British MP George Galloway speaks to reporters in Damascus December 21, 2009, during his campaign to aid Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
By Stuart Littlewood* | Sabbah Report | www.sabbah.bizLink
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams
Is it possible that my open letter to the archbishop last month spurred him to action? I asked what courageous thing he and his colleagues would do this Christmas-time to intervene and bring humanity, practical relief and spiritual help to all those Christian and Muslim families who for years have been so cruelly oppressed and abused by the Israeli regime and its supporters.
"Why not visit the Strip?" I suggested. "Ask Brown and Blair to fix it, and don't take 'no' for an answer. Galvanise the government and remind them of their Christian duty to defend and protect the weak: somebody should. Of course, that is the duty of all decent men, Christian or not."
Will the archbishop bring a smile to the face of God?
On past performance, however, Gazans needn't get too excited. I have seen no statement about Gaza on the archbishop's website for nearly a year. And while Israel was planning its infamous Cast Lead operation, which resulted in the cynical slaughter of hundreds of Palestinian women and children, the archbishop accompanied Chief Rabbi Sachs to Auschwitz to preach against extreme hostility and genocide. The archbishop called it "a place of utter profanity" and spoke of the collective corruption and moral sickness that made the Holocaust possible.
If and when he arrives in Gaza he'll witness a holocaust of another kind. The irony of his remarks about Auschwitz were not lost on the besieged Gazans, who are still under daily bombardment by their mad-dog tormentors. Unfortunately Lambeth Palace has given no further details of the archbishop's trip. Whom will he meet? Will he also visit the exhausted Al-Shifa hospital, which has taken the brunt of the casualties? Will he shoot the breeze with Ismail Haniyeh, the (legitimate) Palestinian prime minister, bishop to imam? Will he see the health minister, Basem Na'im? Will he look up Fr Manuel Mussallam, the redoubtable old priest who has been a mainstay of the Christian community thoughout Gaza's darkest hours? Fr Manuel, a man of true grit, recently retired but is probably contactable in the West Bank.
Will he paddle on Gaza's beach? Will he cast his net upon the waters with Gaza's fishermen, and scorn the machine-gun fire from marauding Israeli warships?
Gazans might perhaps write with helpful suggestions to publicaffairs@lambethpalace.org.uk
Will Rowan Williams bring a smile to the face of God? I hope so, for it is not too late.
He will have already done more than the Pope. That expensively frocked individual, who has a bigger stake in the Holy Land than anyone else in the Western world, earlier this year "refrained" from visiting the smoking ruins of Gaza to show solidarity with his terrified flock, and instead played the tourist in the Occupied Territories next-door. He chose the word "refrain" in his excuse to the media. It smacked of abstinence, as if abstaining from sex, and infuriated those who had suffered so much.
If this Vicar of Christ is a force for good, where is the armada he should have sent to bring relief to his Christian community and to his Muslim brothers and sisters?
'Salt of the earth' aim to break the siege for human decency's sake
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