Palestinians Destroying and Desecrating Christian Ties
to Holy Land by Jeff Dunetz
An under-reported element of the
dispute in the Middle East is that the Palestinians are doing their best to erase
any Christian religious history to the holy land. For over two decades, they
have been destroying Christian holy sites or claiming them as Muslim
sites, thus forbidding prayer by any faith but Islam.
According to Dr.
Mordechai Kedar of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, “In Arabic,
this practice is known as as Tams al-ma’alem, which means ‘erasing the signs,’
in the sense of destroying the relics of all cultures that preceded
Islam.”
In 1997, the Palestinians allowed
the desecration of
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher which stands atop of the site where
Christians believe Jesus was crucified, and where he was initially buried
before his resurrection. The Palestinian Authority-appointed Waqf (which
controls religious property) first tried to break down the wall between the
Church and the adjacent al-Hanaqa Mosque, and when they failed
at that, they simply built a toilet on the roof of the site holy to Christians.
Five years later during Easter
in 2002, over a hundred Palestinians took “refuge”
in, and trashed, Bethlehem’s Basilica of the Nativity of Our Lord–the
birthplace of Jesus.
On April third of 2016, a Lebanese
newspaper Hadfnews reported that a crew building a shopping mall in
the Palestine Square area of Gaza City discovered the ruins of an
1800-year-old Byzantine church. Two days later, another Lebanese news site, Al Mayadeen News, reported that the Church
site was bulldozed, destroying many of
the church artifacts and "drawing sharp criticism from Palestinian
Christians, some of whom rushed to accuse both Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority (PA) of copying ISIS tactics to demolish historic sites."
Appearing on official Palestinian TV
on September 16th of last year, Palestinian Chairman Abbas declared, “The Al-Aqsa Mosque [Temple
Mount] and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher are ours, They are all ours, and
they have no right to defile them with their filthy feet.”
What most Christians don’t realize
is that this should be an affront to them. The Holy Temple, which Abbas and the
Palestinians claim never existed atop the Temple Mount, is not only holy to the
Jews, but also a crucial part of the Jesus story.
Christians, as well as
Jews, are not allowed to pray atop the Temple Mount. If someone bends down to
tie their shoes, closes their eyes, or bows their head; if they do
anything that looks like they are praying, they will be accused of the
illegal act of praying to a God other than Allah. This is despite the fact that the Quran says that
the Temple Mount is a Jewish site.
Along with banning prayer atop the
Temple Mount and destroying hundreds of relics of the two Jewish Temples, the
Palestinians have destroyed a Christian site which resided in the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount,
the Crusader pillars of the 13th-century Grammar Dome.
In October 2015, Palestinian
rioters desecrated and tried to burn down the
tomb of the patriarch Joseph (for the third time). A site not only holy to the
Jews, but also Christians.
As it says in Chapter 11 of the New Testament
book of Hebrews, "By faith Joseph, when his end was near, spoke about
the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt and gave instructions about his
bones."
These are only a few examples of the
treatment of Christian holy sites by the Palestinian governments and their
related authorities.
Most often, people see the conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians as a Jewish/Muslim issue. However, it's
much more than that. Christians are in danger of losing their connection
to the land where Jesus walked.
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