Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

CHRISTIAN LEADERS: WRONG TIME, WRONG ADVICE, WRONG REASONS

June 8, 2001

MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 6/08: Monthly in Washington, on the 22nd day of the calendar month, Christian leaders in the area hold a prayer vigil at this or that church. Many of them mean well. They certainly do pray well. But what they accomplish is practically nothing other than making themselves and their friends feel a bit better with a self-deluding pretense that they are actually doing something. As for the moral and political crisis of our time taking place in the once Holy Land; what they are willing to do, as opposed to what they are able, is actually of very little consequence.

So it has been for a very long time when it comes to the Christian churches in the United States. So it continues to be despite the occasional letter to this or that President or Secretary of State, like the one delivered yesterday at Foggy Bottom. Like the Pope himself -- who didn't personally get involved with the plight of the Palestinian people until the 11th hour, then visiting a refugee camp near Bethlehem at a time when it appeared an "agreement" was about to be imposed on the Palestinian people against their popular will and against their long-term interests in the context of a rump "Palestinian State"-- the leaders of the Christian churches in the U.S. have shown much more opportunism than courage, much more weakness than strength, much more deference to the powerful Jewish interests who have sandbagged them than allegiance to their own basic moral teachings.

For decades in fact the Christian Churches collectively in the U.S. have been extraordinarily weak and cowardly in how they have dealt with the situation in the Middle East and any issue that involves the Jewish State of Israel. They have repeatedly failed the political call to action, though they have occasionally spoken up, always after the fact, with moral righteousness never backed by solid and sustained actions. They have repeatedly listened to bad advice, repeatedly refused the anguished calls for serious action, and constantly shunned those who have spoken up about their failings and hypocrisy.

Indeed, they have cowered before their Jewish friends, most of whom have repeatedly urged them into silence and at times played the "Holocaust card" against them to mute their words even more than their deeds. Yesterday, it but another example of this far-too-little far-too-late far-too-lacking in real action approach, the Christian leaders attempted to assuage some of their constituents and their own consciences by writing a little letter to former General of the Joint Chiefs now Secretary of State Colin Powell. What others have said and done a decade even two ago, what was in fact agreed to at Camp David in 1978 and articulated by a President of the United States before a joint session of Congress at that time, the Christian "leaders" are finally getting around to repeating once again today. But they are still getting bad advice, their timing is wrong, their suggestions are largely not much more more than what has already been said in the "Mitchell Report" and by intellectuals and human rights groups all around the world for a very long time. Indeed, there are many Jewish writers, professors, rabbis, who have spoken up far more boldly and for a long time now calling for suspending American aid to Israel, recognizing a real Palestinian State, and the return of the refugees to their rightful country.

But the Christian church leaders think they can utter a few slogans and be done with it. It's a cheap and easy way out for them; and they have mastered that approach to matters Israeli and Middle Eastern over the long years. They will not act in any serious and sustained way, they will not either advocate or engage in the urgently needed civil disobedience, they will not step up to the plate and call for suspending American aid to Israel, they will not loudly call for justice for the millions of destitute Palestinian refugees. And most tragically of all they will not squarely even face the basic contradictions of what they do advocate -- i.e., a return to the very same "peace process" which is so rife with apartheid-like formulations and realities and which attempts to trap the Palestinian people in perpetual servitude.

CHURCH DELEGATION PRESENTS LETTER TO SECRETARY OF STATE POWELL

June 7, 2001

The Honorable Colin Powell Secretary of State United States Department of State

Dear Mr. Secretary:

We are grateful that you have given us this opportunity to meet with you and are mindful of the additional heads of U.S. churches who joined us in signing this letter. We come with thanks for the wise and strong leadership you are giving to our government's State Department. We come with support for your effort to end the Israeli-Palestinian cycle of violence and rebuild the trust and mutual confidence that are critical for a negotiated settlement.

There is no higher priority for peacemaking in the world today than that between Israel and the Palestinians. This long and tragic conflict is a cancer that threatens the health of the whole region, U.S. relations with Arab and Muslim countries, and interfaith relations worldwide. We, particularly those of us who have precious partnerships with our sister churches in the Holy Land, offer our prayers and encouragement to our government in this crucial work.

Along with many others, we are deeply concerned that the peace process has broken down so violently and tragically between the government of Israel and the Palestinian leadership. The sobering current reality compels us to take a higher profile in advocacy of U.S. policies conducive to peace.

Few things have done more to destroy the hope and pursuit of peace through negotiations than Israel's unrelenting settlement activity. Over these recent years, we have heard from our Palestinian Christian partners, and seen for ourselves, the destructive impact of Israel's settlement policy -- separating village from village, confiscating more and more Palestinian land, creating friction with its military checkpoints. For over twenty years our churches have appealed to the U.S. government to require Israel to cease this transfer of its civilian population into occupied territory, a clear violation of international law and United Nations resolutions. Each administration has spoken in opposition to the settlement activity, only to watch the settlements increase and expand as Israel ignores the advice.

