http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/11/10/africa/ME_FEA_GEN_Christian_Exodus.php

Christian decline in Holy Land echoes pope's worries across Muslim world

BETHLEHEM, West Bank: The death threat came on simple white fliers 
blowing down the streets at dawn. A group calling itself "Friends of 
Muhammad" accused a local Palestinian Christian of selling mobile phones 
carrying offensive sketches of the Muslim prophet.

The message went on to curse all Arab Christians and Pope Benedict XVI, 
still struggling to calm Muslim outrage from his remarks on Islam.

While neighbors defended the merchant --- saying the charges in the flier 
were bogus --- the frightened phone dealer went into hiding, feeling less 
than satisfied with authorities' conclusion that the Oct. 19 note was 
probably a harmless rant.

Now the dealer is thinking of going abroad.

Call it part of a modern exodus, the steady flight of the tiny 
Palestinian Christian minority that could lead, some predict, to the 
faith being virtually extinct in its birthplace within several 
generations --- a trend mirrored in many dwindling pockets of Christianity 
across the Islamic world.

This is one of the major themes the pope is expected to carry to Turkey 
for a four-day visit beginning Nov. 28 --- his first papal visit to a 
predominantly Muslim nation. The Vatican calls it "reciprocity": Muslim 
demands for greater sensitivity from the West must be accompanied by 
stronger protections and rights for Christian minorities.

In some places, such as Pakistan, it means more safeguards from 
extremist attacks. In Indonesia and elsewhere, it touches on appeals to 
quell growing sectarian clashes. In Turkey, Iraq and the rest of the 
Middle East, it seeks to preserve communities dating back to the time 
when Jesus and his apostles preached.

But nearly everywhere in Muslim lands, Christian populations are in decline.

No place is this more striking than the Holy Land.

For decades, it was mostly economic pressures pushing Palestinian 
Christians to emigrate, using family ties in the West or contacts from 
missionary schools. The Palestinian uprisings --- and the separation 
barrier started by Israel in 2002 --- accelerated the departures by 
turning once-bustling pilgrimage sites such as Bethlehem into relative 
ghost towns.

The growing strength of radical Islamic movements has added distinct new 
worries. During the protests after the pope's remarks in September, some 
of the worst violence was in Palestinian areas with churches firebombed 
and hit by gunfire.

"Most of the Christians here are either in the process of leaving, 
planning to leave or thinking of leaving," said Sami Awad, executive 
director of the Holy Land Trust, a Bethlehem-based peace group. 
"Insecurity is deep and getting worse."

The native Palestinian Christian population has dipped below 2 percent 
of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Arab East Jerusalem, down from at least 
15 percent in 1950 by some estimates. Meanwhile, the Muslim Palestinian 
birthrate is among the highest in the world.

Dire predictions abound. The Franciscan Foundation for the Holy Land 
said Christians could become "extinct" in the region within 60 years.

"It certainly doesn't look good for us," said Mike Salman, a Palestinian 
Christian who has conducted studies on demographic trends.

A walk along Shepherd Street puts a face to the lament.

Hannah Qumsieh spends his days playing online poker, fretting about 
unpaid bills and trimming his lemon trees at his house overlooking the 
field where the Bible says an angel told shepherds of the birth of 
Jesus. Qumsieh retired from the Palestinian tourism office last year, 
but has received no pension checks since the militant faction Hamas won 
elections in January and the West slashed aid to the Palestinian Authority.

"If I had money to leave, I would," he said, casting a glance at the 
newly built white-stone house next door in Beit Sahour, one of the last 
Christian-dominated enclaves in the West Bank. Bethlehem, just up the 
hill, is now less than 20 percent Christian.

A day earlier, Qumsieh's eldest son turned over the house keys to 
tenants and took his family to Chile. Down the road, a Christian 
restaurant owner, Ibrahim Shomali, is selling what he can before he 
leaves with his wife this month. They will head for Flint, Michigan, to 
join his brother and hunt for work in one of the most economically 
depressed areas of America.

Shomali also will leave a stack of paperwork for his lawyer, who is 
fighting a group that took control of land that Shomali insists has been 
in his family for more than a century. Christians claim Muslim gangs 
routinely try to seize Christian property using doctored documents, but 
Palestinian authorities say it's random lawlessness in areas where land 
deeds are not registered.

"Here is where Jesus was born and over there, across the hill in 
Jerusalem, is where he was crucified," Shomali said. "We Christians now 
feel like we are on the cross."

Some are trying to change the momentum.

Groups dedicated to Muslim-Christian cooperation are active. During the 
protests over Benedict's remarks, militiamen from Islamic Jihad vowed to 
protect a West Bank church. A poll released Oct. 18 by the Palestinian 
Center for Public Opinion found 91 percent of respondents opposed 
attacking churches to protest Benedict's comments.

Fuad Kokali, one of six Christian deputies in the 132-seat Palestinian 
parliament, proclaimed there "are no religious divides" in the struggle 
against Israeli occupation.

But, after a while, he told another story. He spoke of how Muslims and 
Christians mixed freely at weddings and other events in the 1980s. Now, 
it's a rarity, he said.

"The world is becoming a more unstable and frightening place," he said. 
"In these times, people revert back to their core identity. That means 
closing yourself within your religion and looking out at the other with 
suspicion."

These days Palestinian Christians --- dominated by Greek Orthodox and 
Latin rite churches loyal to the pope --- face questions about whether 
their hearts lie in their homeland or in the West. It gets even more 
complicated because of the strong support for Israel and Jewish settlers 
from American evangelical Christians.

"We are stuck in no man's land," said a leading Palestinian Christian 
activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of reported death 
threats. "In the eyes of the West, we are Arabs. In the eyes of Arabs, 
we are a fifth column."

The choice is either stand up against Muslim radicals or doom Holy Land 
Christianity to a slow death, said Ayman Abuaita, a Christian leader who 
previously served in the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade, which has waged 
suicide bombings against Israelis.

"This is our land. This is where our faith was born," he said. "We 
cannot be weak and just fade away."

But being bold can bring a backlash.

On Oct. 12, Christians students at Bir Zeit University in the West Bank 
protested an exhibit by an Islamic group that included artwork mocking 
the pontiff and a poem deriding Christianity. The argument deteriorated 
into a brief melee with fists and sticks.

No one was seriously injured, but political and religious leaders rushed 
to the college to try to keep the violence from spreading --- as it did in 
2002 when Beit Sahour was engulfed by street battles after a Muslim man 
took a surreptitious photo of a Christian woman in a changing room.

At the St. Theodosius Monastery, a site with a Christian history dating 
to the fifth century, the Greek Orthodox caretaker, Father Ierotheos, 
said he mostly remains behind the walls. He claims he was harassed by 
"Muslim fanatics" for speaking about Christian fears on a local 
television show.

"It's a jungle for us now," he said.

Every Friday, the noontime bells from the Church of the Nativity in 
Bethlehem ring out during prayer calls at a mosque on the other side of 
Manger Square.

"You can hear the bells and think that it is a sign that Christians will 
never be pushed out of this land," said Abuaita. "Or you can hear it as 
a cry for help."

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