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Townhall.com

Walling off Christianity
Robert Novak (back to web version) | Send

April 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- The venerable Rep. Henry Hyde is a staunch supporter of
Israel, but he is also a prominent Catholic layman known for telling the
truth. He did so two weeks ago to Israeli Vice Premier Shimon Peres. He
made clear how unhappy he was that Israel's government had ignored his
previous protests about the destruction of the Christian community in the
Holy Land.

 At a closed-door session of the House International Relations Committee
that he heads, Hyde told Peres that Israeli security practices "in the
center of Christianity's most holy places" are "turning them into a
military zone." Peres conceded to Hyde these are hard times for Christians
in the Holy Land, but predictably blamed their troubles on the Palestinian
Arabs.

 Actually, Hyde's tone is markedly softer than the desperate voices of
Christian clergy who find themselves cut off by Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon's security wall. Their fear and frustration stems from their
inability to move anybody with power in the Bush administration and very
few members of Congress.

 The Israeli embassy took issue with Hyde two years ago because his March
25, 2004, letter to then Secretary of State Colin Powell, protesting
Israeli treatment of Palestinian Christians, had appeared in this column.
Next time, the Israelis asked Hyde, please tell us first. He did so this
time to Peres, who on April 6 was guest of the International Relations
Committee in its small, unmarked conference room, not used for public
hearings, on the House side of the Capitol.

 At that meeting, Hyde recalled his letter to Powell complaining about the
Israeli security wall, which he said is still "drastically undermining the
mission of Christian institutions and the social fabric of their
communities in the Holy Land." He said he remains "concerned about the
plight of the Christian narrative in the Holy Land" and the impact of the
security wall and "growing illegal Israeli settlements and their
infrastructure . . . on religious freedom."

 No Israel basher, Hyde stressed he does not oppose the security wall "that
effectively separates Israelis and Palestinians" and believes it has
improved security. What bothers him is that "in Jerusalem, the barrier
separates Palestinians from Palestinians and not Palestinians from
Israelis."

 Hyde concluded by noting "Jerusalem is home to the three Abrahamic faiths:
Judaism, Christianity and Islam." Peres responded that "one of our brothers
doesn't like Christians or Jews" -- that is, Palestinian Christians should
blame Palestinian Muslims for their plight.

 An experienced diplomat, Peres then took a more conciliatory tone. He
"acknowledged" that "Christians are in an uneasy situation." They are being
"compensated," said Peres, for damage done by Israeli security. That
provides faint comfort, however, after the Israeli bulldozers have moved in.

 It is certainly no compensation for Mother Agapia Stephanopolous,
administrator of the Orthodox School of Bethany in Jerusalem, who recently
visited Washington. A Russian Orthodox nun (and sister of ABC News anchor
George Stephanopoulos), she is a passionate advocate for the Christian
cause. "Israel is destroying the local Christian community," she told me.

 In a letter to members of Congress, Mother Agapia took essentially the
same position as Hyde but in much tougher language, describing how East
Jerusalem has been cut off from the rest of the West Bank. "It is only a
matter of time before Christians and Muslims will be unable to survive
culturally and economically," she predicted.

 The nun reported that Israeli slabs of concrete, 9 yards high, have
"shattered" Christian communities. As a school administrator, she said, "I
witness the strangulation of East Jerusalem, and the deprivation of her
non-Jewish residents' religious rights every day." Unlike Hyde, she would
tear down the settlements and the wall "that favor one people's fundamental
rights to the exclusion of others."

 "Even the United States seems to have been taken in by Israeli spin,"
Mother Agapia said. Last Thursday, as Sharon visited Bush in Texas, the
Jerusalem Post described the two leaders dancing a little dance that
promises no change on the settlements. If the born-again Christian
president does not act to save the Christians in the Holy Land, the efforts
of Henry Hyde and Agapia Stephanopoulos cannot be expected to change
anything.


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experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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