After a series of attacks by vandals on Christian holy sites in
Israel, normally tight-lipped Roman Catholic officials are beginning to
speak out, publicly appealing to authorities to take a stronger stand
against the violence.
The Rev. Pierbattista Pizzaballa, one of the church's top officials
in the Holy Land, said he is worried about relations between Jews and
Christians in the Holy Land. He believes the blame can go all around.
"I think the main atmosphere is ignorance," Pizzaballa told The Associated Press in an interview.
Because the local Christian population is tiny, "we do not exist for
the majority ... They have other priorities," he said. "On the other
side, we as a minority maybe didn't invest enough energy and
initiatives" to reach out to Israeli Jews.
That may be changing following this month's attack on a well-known
Trappist Monastery in Latrun, outside Jerusalem. Vandals burned a door
and spray-painted anti-Christian graffiti on the century-old building
with the words "Jesus is a monkey."
Suspicion has fallen on extremist
Jewish West Bank settlers or their supporters, who are believed to be
behind a series of attacks in recent years on mosques, Christian sites
and even Israeli army property to protest moves against settlements.
In response, the church's top officials, including Pizzaballa, the
"custos," or custodian of Catholic holy sites, to issue a rare
"declaration" calling on Israeli leaders to take action.
"Sadly, what happened in Latrun is only another in a long series of
attacks against Christians and their places of worship," the Catholic
leaders said. "What is going on in Israeli society today that permits
Christians to be scapegoated and targeted by these acts of violence?"
It said authorities should "put an end to this senseless violence and
to ensure a 'teaching of respect' in schools for all those who call
this land home."
Israeli leaders swiftly condemned the attack, and police vowed to
bring the vandals to justice. Nearly two weeks later, there have been no
arrests.
The monastery was targeted shortly after Israel evacuated an
illegally built West Bank settler outpost. In recent months, two other
monasteries and a Baptist church were vandalized. It is not clear why
the vandals have targeted Christian sites. For years, Christian
clergymen also have been spat at by ultra-Orthodox seminary students in
Jerusalem's Old City.
There are about 155,000 Christian citizens of Israel, less than 2 per
cent of its 7.9 million people. About three-quarters are Arabs, and the
others arrived during waves of Russian immigration over the past 20
years. They are split between Catholicism and Orthodox steams of
Christianity. Tens of thousands of Christian foreign workers and African
migrants also reside in Israel.
Pizzaballa said he recognizes the attacks do not reflect the views of
most Israelis, and he welcomed the condemnations by Israeli police,
politicians and mainstream rabbinical authorities.
But he said Israel must do more.
"It's important not just to condemn, but also to work, to take initiatives to stop this phenomenon," he said.
Far "more serious," he said, was an incident in July in which an
Israeli lawmaker ripped up a copy of the New Testament in front of TV
cameras after Chrisitan missionaries mailed him the book. The lawmaker,
Michael Ben-Ari, is now the subject of an ethics probe in parliament.
"This is a member of the Knesset. He is a representative of Israeli institutions," Pizzaballa
said.
Even if the delivery of the book was a "provocation," he said, "you
cannot rip the New Testament in front of the cameras and throw it in the
trash and ask that the New Testament be banned from the country. This
is unacceptable for every Christian believer."
He pointed to the recent uproar in the Muslim world over a movie that
mocked the Prophet Muhammad as an example of how explosive and hurtful
religious hatred can be.
Pizzaballa's words carry extra weight because of his strong ties with
Israel.
Pizzaballa, 47, has lived in the country for two decades,
speaks Hebrew and has been a faculty member at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem. He is scheduled to complete his term as custos next year.
Jews and Catholics have had a fraught relationship over the
centuries. It was only in 1965 that the Vatican rejected the long-held
charge that the Jewish people were responsible for killing Jesus.
The
actions of Pope Pius XII during World War II still remain a sensitive
diplomatic issue between Israel and the Vatican. Critics have long
contended that Pius could have done more to stop the Holocaust, when 6
million Jews were killed by the Nazis. The Vatican says Pius used quiet
diplomacy to save Jews.
Israel and the Vatican have made inroads in recent years. The late
Pope John Paul II established diplomatic ties with Israel in 1994, and
his successor, Pope Benedict XVI, has promoted interfaith dialogue.
Pizzaballa acknowledged the difficult past but said Israelis have
little understanding about modern Christianity or "the reality of the
Christians in the country."
While Christianity was born in the Holy Land, Christians' situation
here is fragile. In Israel, the number of Christian citizens has
remained about the same for 20 years, with the influx of Russian
immigrants balancing out some emigration by Arab Christians.
The West Bank has seen its Christian population dwindle over the
years to roughly 50,000 people today, less than 3 per cent of the
population, the result of a lower birthrate and increased emigration in
search of a better quality of life. Just one third of Bethlehem, the
traditional birthplace of Christ, is Christian today, down from 75 per
cent half a century ago.
In the Gaza Strip, ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas, the situation is even more precarious.
Fewer than 3,000 Christians live among 1.7 million Muslim residents,
and their numbers have rapidly shrunk in recent years because of turmoil
in the territory.
A Christian activist — who ran Gaza's only Christian bookstore — was
stabbed to death after Hamas took power in 2007. The killer was never
found.
In recent years, several Christian institutions were attacked by
suspected Muslim hardliners.
In at least two cases, including the
torching of the local YMCA, assailants were caught and sentenced to
prison.
Pizzaballa said Hamas has ensured that local Christians can worship freely, but nonetheless the environment is uncomfortable.
"You feel the pressure in the society and the life of the Islamic regime," he said.