Note: The following resolution, submitted by
Wider Church Ministries, was approved by the
25th General Synod of the United Church of Christ, which met in Atlanta,
Georgia from July 1-5.
THEOLOGICAL RATIONALE
For he is our peace; in his flesh he
has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall,
that is, the hostility between us. (Ephesians 2:14)
A central tenet of our Christian
faith is the possibility for reconciliation among peoples. This human
reconciliation through God’s love was demonstrated by Jesus Christ, and
reported to the people of Ephesus by Paul. We are called to be people
of reconciliation and called to engage in the act of reconciliation.
Barriers to reconciliation exist in many forms and in many places. When
barriers are constructed, hostility that exists becomes exacerbated.
Differences between peoples can only be addressed through bringing them
together, not by adding further divisions. By breaking down walls that
separate, we actively seek peace and reconciliation in the world in an
attempt to follow Jesus’ example. In doing so, we seek a death to
hostility.
BACKGROUND
In June 2002, the State of Israel
began an ambitious construction. Construction of a separation
barrier—also known as the “security fence” and as the “Wall”—commenced and
continues to this day.
According to Israeli plans, the
barrier will be over 400 miles (650 kilometers) in length, at a cost not
less than $1.6 million per mile ($1 million per km), and will exceed $1
billion for the entire project. The main barrier takes on many forms,
including 8-meter high cement walls, 3-meter high electric and barbed-wire
fences, and a combination of the two. The infrastructure of the barrier
that also includes a buffer zone on both sides, surveillance cameras,
trenches, and observation posts compounds what Israeli human rights
activist Jeff Halper calls the “matrix of control” of settlements, by-pass
roads and checkpoints.
The barrier violates multiple
international conventions, agreements, and resolutions, including article
2.4 of the United Nations Charter (prohibiting the use of force to violate
territorial integrity), the Fourth Geneva Convention (prohibiting the
destruction of land or property and the practice of collective
punishment), and both the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights and the International Covenant on Economical, Social, and Cultural
Rights (defining rights of movement, property, health, education, work,
and food). The barrier also is contrary to UN Security Council resolution
242 which calls for the “Withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from
territories occupied in the recent [1967] conflict.”
The barrier encroaches into the
occupied Palestinian territories from along the entire perimeter of the
West Bank, frequently abutting or intersecting Palestinian villages, while
leaving agricultural fields, shops, and family members on the opposite,
Israeli-claimed side of the border. In places like Qalqilya, the barrier
loops prominently into the West Bank, enveloping entire Palestinian
villages and creating ghettos with a single, narrow checkpoint guarding
the entrances to these villages. It will result in Israel’s effective
annexation of roughly half of the West Bank, displacing and disconnecting
Palestinians from their homes, families, neighbors, and fields. It is
this encroachment and the resultant humanitarian crises that the Israeli
Supreme Court addressed in its June 30, 2004 ruling, even as it found the
motivation for the barrier, based on security concerns, justified.
In a more broad-reaching ruling on the
barrier, the International Court of Justice ruled on the barrier’s
legality in a July 9, 2004 verdict. In sum, the decision rendered the
construction of the barrier contrary to international law, recommended
that the State of Israel end its construction and dismantle existing
segments and that Israel pay reparations to those who have suffered loss
as a result of the construction, and instructed the United Nations to
pursue necessary means to address the illegality of the barrier. Both
Israel and the U.S. disregarded this ruling and thereby dismissed the
relevance of international law. The U.S. continues to provide more aid to
Israel than to any other country in the world.
The impact of the visually,
physically, psychologically and spiritually offensive barrier on the
Palestinian people has been more devastating than abstract facts can
convey. Homes have been demolished, water supplies have been cut off,
fields have been razed, villages divided, and access to the other side has
been cut off. Farmers have lost their fields or lost access to them.
Faith communities—including
Palestinian Christians—have been denied access to houses of worship.
Families have been split. According to UN estimates, 680,000
Palestinians (30% of the West Bank population) are directly affected. The
Sabeel Liberation Theology Center in Jerusalem reports that “Palestinians
have been separated from their places of employment, their farmlands,
hospitals, schools, places of worship and their families. In the first
phase of the wall alone, 100,000 trees have been uprooted; 35,000 meters
of irrigation networks have been destroyed; and 75% of teachers and
students living in the construction areas have had difficulty arriving at
school.” These effects further deteriorate the quality of life of the
Palestinian population in the occupied territories.
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS
the ongoing violence has created fear, whittled away trust; and both
Israel and Palestine have been deeply wounded politically, economically,
physically, spiritually, socially, and psychologically; and
WHEREAS
the Israeli government, as part of its de facto policy of
settlement and colonization,
continues to construct the separation barrier, also known as the security
fence and the wall, and plans to extend it to approximately 400 miles (650
kilometers) at a cost not less than $1.6 million per mile ($1 million per
km), thereby rendering the internationally-endorsed Road Map for peace and
other proposals for a negotiated two-state solution unachievable; and
WHEREAS
the wall unilaterally changes an international border without direct
negotiations between partners, effectively annexes nearly 50% of
Palestinian West Bank land, and destroys the contiguity of Palestinian
life and land, rendering a Palestinian state unviable; and
WHEREAS
the barrier succeeds in confiscating Palestinian agricultural fields,
water, and other natural resources, contributes to unemployment, and cuts
populations off from such essentials of life as employment, education,
health care, worship and family; and
WHEREAS
the Israeli Supreme Court has questioned the legality of the path of the
separation barrier on humanitarian bases and the International Court of
Justice has ruled that the barrier is, ipso facto, illegal; and
WHEREAS
the barrier has had devastating effects on the lives and livelihoods of
Palestinians living in the occupied territories by destroying homes,
fields, and mobility, severely obstructing health care, education, and
even worship opportunities for Palestinians; and
WHEREAS
history demonstrates that walls build barriers and limit the opportunity
for people in conflict to be in contact with each other and reconcile
their differing points of view, and the U.S. has previously demanded that
walls of separation be torn down;
THEREFORE LET IT BE RESOLVED
that the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ,
mindful of all previous General Synod resolutions and all previous board
resolutions and statements relating to the Arab-Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, specifically affirms the two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, fully supporting the right of Israel to
exist in peace with its neighbors and protect itself within secure and
internationally recognized borders and at the same time asserting the same
right to national sovereignty in a secure, recognized and viable state for
Palestinians, who would control their borders; and
LET IT BE RESOLVED
that the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ calls
upon the Israeli government to cease the project to construct the barrier,
tear down the segments that have already been constructed, and make
reparations to those who have lost homes, fields, property, and/or lives
and health due to the barrier and its effects as security for both peoples
can best be achieved through an end to the occupation and efforts to
encourage access and contact, rather than restricting and denying it; and
LET IT BE RESOLVED
that the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ urges
the U.S. government to persuade the Israeli government to abide by
international law and agreements and withdraw from the occupied
Palestinian territories; and
LET IT BE RESOLVED
that the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ calls
upon the U.S. government to engage actively, fully and fairly in a peace
process that will lead to the peaceful coexistence of two states: Israel
and a future Palestine; and
LET IT BE RESOLVED
that the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ
encourages its members at all settings of the United Church of Christ to
engage in prayer, study, and dialogue about the barrier and to raise
diligently with their governmental officials these concerns.
Funding for this action will be made
in accordance with the overall mandates of the affected agencies and the
funds available. Wider Church Ministries is responsible for developing
the strategy and program designed to implement this resolution. |