Letters and Reports on Israel-Palestine
Relations
January 13, 2005
Religious leaders
push president to focus on Middle East peace
PC(USA)’s Kirkpatrick is part of Washington delegation
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE — During a morning press conference in Washington, D.C. today,
35 Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders appealed to President George Bush
to resume peace negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis.
The National Interreligious Leadership Initiative
for Peace (NILIP) in the Middle East is a collaboration of the U.S. leadership
of the three Abrahamic faiths — Christians, Jews and Muslims — and is a first
in this arena.
The national leaders and
heads of 28 organizations are also mobilizing local religious communities
in U.S. cities to back this appeal to the president and to request support
for it by their senators and representatives to Congress.
In the appeal the religious leaders are offering
four specific suggestions:
- Appoint a full-time special presidential envoy,
in coordination with the European Union, the Russian Federation and the U.N.
Secretary General, to press ahead for full implementation of the Road Map
to Peace;
- Negotiate a timetable for specific, simultaneous
steps to be taken by the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli government,
with effective and highly visible monitoring to assure implementation by both
sides;
- Mobilize increased international economic aid that
is heavily monitored to build up the Palestinian Authority’s capacity to provide
security, prevent violent attacks on Israelis, and deliver humanitarian aid,
vital services and developmental assistance to the Palestinian people — putting
a high priority on creating jobs; and
- Support benchmark principles for mutually acceptable
peace agreements drawn from earlier official negotiations and from Israeli-Palestinian
civil society initiatives, such as the People’s Voice and the Geneva Accords.
The Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick, the stated clerk of the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) spoke to reporters at the National Press Club
today as part of an NILIP delegation, which included His Eminence William
Cardinal Keeler, archbishop of Baltimore; Rabbi David Saperstein, director
of the Religious Action Center for Reform Judaism; and Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed,
general secretary of the Islamic Society of North America.
“I am delighted that the leaders of
the three major faith communities — Muslim, Jewish and Christian — have come
to one mind on the importance of a two-state solution and on U.S. leadership
for peace in the region,” Kirkpatrick told the Presbyterian News Service.
“This is clearly a moment of opportunity for peace in the Middle East, and
I hope and pray that the Administration will seize the opportunity to join
us in working for peace.”
NILIP coordinator Ron Young of Seattle, WA,
said that stalling peace negotiations until all the violence stops only gives
a “veto” to extremists in this conflict when most Jewish and Arab Americans
endorse similar solutions to the conflict and nearly 70 percent of Israelis
and Palestinians would accept the same plan if it was mutual.
“We really have to overcome the sense that
peace is not possible,” Young said, calling the compromises offered in documents
like the Geneva Accords “realistic” on the tough issues. “Now is the time
for the administration to move quickly.
“Delay is not the way.”
Last October these same religious leaders
pushed Secretary of State Colin Powell to secure a full-time peace envoy to
Israel and Palestine, just as the United States did in Northern Ireland and
Sudan — without requiring that the violence stop before negotiations begin.
“This issue needs that same kind of attention,”
Young told PNS in a telephone interview a few days before the official appeal
was issued.
Young said there are other hopeful signs
that make “now” the opportune time to intervene:
Palestinian elections put new leadership in place that has a priority on
peace negotiations (“This is a new opportunity to get negotiations started
again”).
The Israeli government intends to withdraw from the Gaza Strip, which may
be the beginning of the end of the occupation (“The military occupation has
not worked … and withdrawal from all of the West Bank is the way to go in
the end”).
A second-term U.S. president can be less
worried about elections and be more decisive on policy matters (“President
Bush is the first president to explicitly support a two-state solution”).
In its appeal for the United States to take a leading
role in peace work, the document states: “For the sake of Israelis and Palestinians
— for the sake of peace in the region and worldwide — negotiations must be
restarted, the cycle of violence halted and progress resumed toward the goal
of a viable, independent, democratic Palestinian state alongside the State
of Israel with peace and security for both peoples. Continuing conflict is
jeopardizing the prospect of a two-state solution and providing fuel for terrorism.
