June 24, 2003
by Joel
Ecumenical Accompanier
It is easy to forget that the West Bank, home
to so much modern injustice and violence, was once home to other
events as well. It was in the West Bank - Bethlehem to be exact
- that Jesus was born. And it is in the West Bank that Christians
have lived for nearly 2,000 years. To this day, church steeples
in many Palestinian towns and villages remind the visitor of the
long history of Palestinian Christians in this troubled land.
Their lives, however, have not been easy. The
past century has witnessed a startling drop in the number of Christians
living in the Occupied Territories (both the West Bank and Gaza).
They have emigrated in large numbers. Today, no more than two percent
of the population is Christian, compared to as much as 20 percent
in 1948. The population of towns like Bethlehem and Ramallah were
once over 90 percent Christian, but today, Bethlehem is less than
25 percent Christian while in Ramallah, the percentage is even lower.
In fact, there are more Christians from Bethlehem living in Chile
and Brazil than in Bethlehem. Similarly, there are more Christians
from Ramallah living in the American cities of Detroit and Jacksonville
than in Ramallah.
Today, fewer than 50,000 Christians still live
in the West Bank (about 2,000 also live in Gaza). Each month, especially
during this current intifada, the number has shrunk further. Many
fear that this will be the century that the two thousand-year-old
Christian community in the West Bank and Gaza disappears.
While not making light of these concerns, it
is important to emphasize that the church is still alive today.
Christians are heavily involved in running schools and hospitals.
Others are organizing centres that foster cultural activities and
provide a positive setting in which young people can come together.
Each Sunday, people fill the pews of Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant
churches alike. And from these sanctuaries, they worship a Lord
who passed through the very towns that many Palestinians still call
home today.
Heartache, abuse
While Christians in Palestine constitute a small
segment of the population, they will express a broad range of opinions
and focus when asked about their lives in the Occupied Territories.
Many, of course, will share their perspectives on the Israeli occupation.
Reportedly, dozens of Christians have been killed by Israeli forces
during this intifada, mostly in the Bethlehem area.
Others are well acquainted with interrogation
and imprisonment in Israeli facilities. The stories of heartache
and abuse at the hands of Israeli soldiers can be heard in every
church, and probably in every pew.
For example, two months ago in the northern West
Bank village of Zababdeh, one 33-year-old mechanic, a member of
the Roman Catholic community, was taken from his shop by a passing
military jeep to be used as a human shield while the soldiers fired
beside his head in response to a Molotov cocktail that someone had
thrown near their jeep. It was his wife's 24th birthday. The practice
of taking human shields is illegal according to international law,
and Christians - like their Muslim neighbours - share the fear of
and anger at being abused by Israeli soldiers who break the law
and take advantage of Palestinians.
One of the priests in Zababdeh, Father Aktham,
points to another realm in which the Israeli occupation causes difficulty
for the Palestinian Christian community. The Shas Party, a right-wing
component of Prime Minister Sharon's government, was given responsibility
last year for the Ministry of the Interior. Many priests and nuns
ministering in Palestinian congregations depend on a work visa to
maintain their legal status in the West Bank. For the past year,
the minister has refused to renew these visas, leaving some eighty
priests and nuns in a very awkward position: they want to be faithful
to the congregations they serve, but find themselves no longer with
the legal right to be in Israel or the West Bank. The ministry is
now in the hands of another party that promises to rectify the problem.
Minority status
While some Christians focus on the occupation
as the most crucial issue in their lives today, others are more
preoccupied with being a minority in a predominantly Muslim environment.
All Christians agree on the injustice and abuse that Israeli occupation
has brought into their lives, but there is less agreement on what
it means to be a minority in the midst of a Muslim majority. One
Christian, for example, may complain about the myriad ways that
Muslims discriminate against Christians. The officials who hire
teachers at the public school will hire a Muslim over a Christian,
he says, because they would rather have a co-religionist than a
perhaps better qualified Christian influencing the lives of children.
A neighbour, however, disagrees, and points to numerous examples
of Christians being treated equally. He even identifies the ways
in which Christians have received preferential treatment. For example,
Yasser Arafat has a higher percentage of Christians in his government
! than there is in the population at large.
Some Christians also talk about how their lives
are impacted by Western media. Muslims often interpret the movies
and sitcoms that are broadcast into Palestinian homes as evidence
of the moral failures of Christianity. A naked and unmarried Western
couple, frolicking on a Muslim Palestinian's TV set, contributes
to the stereotype that Christians are a loose, ungodly people. Palestinian
Christians then find themselves having to deal with these associations
some Muslims make with Christianity. As one Palestinian priest says,
"Western TV hurts us."
Palestinian Muslims who live in areas where there
is no Christian population may be ignorant of both the history and
presence of Palestinian Christians. For example, some first-year
students at the Arab American University, located just outside the
predominantly Christian village of Zababdeh, are surprised to discover
that some Palestinians are not Muslim. Despite the important role
that Christians have played in Palestinian society, some Muslims
do not appreciate their contributions to Palestinian history, often
because they never learned about them.
Some Muslims accuse Christians of not being involved
in the struggle against the Israeli occupation, saying that Muslims
suffer for the cause while Christians live an easy life. For Christians,
however, this is a painful and false accusation. Christians are
sometimes killed, jailed and beaten, just as Muslims are. Christians
too are confined to their homes when a town is placed under curfew.
Christians also have difficulties at checkpoints and are forbidden
to use settler by-pass roads. They too suffer from unemployment
and worry about what kind of future their children will have.
Even after recounting some of the above difficulties,
Palestinian Christians recognize and speak with pride about the
many ways Muslims and Christians co-exist positively in the Occupied
Territories. In Zababdeh and other communities, Muslims and Christians
attend school together, learning from both Muslim and Christian
teachers. Sheikhs and priests sometimes pay visits to one another
on important religious holidays, or to discuss community issues.
The Palestinian constitution, currently being created, has been
sent to church leaders for their review and feedback. Yasser Arafat,
when not confined to Ramallah, attends Christmas Eve mass in Bethlehem
each year.
Christians and Muslims are united in their opposition
to Israeli occupation. There is, however, some apprehension about
what an independent Palestinian state might look like once the occupation
ends. Islamic movements have taken on an increasingly powerful role
in Palestinian political culture, and generally call for the establishment
of an Islamic state in Palestine. Christians, on the other hand,
along with many other Muslims, are united in their call for a more
secular and inclusive political system. For them, it would be a
dubious improvement to go from an Israeli occupation to an Islamic
state.
The life of Christians in the Occupied Territories
is complex. They live amidst the realities of a military occupation.
They also live as a small minority in a predominantly Muslim society.
And in many ways, they live isolated from the church in other countries,
where Christians are often more interested in the aging biblical
sites in places like Bethlehem than in the living communities that
live there.
World Council of Churches
29-year-old Joel from the USA has just completed a stint as an ecumenical
accompanier in Zababdeh within the WCC's Ecumenical Accompaniment
Programme in Palestine and Israel. In the small, predominantly Christian
village of Zababdeh, Joel and two other ecumenical accompaniers
were working within a loose network of churches and organizations
including a Latin Patriarchate convent and secondary school, Greek
Orthodox, Greek Melchite and Anglican churches. From their base
in Zababdeh, the three ecumenical accompaniers participated in classes
at the Arab American University, accompanied school buses, and helped
Jenin's YMCA provide food and water for the municipality while it
was under curfew. Joel has a BA in Political Science and Sociology,
and a Masters in Church History with a thesis on the Palestinian
church under Israeli rule. (The Ecumenical Accompaniers are not
named in full for security reasons.)
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