Vandals sprayed graffiti insulting to Jesus on the walls of a
Franciscan convent on Mount Zion in Jerusalem, echoing a similar attack
last month and drawing renewed condemnation from Catholic leaders.
The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land, a group of the
region’s leading Catholic bishops, voiced “full fraternal support and
prayer” for the Franciscans and the Christian community in the Holy
Land, following the latest attack.
The Hebrew-language graffiti was discovered early on Oct. 2 on the
Convent of St. Francis, adjacent to the Cenacle complex, which is
traditionally regarded as the location of the Last Supper.
The graffiti derided Jesus and used the phrase “price tag,” a term
Israeli extremists use for revenge attacks on Palestinians and Arabs,
Agence France Presse reports.
The Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land posted photos of the vandalism on its website, under the title “Once again ...”
Israeli President Shimon Peres denounced the vandalism, saying it goes
against “the morals and values of Judaism” and does “great harm” to the
state of Israel. He added that it is “forbidden” to harm religious holy
sites.
The Catholic ordinaries’ assembly voiced its “grave concern” about the
education program in “some schools where contempt and intolerance are
taught.”
“More than anything, the assembly again asks that radical changes be
made in the educational system, otherwise the same causes will produce
the same effects over and over,” they said.
The bishops are hopeful that the perpetrators will be caught and brought to court.
Police are investigating the incident, which resembles another recent act of vandalism.
On the morning of Sept. 4, vandals set fire to the door of the
Trappists’ Latroun Monastery and spray painted the walls with
blasphemous phrases in Hebrew.
The act drew condemnation from the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem and
Israeli and Palestinian political leaders.
Dozens of prominent rabbis
from Israel and Europe also condemned the attack and expressed
condolences to the monastery.