“We believe U.S. leadership to achieve Arab-Israeli-Palestinian
peace will reduce support for terrorism, provide incentive in the region for
democratic reform, economic development and arms control, and offer a powerful
precedent for resolution of the conflict. Majorities of Israelis and Palestinians
desperately want the violence to end, not only because of the terrible toll
on human life, but also because it is clear that peace with justice — that
is, real security for Israelis and an end of occupation for Palestinians
— can only be achieved by negotiations. There are hopeful signs that Lebanon
and Syria also recognize the urgency of resuming negotiations.
“Israelis and Palestinians and Arab states
need America’s help. Determined U.S. leadership for peace is urgently needed
now.”
Local religious leaders in some U.S. cities
and Washington, D.C., are backing the NILIP appeal. Endorsements have come
from religious groups in Atlanta; Baltimore; Charlotte; Chicago; Hartford/New
Haven, CT; Detroit; Durham/Chapel Hill, NC; Indianapolis; a coalition of cities
on Long Island, NY; Portland; San Francisco; Seattle and Minneapolis/St.Paul.
The document concludes: “Mr. President, based
on the deepest beliefs in our three Abrahamic religious traditions, and on
past progress and new opportunities, we believe peace is possible. And we
believe determined U.S. leadership is essential for achieving peace.
“We pledge our prayers and active support
for your efforts, and we will work to mobilize our communities’ support nationwide.”
More information about the NILIP campaign
is available on its web site: www.walktheroadtopeace.org.
http://www.pcusa.org/pcnews/2005/05019.htm
Ecumenical Advent
and Christmas Message from Holy Land - Douglas Dicks
"A voice was heard in Ramah,
Wailing and loud lamentation,
Rachel weeping for her children;
She refused to be consoled,
Because they are no more."
Jeremiah 31:15
Grace
and peace to you from the Holy Land! We are well into the season
of Advent … the season of waiting and watching, listening for the wilderness
voices crying to prepare the way and make straight the roads of the Lord.
To make straight the roads..... a poignant cry in a land whose roads
are blocked in hundreds of places by checkpoints, barriers, fences and
the Wall! The only roads that are straight, the hundreds of miles
of bypass roads, are primarily forbidden to Palestinians. For them,
there is no straight road. (www.btselem.org , “Forbidden Roads,”
August 2004 report)
In this season when our eyes turn towards Bethlehem, we can see what
is tragically taking place across the whole of the West Bank. If Mary and
Joseph were to arrive in Bethlehem today, not only would they need permits
to pass the checkpoints, but they would have to take a detour to get into
the town. The main historic street into Bethlehem is being completely
cut off by a wall, ostensibly because of Rachel and her tomb, located on
that road. This place has had religious meaning not only to Jewish
women, but historically was a gathering point for Christian and Muslim women
as well, as they prayed for the gift of a child. The tomb area was also
the main burial ground for Muslims in the city, but is no longer available
to them. Now, Rachel’s tomb has become a fortress, an Israeli military
outpost at the entrance to the city. Only Israeli Jewish and foreign
women and men are allowed access today. As part of the Wall project, the
area is being cut off from Bethlehem, making way for a new Jewish settlement,
displacing more Palestinian families and separating others from their olive
groves or businesses.
(http://www.poica.org/casestudies/Bethlehem%2026-01-04/index.htm)
If one manages to get close enough to the Tomb, though, past the razor
wire and around the 20 inch thick concrete walls, one can almost hear Rachel,
still weeping for her children. She weeps for Iman al-Hamas, a 13-year
Palestinian girl riddled with machine-gun bullets by an Israeli army officer
on her way to school in Rafah, as she weeps for the 652 Palestinian children
which have been killed in the past 4 years alone. She weeps
for Yuval Abadeh, age 4, and Dorit Aniso, age 2, recent Jewish immigrants
from Ethiopia, killed in Sderot by rockets fired by Palestinian militants
in the Gaza strip, as she weeps for the 117 Israeli children which have
been killed. (www.rememberthesechildren.org)
She weeps for the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi and Sudanese children,
and the over 2 million children who have lost their lives in armed conflicts
in the last decade alone. She weeps for children left without parents,
without food and water, without housing and education, who are victims
of the world's obsession with violence, a world so bent on destruction
and war that it spends billions on bullets, bombs and brutality, responding
to symptoms of conflict rather than proactively investing in solutions to
the causes.
