant, Orthodox and Roman Catholic schools to reach their
jobs.
Our educational programs and plans are
in disarray. The problem has gone from bad to worse and our childrens
education remains at a virtual standstill, says Noujaim, who
had met earlier with Prime Minister Netanyahu and pled that young
people who cant come to school become bored, restless and
tense. Left to themselves, deprived of guidance and association
with role models, they easily fall prey to unsavory elements in
the streets.
Our childrens education remains at a virtual
standstill.
He told the prime minister that the school administrators
were mindful that access to education and the encouragement
of positive attitudes are significant factors in our common pursuit
of peace and justice for the people of this land, and expressed
the hope that together we may forestall frustration and violence
and work for the peace and security of Jerusalem.
The schools, most of which serve Muslim as well as
Christian youths, are known throughout the region for their high
academic standards. Many of the teachers come from nearby, traditionally
Christian Bethlehem, Beit Jala, Beit Sahour and Ramallah. They provide
multilingual education for both Palestinian and expatriate children.
Earlier attempts by Christian schools in Jerusalem to ensure the
return of staff were unsuccessful. In April the heads of Christian
churches discussed the problem with leading government officials
who had promised to find a solution. A letter last month to the
prime minister from the Latin, Greek Orthodox and Armenian patriarchs
and Lutheran, Anglican and Coptic leaders has not been acknowledged,
says Ecumenical News International correspondent Martin Bailey.
Royalty Undergirds Efforts to Save Mt. Sinai Treasures
For more than 15 centuries, the monks of St. Catherines
Monastery on the barren slopes of Egypts Mount Sinai have
been collecting, copying and illuminating manuscripts related to
the Christian faith. One result today is its librarys accumulation
of almost 5,000 handwritten books and scrolls, second only in number,
volume and importance to the Vatican Librarys collection.
Most of them date from before the invention of movable type.
Produced with devotion and with many safeguards for
accuracy, they are, among other things, basic to establishing the
original text of the Bible. To preserve and amplify this collection,
the British Royal family, in consultation with Dr. George Carey,
Archbishop of Canterbury, and with enthusiastic cooperation from
the monasterys Abbot Damianos, has established the St. Catherine
Foundation. It has enlisted Camberwell College of Arts in south
London to help with a conservation program for which Father Nilus,
one of the monks, has taken technical training, and 19 others are
being prepared. Since Sinai desert heat can seriously damage books
and papers, a priority for the foundation is the creation of environmentally
controlled storage and archive systems.
The site of St. Catherines Monastery is venerated
by Christians, Muslims and Jews as the place where Moses had the
vision of the burning bush and later received the Ten Commandments
(Exodus 19-24). The Prophet Muhammad provided the monastery with
a letter of protection, copies of which can still be seen at St.
Catherines.
Peace to the City Ponders Beirut
International peace has been a goal of the World Council
of Churches ever since its creation. Interchurch programming on
urban violence, however, generally has been left up to local and
regional church councils and their secular colleagues. The Sept.
12-20 meeting of the WCCs Central Committee in Geneva, however,
decided to launch a joint initiative to encourage churches, under
the heading of Peace to the City, to visibly demonstrate
the destructive force of violence and foster significant
initiatives for building peace and justice. To this end it
is working on the selection of seven widely separated cities for
study.
Rio de Janeiro and Johannesburg have since been targeted.
Beirut is at present the most likely choice for the Middle East.
Belfast, Manila, Chicago, Mostar and Port-au-Prince are among others
being considered. Those selected will receive a series of team visits
in the next two years. Their representatives will meet at the next
WCC Assembly in Zimbabwe in 1998 to help member churches reflect
on how the WCC might facilitate their work on overcoming violence
in the period after the assembly.
Margot Kassmann, a German member of the Central Committee,
told a Sept. 19 press conference in Geneva that this initiative
is part of the WCCs program to overcome violence, which she
views as having the potential of becoming the most important
social-ethical enterprise of the WCC. In a time when violence is
disrupting human relationships, when societies are torn apart by
violence and civil conflict, and violence is seen as a legitimate
way of settling disputes within or between states, the churches
have to say a clear no.
Cities, she added, can be symbols
of the urgency to act. We do not want to describe violence, but
to show that something can be done about it. We want to encourage
churches to act, to cross barriers, to make new alliances and to
rebuild broken communities.
The program is also intended to examine situations
where churches or religious groups contributed to the causes of
violence, she said.
Church Leaders Differ on Iraq Sanctions
The Central Committee of the World Council of Churches
(WCC) has criticized economic sanctions against Iraq for the
additional suffering they often inflict on affected populations,
and called on all nations to respect the territorial integrity
of Iraq.
The committee also expressed appreciation for a statement
issued on Sept. 13 by 21 leaders of the National Council of Churches
of Christ in the U.S.A. (NCC), who strongly urge the U.S.
government to pursue a course of military restraint and multilateral
diplomacy. While stating that we have no sympathy for
the policies of the government in Iraq, the NCC leaders urged
the U.S. government to operate in concert with U.N. Security Council
resolutions and to reject any urgings to trust only in muscle
and might.
Some committee members, however, felt that sanctions
could be a significant means of nonviolent action. Citing results
in South Africa, they asserted that sanctions should not only be
seen in a negative light.
Memories of Rabbi Elmer Berger
The tribute to the late Rabbi Elmer Berger on page
25 of this issue will stir grateful memories among many Christians
whose perspectives on Biblical and modern religious teachings and
political stances were stimulated by his critical analyses, penetrating
judgments and their practical implications. Church leaders who differed
as widely as liberal Protestant President Henry Pit
Van Dusen of Union Theological Seminary and Socialist politician
Norman Thomas were of one mind in their appreciation of his integrity,
candor, and thorough scholarship and courage in the face of Zionist
character assassination and mishandling of Scripture passages out
of context.
In interfaith relations, whether in lectures, dialogues
or conversation, he listened carefully and responded appreciatively
or impatiently as the instance might require.
In the overall picture of Judaism in America, he
embodied as much as anyone could possibly have done the convictions
on which American Reform Judaism was founded. As phrased most succinctly
in the 1841 declaration of the Charleston, SC, synagogue, This
country is our Palestine; this city is our Jerusalem; this house
of God is our Temple. |