It is time for the United States to do what it must to bring Israel's settlement activity to an end. We urge you to make clear to Israel and the Palestinians that the United States is committed to a negotiated end of Israel's military occupation of the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and East Jerusalem as called for in U.N.S.C. Res. 242 and that an immediate freezing by Israel of its settlement activity including "natural growth" is imperative. It will likely require considerable diplomatic pressure, and possibly economic pressure as well, to convince the government of Israel to recognize that this is a major policy concern of the United States.

Breaking the cycle of violence is fundamental to restarting the peace process and rebuilding the hope and will for peace. While we condemn the violent words and actions of Palestinians, we understand the rage that comes from decades of occupation, dislocation and the feeling of having been betrayed by the peace process. We appeal to the Palestinians, as have you, to abandon violence as a means to end the occupation.

We understand as well Israel's quest for security for the state and its people, but condemn the disproportionately violent and destructive means it is using. Israel's practice of assassination and the economic strangulation of the fledgling Palestinian state are counterproductive to either security or peace. We hope that Israel is responsive to your appeal that it lift the siege of Palestinian towns and pay the taxes owed to the Palestinian Authority. We call upon Israel to abandon military force and return to negotiations as the path to security.

A delegation of church leaders on a December pastoral visit saw the destruction wrought by Israel's military might on the homes and livelihood of the Christian towns of Bethlehem, Beit Jala and Beit Sahour. The delegation urged that the United States suspend the current sales of attack helicopters to Israel pending investigation of their use against civilian targets as well as assurances that they will be used in conformity with United States law covering "end-use" in our weapons sales. We ask you to place a hold on any pending delivery of attack helicopters or fighter jets to Israel and to reconsider the promise made by the Clinton Administration that the United States will increase military aid to Israel for each of the next eight years. While we recognize that it has been U.S. policy to support Israel militarily in order to insure its security and to encourage it to move forward with confidence in negotiations, the use of F-16 fighter jets against civilian populations is unacceptable and must be challenged by the U.S. government. Like the U.S. effort to stop settlement activity, stopping the use of these heavy weapons against civilians will require considerable diplomatic pressure and possibly economic pressure.

Although our concern extends to each person suffering from this conflict, we are extremely worried about our Palestinian Christian brothers and sisters. Facing daily threats from violence and economic deprivation and lacking hope for peace and a viable Palestinian state, many feel the pressure to emigrate. The demise of the living Christian community from the birthplace of the Christian religion would certainly be an irreparable tragedy for the Middle East and the Christian community internationally. For their sake, and for the sake of all, we seek a restoration of hope for a negotiated sharing of the Holy Land and the city of Jerusalem, holy to Jews, Christians and Muslims. We tremble to consider the destructive consequences that would follow the premature moving, as called for by Congress, of the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

We have heard the cries of fear and mourning of Palestinian Christians and Muslims and of Israeli Jews and pray for their healing and the reconciliation of the Abrahamic family. Be assured of our prayers for you and the President and all others in the Administration as you seek to forge a fair and just policy for the two peoples and three faiths who share a common religious heritage in the land we hold as holy.

Sincerely Yours,

The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold Presiding Bishop and Primate The Episcopal Church

Bishop Vicken Aykazian Diocesan Legate and Ecumenical Officer The Armenian Orthodox Church

The Very Rev. Brother Stephen Michael Glodek, S.M. President Catholic Conference of Major Superiors of Mens' Institutes

The Rev. John L. McCullough Executive Director Church World Service

Bishop Donald J. McCoid Southwestern Pennsylvania Synod Chair, Conference of Bishops of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Bishop Dimitrios of Xanthos Ecumenical Officer The Rev. Alexander Karloutsos Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America

Bishop William B. Oden Immediate Past President The Council of Bishops The United Methodist Church

The following heads of churches and faith-based organizations join the delegation in this expression of concern and appeal to Secretary of State Colin Powell:

Bishop McKinley Young Presiding Bishop, 10th Episcopal District African Methodist Episcopal Church

The Rev. Dr. Robert H. Roberts Interim General Secretary American Baptist Churches USA

Mary Ellen McNish General Secretary American Friends Service Committee

Metropolitan PHILIP, Primate Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America

The Rev. Dr. Richard L. Hamm General Minister and President Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the United States and Canada

The Rev. Judy Mills Reimer Executive Director Church of the Brethren General Board

The Rev. H. George Anderson Presiding Bishop The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Michael E. Livingston Executive Director International Council of Community Churches

The Rev. Dr. Seung Koo Choi General Secretary of Korean Presbyterian Church in America

Dr. Ron J. R. Mathies Executive Director Mennonite Central Committee

The Rev. R. Burke Johnson President Moravian Church - Northern Province

The Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar General Secretary National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA

The Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick Stated Clerk Presbyterian Church (USA)

The Rev. Wesley Granberg-Michaelson General Secretary Reformed Church in America

Archbishop Cyril Aphrem Karim Archdiocese of the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch for the Eastern USA

The Rev. John Buehrens President Unitarian Universalist Association

The Rev. John H. Thomas General Minister and President United Church of Christ

Bishop Melvin G. Talbert Ecumenical Officer Council of Bishops The United Methodist Church
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Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/6/235.htm