In the United States alone, we have poured over $150 billion into the
war on Iraq. With that same amount we could have done any one of the
following: immunized every child in the world for almost 50 years;
provided health insurance for almost 90,000,000 children in the USA; put
over 19,000,000 kids in Head Start or over 2,000,000 more public school teachers
in place for a year; built 1,300,000 new homes for those struggling to make
ends meet; given over 7,000,000 students 4-year scholarships to public universities;
or fully funded global anti-hunger programs for 6 years or global AIDS programs
for 14 years. If we add the amounts spent by nations worldwide on
arms and conflict, what we could have done for children around the world
is almost unimaginable. (www.costofwar.com)
Living and working in this land called ‘holy,’ we cry with Rachel for
all of the children -- Palestinian, Israeli, Christian, Muslim, and Jew.
We weep for children everywhere who pay the price for the arrogance and
greed of adults the world over. We long for the crooked places to
be made straight, so that the most vulnerable among us might know life before
death!
Yet Advent reminds us that, in the midst of weeping, there is another
cry. It is the sound of hope and truth that – somehow - the darkness
and weeping cannot and will not overcome. It is the sound of a newborn
child crying, bearing new life, hope and light into a broken world.
This stable-born savior was born to change the world by transforming our
love of power into the power of love; a love that blesses the poor, embraces
the unworthy, forgives the guilty and liberates the oppressed. This
child will lead people to a holy mountain where the wolf will live with the
lamb and the leopard will lie down with the kid. During this sacred
season, we wait with faith and longing, even in the midst of tears and fears,
for the fullness of God’s reign on earth. We reflect on our lives and
our choices, and we watch every day for signs of the Child. We
center our lives on the gift of Love that came to us in a child and we seek
renewed conviction to give ourselves to the work of justice and peace.
This Advent, we go to Bethlehem, where Love is born, to see if there
is any room in our busy, important lives for the Child. We go as the
scared and surprised shepherds, to watch for angels and listen for Glorias!
We go as Mary, pondering and treasuring in our hearts what this Child means
for us all. And, yes, we go as Rachel, to wonder at how each of us
can reach out to change our priorities for the well-being of children everywhere.
Please pray for us in this little town of Bethlehem and all over this
Holy Land, for the good news of steps toward a just peace, towards healing
and reconciliation. Pray that we may all live so that Rachel’s weeping
is transformed into joy as children the world over discover the opportunity
for life.
May the peace of the Christ Child be born in you again this Christmas,
and carry you with joy and blessing into the New Year.
Sincerely,
Rev. Alex and Mrs. Brenda Awad
General Board of Global Ministries
Mission Personnel - United Methodist Church
Douglas Dicks
Presbyterian Church (USA) Regional Liaison
Israel, Palestine and Jordan
Nancy Dinsmore
Development Officer
Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem
Rev. Paul Lillie, deacon
St. George's Cathedral, Jerusalem
Sri Mayasandra
Mennonite Central Committee
Catherine Nichols
Global Ministries Personnel Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) &
United Church of Christ
Rev. Sandra Olewine
United Methodist Church Liaison – Jerusalem
General Board of Global Ministries
Rev. Julie Rowe
Communications for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and Jerusalem
Tim and Chris Seidel
Mennonite Central Committee
Rev. Russell O. Siler, pastor
English-speaking congregation
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer, Jerusalem
December 15, 2004
Denominational leaders, ACSWP delegation
exchange letters over fallout from Hezbollah visit
by Jerry L. Van Marter
LOUISVILLE
— Several weeks of intense dialogue between Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
leaders and members of an Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP)-led
delegation that held a controversial mid-October meeting with Hezbollah
officials in southern Lebanon has culminated in an exchange of letters.
