Zakaria al-Mashriqi, a leader in the church, said, “that right-wing Israeli settlers broke a number of windows of the two-storey church and hurled Molotov cocktails inside it completely burning the first floor”.
The church was built in Jerusalem in 1897, and housed the Palestinian Bible College until 1948, when parishioners were pushed out by Jewish armed gangs during the violence accompanying the creation of the state of Israel”.
This is not the only Israeli attack on churches and mosques in occupied Palestine. Killing worshipers is a common criminal practice terrorist Zionist groups have mastered for over seventy years in Palestine.
Israel’s destabilizing of Lebanon led to the 1975 civil war and the consequent violence which led to mass migration on the part of Christians from Lebanon. This is what has been happening in Iraq since 2003 where Western powers are destabilizing the country for objectives related to dominating the Middle East.
The crimes committed by Israel against the Palestinians do not distinguish between Muslims and Christians: the martyrs and the prisoners are always Christians and Muslims. After days of burning the Baptist Church in Jerusalem, the settlers, protected by Israeli occupation troops, attacked the Prophet Yusuf tomb in Nablus. These Zionist crimes against Arab Christians became more ferocious since Bush’s war on Iraq and even more brutal since the publication of the recommendations of the Catholic Synod for the Christians of the East which condemned violence, terrorism and all forms of religious extremism, racism, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
The Catholic Synod called on Christians to “adhere to their homeland,” stressing that “Christians are an essential component of the peoples of the region, and that they should be actively involved in the political, cultural and economic life of their countries in a context of mutual respect and continuous dialogue with people of other religions, particularly with their Muslim partners”.
Muslims, who have lived in tolerance with Christians and Jews for fourteen centuries, agree with this approach. Muslims even lived with and respected groups whose religions date back to pre-Judaism, and still live in Mesopotamia, like the Sabians who have enjoyed religious freedom and practiced their traditional occupations for thousands of years without ever being subjected to pressure, threat or aggression, except after the American occupation of Iraq. The same applies to Christians and churches in Iraq which have never been attacked since they were established, despite the political convulsions in this traumatized country. Israel is the only country which prevents Muslims from worshiping in their mosques on Fridays and religious occasions and prevents Christians from going to their churches. Yet, no one in the ‘free’ West, the defendant of human rights, dare condemn this brutal insult.
It can be asserted with certainty that Zionism is a danger, not only to unarmed Palestinian civilians whom it humiliates, imprisons and assassinates in front of the cameras of the ‘free’ world, but also to coexistence, tolerance and peace in the Middle East which has been, throughout history, a model of coexistence, tolerance and peace among followers of different religions and sects for thousands of years. Christ was born in Bethlehem in the ‘East’. Prophet Mohammad was transported from the Sacred Mosque in Mecca to the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. Saint Paul embarked on his mission from Damascus carrying Christ’s message and spreading Christianity all over the world. Who are those who want to empty the East of its Christians in the same way they emptied it of Jews? Who are those who attack mosques and churches to sow conflict between Muslims and Christians, something that has never existed before the creation of Israel, which is not only usurping the holy land in Palestine, but usurping the spirit of historical and exceptional coexistence in the East.
On these grounds, confronting Zionist crimes in Palestine is the duty of all the free people of the world, not only in defense of coexistence in Palestine alone, but in defense of coexistence, tolerance and peace in the Middle East and the world at large, in the same way that killing innocent worshipers in the Lady of Our Salvation Church in Baghdad is a condemned terrorist act, every transgression against any holy place, Muslims or Christians, and worshipers, Muslim or Christian, is a terrorist act which should be condemned by the whole world.
Keeping silent towards to Israeli crimes has become a threat to the freedom, security and safety of people everywhere; so it is important to call for a correct reading of the link between the Baptist Church in the Prophets Street in Jerusalem, the Prophet Yusuf tomb in Nablus and the Lady of Our Salvation Church in Karada in Baghdad.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
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