‘Theory’ not reality in Middle East argument
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I cannot let Rabbi Mark Miller’s response in the May 5 “In Theory”
column go by without relating how the Palestinians suffer more than
the Israelis.
Instead of the war of the Palestinians against the Israelis, I can
fairly say it is also the war of the Israelis against the
Palestinians.
Over three times as many Palestinians have been killed and
thousands of Palestinian homes have been demolished. Israel, the
democratic state, is practicing grave violations of basic human
rights. Until Palestinians are treated as human beings at the check
points -- where they wait for hours and are humiliated and then
refused passage -- maybe then there can be a vision of peace.
I wonder if Miller knows that visas are being denied by Israel for
clergy and church personnel resulting in understaffed seminaries,
churches, hospitals, educational and other institutions so that they
have neither the spiritual or professional staff that they need. For
example, the Catholic church operates 151 institutions, including 33
parishes, seven hospitals, 11 dispensaries, eight orphanages, five
homes for the elderly, seven homes for the handicapped, 70 schools,
five theological seminaries and five institutions of higher learning.
Protestant denominations have similar institutions and all suffer
from lack of sufficient personnel due to visa problems.
The separation wall, which is costing $1 million a mile, and no
doubt paid by our taxes, is intensifying Palestinian despair and will
bring no relief to terrorizing acts.
It is impossible for those who have not seen the barrier to
comprehend fully its effect on the psychology of both Christian and
Muslim Palestinians of all ages. The separation barrier is damaging
Christian institutions and the daily livelihoods of Christians and
Muslims. It separates families from one another, students from their
school, workers from their jobs, farmers from their land, doctors and
patients from their hospitals and Bethlehem from Jerusalem. There is
a danger that the indigenous population in the Holy Land could
disappear. The Israeli government needs to know that thriving
Christian institutions are vital to the future of a secure Israel.
Many of the Christians who live, work and worship where Jesus was
born are not allowed to go a few miles to Jerusalem where Jesus died
and rose.
Since September 2000, more than 1,900 houses have been demolished
leaving 15,200 residents homeless in Rafah, south of the Gaza strip.
What Israel is doing in Rafah is an act of terror and a war crime.
Rabbi Miller should talk to Jeff Halper, who heads the Israeli
Committee Against House Demolitions or to Bat Shalom, who works with
Palestinian Women for Peace or to Rabbis for Human Rights. Most of
all, he should talk to Father Elias Chacour, who has a school in
Ibillin, Galilee, and welcomes Jews, Christians, Muslims and Druze.
His village, along with 418 others, were demolished in 1948. Still,
he works constantly for peace. His two books “Blood Brothers” and ‘We
Belong to the Land” tell his story. When the Rev. Desmond Tutu
visited Israel, he said that apartheid had never been as bad in South
Africa as it is in Israel. We must all continue to hope and pray for
peace with justice for both the Israelis and Palestinians.
GWEN PASTOR
Corona del Mar
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