A joint statement to the Presbyterian
News Service on Dec. 13 included the two letters and a brief report of
the delegation’s Oct. 14–31 visit, which included stops in Lebanon, Syria,
Jordan, Israel/Palestine and Egypt.
The Oct. 17 meeting between the Middle
East “fact-finding” delegation and leaders of Hezbollah — which is on the
U.S. government’s list of terrorist organizations — created a deluge of protests
from numerous Jewish groups and Presbyterians around the country. The meeting
was widely televised on Arab networks.
Two high-level PC(USA) staffers — General
Assembly Council Deputy Executive Director Kathy Lueckert and ACSWP Coordinator
the Rev. Peter Sulyok — were subsequently relieved of their duties.
In their Dec. 1 letter to GAC Executive
Director John Detterick, General Assembly Stated Clerk Clifton Kirkpatrick
and General Assembly Moderator Rick Ufford-Chase, seven ACSWP elected members
defended the meeting as an opportunity to “listen to those voices not usually
heard by Presbyterians in order to gain a wider perspective and a deeper
understanding of the conflicts in the Middle East.” But they said they
regretted the “pain and difficulties” the visit created for the denomination.
During the Hezbollah meeting Ron Stone,
a retired professor at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, said, “As an elder
of our church, I’d like to say that according to my recent experience, relations
and conversations with Islamic leaders are a lot easier than dealings and
dialogue with Jewish leaders.”
The Dec. 6 response from Ufford-Chase,
Detterick and Kirkpatrick thanked the ACSWP members for their expressions
of regret and in turn apologized for a post-visit statement they issued denouncing
the visit and calling Stone’s comments “reprehensible.”
The denominational leaders told ACSWP:
“We appreciate your sensitivity to our Church’s important witness for peace
and justice in the Middle East and to its deep commitment to the well-being
of both Palestinians and Israelis. We share that commitment with
you.”
Neither letter made any mention of the
firings of Lueckert and Sulyok.
-----------------------------
The full text of the ACSWP members’ letter — signed
by Dianne Briscoe, Esperanza Guajardo, the Rev. Sue Dickson, the Rev. Ronald
Kernaghan, the Rev. Gordon Edwards, Stone and the Rev. Nile Harper, ACSWP
chair:
Dear Colleagues in Ministry:
The elected members of the Advisory Committee
on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP) who participated in the recent Middle
East fact-finding trip acknowledge that their meeting with the Hezbollah
party in south Lebanon created great pain and difficulties for you and
for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
We regret the rupture in relationship
and dialogue with leaders of the American Jewish community caused in part
by the media reports of our conversation with Sheikh Nabil Qaouk, the spiritual
leader of Hezbollah. The purpose of our trip was to listen to a variety
of different voices and especially to those voices not usually heard by
Presbyterians in order to gain a wider perspective and a deeper understanding
of the conflicts in the Middle East. A brief report from the ACSWP trip
is available at www.pcusa.org/acswp
.
The meeting with Hezbollah was arranged
by our Presbyterian hosts, The Evangelical Synod of Lebanon and Syria,
and seemed to be in keeping with our fact-finding purpose. In retrospect,
we understand that the visit with Hezbollah leadership was untimely and
unwise given the larger context of religious and political tensions within
our country. Nevertheless, we accept responsibility for our actions in carrying
out the meeting.
It is our fervent prayer that we
may join together with you in working for peace, unity and justice within
the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and in the larger world.
---------------------------------------
The full text of the letter from Ufford-Chase, Detterick
and Kirkpatrick in response:
Dear Friends in Christ:
We write this letter specifically to thank
you for your letter of December 1, 2004 expressing regret over the consequences
of your meeting with the Hezbollah Party in Lebanon and for the copy of
the report on the highlights of your visit to the Middle East. We
are grateful for the partnership in the gospel that we have with you and
your colleagues in the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy and for
the important role that ACSWP plays in the life of our Church.
