De kristne i Midtøsten under press, redd for å si fra

Khaled Abu Toameh, journalist i Jerusalem Post

Den kristne bor­ger­mes­te­ren av Bet­le­hem tok nylig til orde for full boi­kott av Israel. Hvor­for er han ikke mer opp­tatt av hva som skjer med kristne i regio­nen? Den ara­biske våren har ført til økt press på mino­ri­te­ter. Men det er mer oppor­tunt å snakke om Israel,

Arab Spring Sen­ding Shud­ders Through Chris­ti­ans in the Middle East
by Kha­led Abu Toameh

In his annual Chris­t­mas mes­sage to the world, Bethle­hem mayor Vic­tor Batarseh cal­led for a com­pre­hen­sive boycott of Israel, argu­ing that this would force the Jewish state to return to the nego­tia­ting table with the Palestinians.

It wor­ked with Apart­heid South Africa,” Batarseh decla­red. “We call for boycot­ting Israel cul­turally, edu­ca­tio­nally, in sports, eco­no­mics and trade. We want peace, but boycott is the only lan­guage that Israel understands.”

The mayor’s anti-Israel mes­sage came at a time when Chris­ti­ans throug­hout the Arab world -- and in Bethle­hem and the Gaza Strip -- are facing serious threats. But of course Batarseh has cho­sen to bury his head in the sand and does not want to look around him and see what is hap­pe­ning to his fel­low Christians.

The Bethle­hem mayor’s Chris­t­mas mes­sage com­pletely ignored the fact that the “Arab Spring” has been any­thing but a bles­sing to Chris­ti­ans living in the Arab countries. Accor­ding to Rita Daou, a repor­ter for Agence France Press,

The rise of Isla­mist move­ments in countries swept by the Arab revo­lu­tions has sent shud­ders throug­hout the region’s Chris­ti­ans who fear for their sur­vi­val and ques­tion the make-up of the Middle East.”

The Pale­sti­nian Aut­hority has done little to pro­tect Chris­ti­ans against assaults by Mus­lims -- inclu­ding rape, inti­mi­da­tion, land theft and finan­cial extor­tion. But these are all “sen­si­tive” issues that many Chris­tian lea­ders do not want to discuss in pub­lic out of fear of being accu­sed of ser­ving the Israeli “pro­pa­ganda machine.”

This is why Batarseh and many lea­ders of the Chris­tian com­mu­nity deli­be­rately ignore what hap­pe­ned in 2002 in Bethle­hem, when dozens of Mus­lim gun­men stor­med the Church of Nati­vity to escape from Israeli sol­di­ers. The gun­men hid inside the church on Man­ger Square for five weeks. Priests later com­plai­ned that they and some nuns had been held hos­tage by the gun­men, who also desecrated the church by smo­king, drin­king alco­hol and littering.

Chris­tian lea­ders who ignore the tor­ching of churches in Egypt and the perse­cution of Chris­ti­ans there and in Iraq and other Arab countries are betray­ing the cause of their people. Have these lea­ders ever asked what is hap­pe­ning to the few Chris­ti­ans who still live under Hamas in the Gaza Strip?

It is hard to see how boycot­ting Israel “cul­turally and edu­ca­tio­nally” could help solve the plight of Arab Christians.

Batarseh could have done a ser­vice to his people had he, for example, talked in his mes­sage about the fact that many Chris­tian fami­lies con­ti­nue to leave Bethle­hem in search of a bet­ter life in the West.

The claim that Chris­tian fami­lies flee the Pale­sti­nian ter­ri­to­ries because of Israel’s security measu­res is irre­le­vant. Chris­tian emi­gra­tion star­ted long before Israel cap­tu­red the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967.

Also, the claim that Chris­ti­ans leave because of the bad eco­no­mic situa­tion is also inva­lid because the same would have applied to Mus­lim Palestinians.

The truth is that Chris­ti­ans leave Bethle­hem mainly because they do not feel com­for­table living as a tiny minority in their city.

In the 2005 Pale­sti­nian muni­ci­pal election, Hamas gai­ned the majority of the open seats of the Bethle­hem muni­ci­pal coun­cil, which con­si­sts of 15 elected mem­bers, inclu­ding the mayor and deputy mayor.

Since its estab­lish­ment in 1994, the Pale­sti­nian Aut­hority has done almost not­hing to encourage Chris­tian fami­lies to stay.

Boycot­ting Israel “cul­turally and edu­ca­tio­nally” is cer­tainly not going to solve the pro­blems and dan­gers facing Arab Chris­ti­ans. For now, Israel remains the only place in the Middle East where Arab Chris­ti­ans feel pro­tected and safe.

Decem­ber 20, 2011 at 5:00 am

http://www.hudson-ny.org/2685/arab-spring-christians

Document.no tak­ker Toameh for til­la­telse til å repro­du­sere hans artikler


Om du ikke følger Document på sosiale media kan du følge oss på e-post.

Donere engangsbeløp?Kan du forplikte deg til fast betaling?

Penger kan også doneres til kontonummer 15030249981.

Leserkommentarer på Document er gjenstand for moderering, som ikke skjer kontinuerlig og under enhver omstendighet ikke om natten. Vi ønsker en respektfull tone uten personangrep, sleivete språk eller flammende retorikk. Vis særlig nøkternhet når temaet er følsomt. Begrenset redigering av skjemmende detaljer kan finne sted. Skriv til debatt@document.no dersom du ikke forstår hvorfor en kommentar uteblir. Se her for nybegynnerhjelp.