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(WASHINGTON, May 7, 2004) Fifty leaders of evangelical
and mainline Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox churches and
church-related organizations in the U.S. today delivered a letter to
President Bush asking for a full understanding of “the crisis in the
Holy Land confronting Christian Palestinians, Christian institutions,
and those who wish to visit the birthplace of Christianity.”
Stating that the “churches have directed their concerns
to the Israeli government but to little avail,” the church leaders
appealed for the President’s intervention to help restore the normal
functioning of Christian institutions in Israel and the Occupied
Territories and claimed that “it is generally acknowledged that
relations of the churches and these institutions with the Israeli
government may be the worst they have ever been.”
The letter addressed the church leaders’ concerns
specifically regarding the effects of the separation barrier being
constructed by Israel, taxation issues that may force some church
institutions to close due to the removal of their longstanding
tax-exempt status, and “the denial and delay of visas, by Israel, for
clergy and church personnel result[ing] in understaffed seminaries,
churches, hospitals, education and other institutions.”
Speaking as one of the diverse group of signers, the
Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church,
USA, said, “Our churches, hospitals, schools, and other institutions are
important visible expressions of our faith's concern for humanity.
While they serve Christians and non-Christians alike, they are also
expressions of our Christian heritage and its many contributions to the
region.”
Another signer, Brother Robert Schieler, Provincial
for the De La Salle Christian Brothers who administer Bethlehem
University, emphasized the destructive effects of the separation barrier
on Christian and Palestinian populations: “Even if the barrier is
intended for security, it has had the very real effects of separating
students and faculty from their classrooms, families from one another,
farmers from their fields, and Christian worshippers from their
churches.”
In the letter to President Bush, the church leaders
observe, “We find it difficult to be assured by your description on
April 14 of the barrier as ‘temporary’ in light of Israel’s plans to
extend the barrier far beyond the 1967 Green Line, encompassing on the
Israeli side those large West Bank settlements that you implied would
remain part of Israel.”
Speaking of Bethlehem particularly, Bro. Schieler
noted, “The barrier and checkpoints are now cutting off Christians in
Bethlehem from Jerusalem just a few miles away. I wonder if U.S.
Christians who visit Bethlehem as tourists know that many of their
Christian brothers and sisters who live and work and worship where Jesus
was born are not able to travel just a few miles to Jerusalem to where
Jesus died and was risen. Unfortunately, most American Christians
remain woefully uninformed about what is happening in the very land
where Jesus walked.”
Letter signers included the heads of many Catholic
orders and organizations in the United States; the General Secretary of
the National Council of Churches; the Presiding Bishops and leaders of
many denominations, such as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America,
Presbyterian Church (USA), Reformed Church in America; and Armenian
Church of America; evangelical leaders including Leighton Ford, Robert
Seiple, and Ron Sider; the heads of relief and development agencies such
as World Vision, Catholic Relief Services, Church World Service, and the
Mennonite Central Committee; and many others. The complete text of the
letter and list of signers is available at
www.cmep.org/letters/BushLetter.pdf
The signers, while specifically raising the concerns
of church institutions and Palestinian Christians, stated clearly that
they “do not mean to minimize the suffering of Muslims and Jews.” The
letter ended by imploring the President to assist all Muslims, Jews, and
Christians in the Holy Land, stating, “your help is needed as a force
for peacemaking that builds bridges to a new and hopeful future.”
Bishop Griswold summarized, “We believe that our
institutions provide services that are essential to bringing hope to
people in need and thus to our shared goal of two states, with secure
borders, and able to live in peace, one with the other.” |