We appreciate your sensitivity to our
Church’s important witness for peace and justice in the Middle East and
to its deep commitment to the well-being of both Palestinians and Israelis.
We share that commitment with you. We also appreciate the full report
on your visit, the helpful fact finding you have done for the church, and
the many ways in which your trip strengthened our partnerships in the Middle
East and brought hope to those who have suffered for far too long.
We affirm the continuing policy research that ACSWP does for the General
Assembly, both in this nation and around the world.
We acknowledge that our letter was
hurtful to you, and we are sorry for that hurt. We are eager to move
on to work for the peace, unity and purity of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
in order that we may together give faithful witness to the compassion and
justice of Christ for all the peoples of the world.
The text of the “Brief summary of
highlights” from the trip (for more information, visit the Web site www.pcusa.org/acswp):
Differentiation Of Presbyterian Policy From American Religious
Zionism
In every country we visited
(Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Israel, Egypt), we heard deep appreciation
for the balanced policy of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) supporting negotiated
peace, with safe borders for Israel and Palestine, rejection of all forms
of terrorism, the right of self determination, and self defense, the end
of the occupation, removal of The Wall, and praise for the planned, selective,
phased economic divestment action of the General Assembly. Christian, Muslim
and some Jewish leaders praised General Assembly courage.
Meetings In Beirut, Lebanon — Praise For Presbyterian
Partnership
ACSWP met with leaders from
the Evangelical Synod of Lebanon and Syria, Faculty of the Near East School
of Theology, The Metropolitan Maronite Bishop (Catholic) of Beirut, the
General Secretary of the Middle East Council of Churches. From all these
people we heard appreciation for historic Presbyterian partnership; praise
for the courageous Presbyterian General Assembly action for planned, selective
economic divestment, and gratitude for our coming to meet with and listen
to all parties and voices involved in the Middle East regional struggles for
peace with justice.
Powerful Worship And Experiencing The Body Of Christ Globally
In South Lebanon at the Ebel
Al-Saki Presbyterian Church in the small village of Marjiyoun where every
family has lost one or more members to the long war of Israeli occupation--here
we saw how Presbyterians and Muslims live, cooperate, and work together to
rebuild their region. In Damascus, Syria we worshipped in the Evangelical
Presbyterian Church of St. Paul and the congregation of over 100 came out
into the street to welcome us; we shared in prayer, scripture, song and preaching,
testimony, food and fellowship that moved us to tears. In Jerusalem
at the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer inside the old city we prayed with
Arab Christians, Mennonite peace workers, Israeli Jews, and many others
receiving communion together and making many new friends. In Cairo,
Egypt we joined in worship with brothers and sisters from the Synod of the
Nile who shared their vision for growing mission, church outreach into Muslim
communities through acts of love in health care, schools, and economic development.
They challenged us to new partnerships.
Listening To Five Iraqi Church Leaders — A Call To Compassionate
Partnership
We met for a full day with
five national level leaders from Iraq: the Armenian Orthodox Bishop of Baghdad;
the Greek Orthodox Archbishop of Baghdad; the Syrian Orthodox Bishop of Baghdad;
the Senior Presbyterian Pastor from Baghdad; and the Pastor of the Evangelical
(Presbyterian) Church in Tikrit. They all spoke of the lack of safety, lack
of police security, fear of people to venture out to church, lack of dependable
water, electricity, and basic public services. However, they emphasized
that their churches, schools, health care clinics are struggling to reopen
and serve the great needs of their members and the general public. They
gave detailed lists of ways in which Presbyterians could engage in partnership
with Iraqi Christians. It was a clear call to compassionate partnership. There
are real mission opportunities here.
Bethlehem – A Dying City
ACSWP spent a day in Bethlehem
meeting with staff of the Center for Palestinian Residency & Refugee
Rights, visiting a refugee community, the Bethlehem International Center,
talking with people in the streets and shops, and later that evening meeting
with leaders from the Palestinian Authority. In Bethlehem we found that many
shops and local businesses have been closed. Many have gone bankrupt. Local
residents travel only with great difficulty. The Wall of Separation runs in
such a way as to limit access to the surrounding area. Tourism is almost dead.
The large Jewish settlements are visible from Bethlehem as well as the limited
access highways that connect them. These roads cannot be used by Palestinians.
They must endure slow travel with long delays at Israeli military checkpoints.
Close Encounter With The Wall Of Separation
The group spent a full afternoon
touring regions of Jerusalem and surrounding communities through which the
newly constructed Wall of Separation has been built. We saw firsthand how
the Wall divides Palestinian sections of East Jerusalem. We witnessed how
Palestinians must travel for several hours to make necessary detours to reach
schools, jobs, health care, and other facilities. We learned that a simple
mile-long trip that would have taken fifteen minutes before The Wall now
takes over one hour. We passed through the three Israeli military checkpoints
between Jerusalem and Bethlehem — a short eight-mile trip — that now can
take two hours for Palestinians to travel. We also heard some
Israelis indicate they felt safer since The Wall went up. Others indicated
they thought The Wall was a barrier to real peace and stability.
Jerusalem Reception Brings Out 100 People
On the evening of October
23, ACSWP hosted a reception in Jerusalem at the Notre Dame Conference Center
for about 40-50 invited guests representing all viewpoints on the Middle
East. Over 100 people turned out and stayed until 11:30 p.m. People
were hungry for the opportunity to have open conversation in a safe place
with no strings attached. Who came? Jewish Rabbis, human rights workers, pastors,
priests, NGO staffers, Quaker and Mennonite peace leaders, Muslim, Jewish
and Christian religious leaders, a real mix and cross section of the Middle
East peoples. Existing partnerships were strengthened. New opportunities for
collaboration were discovered. Listening and learning. Ideas for future partnerships
emerged. Bridges of communication were opened.
Cairo, Egypt – Meeting For Interfaith Dialogue And With
The Synod Of The Nile
We met for dialogue with a
group of over 50 Coptic Christians, Evangelical Christians, and the Islamic
Brotherhood. Conversation began with the Grand Mufti (highest religious official
of Islam in Egypt) putting hard questions to us about U. S. foreign policy
with focus on the war in Iraq and perceived lack of serious leadership for
peace processes between Israel and Palestine. We shared General Assembly
policy actions which were well received. There was great interest in General
Assembly action toward a planned, selective economic divestment. As
the evening moved ahead, there was a warming trend and dialogue led toward
friendship and future communication.
A great point of learning came in several
meetings with representatives of the Synod of the Nile. The PC(USA) has
longstanding partnerships in Egypt. The Nile Synod has a new Moderator who
spoke with passion for their new vision of expanding mission including creating
five new centers of health, education and social service for people in large
and growing communities in and around Cairo. Each center will seek to create
a new Christian congregation at the center of its outreach services. Education,
health care, and economic development are seen to be avenues of doing the
gospel of Christ. The moderator challenged us to take back the invitation
to Americans to join with energy in the emerging initiatives through which
they believe God is doing a new thing.
Conversations With Muslim Leaders And Scholars
We met with Muslim scholars,
government representatives and imams in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt.
The delegation had private interviews with President Lahoud of Lebanon, President
Assad of Syria, the Minister of Foreign Affairs in Egypt and the Grand Imam
of Al Anzhar University in Cairo. We also engaged in dialogue with The Islamic
Institute for Interfaith Relations in Damascus and The Muslim Brotherhood
in Cairo. There is great interest in continued dialogue between Christians
and Muslims, a deep respect for the Arab Christian community as a stabilizing
influence in Middle Eastern societies, and a desire among moderate Muslims
to engage evangelicals and Christian Zionists in conversation. Muslim leaders
expressed a deep reverence for Jesus Christ and were eager to discuss questions
of justice and peace in the Middle East from the perspective of the teachings
of Jesus. It was a moving experience to hear sincere expressions of concern
for the suffering of Israelis. We heard several clear statements that acts
of terror committed against civilians are a violation of the teaching of
the Koran. Some of the Islamic leaders who spoke against terrorism have done
so at great personal risk.
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