| United Methodists learn Palestinians’ side on Mideast
trip
Feb. 22, 2006
A UMNS Report
By Linda S. Rhodes*
A group of 51 United Methodists from across the United States spent 10 days
in Israel and the Palestinian territories searching for ways to bring peace and
justice to that conflicted area.
The study trip, “Seeking Peace and Pursuing Justice: Mission Education and
Advocacy for Israel and Palestine,” was sponsored Jan. 17-27 by the United
Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is “a deeply spiritual crisis that involves
all of us ? American, Israeli and Palestinian,” said Bishop Hee-Soo Jung, who
leads the denomination’s Chicago Area. In a sermon delivered on the trip, he
called on Americans to repent of their part in the conflict and work toward a
just peace in the area.
“Somebody said you can’t be a Christian if you’re not a peacemaker,” he said.
“I truly believe that.”
Jung led 16 church members from his area on the trip. The delegation also
included a person from the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference, three from
the California-Nevada Annual (regional) Conference, nine from Virginia, 11 from the California-Pacific Conference and 11 from North Central New York.
The trip was organized by the Rev. Sandra Olewine, a United Methodist
missionary serving as liaison to Jerusalem, and David Wildman, the Board of
Global Ministries’ executive secretary for human rights and racial justice. It
was designed to strengthen the United Methodist Church’s human rights and
peace-building advocacy work both in the Middle East and in the United States.
The board is working to create advocacy teams in the church’s annual (regional)
conferences.
Emphasis was on hearing the Palestinian side of the story,
Wildman said, because most Americans are already familiar with the Israeli side
of the issue.
“It was an advocacy-oriented trip to the Holy Land to walk where Jesus walked
and to walk as Jesus walked in terms of justice and peace,” Wildman said. “It
included meeting with Palestinians, Israeli peace groups, human rights groups
and our mission partners. One day was devoted to visiting mission projects and
partners supported by the United Methodist Church to learn how they are impacted
and how they are working under the current situation.”
The group heard representatives from the Israeli Committee Against Housing
Demolition, Israeli Information Center on Human Rights in the Palestinian
Territories, Council for Unrecognized Villages, Coalition of Women for Peace,
Rabbis for Human Rights and “Breaking the Silence” organization of former
Israeli soldiers.
Presentations also were made by Badil Palestinian Refugee and Residency
Rights Organization; Palestinian Civil Society for Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions Against Israel; Open Bethlehem; Center for Bedouin Studies at
Ben-Gurion University; Applied Research Institute of Jerusalem; and Emil Touma
Center for Palestinian Studies.
Members of the Parent’s Circle Family Forum, which consists of Israelis and
Palestinians who have lost family members to acts of violence, spoke about their
work for peace and reconciliation between the two peoples.
The United Methodists listened to panel discussions with Jews, Christians and
Muslims; toured the West Bank; saw the remains of destroyed villages; and had an
overnight stay with Palestinian families. They also observed the first
Palestinian election in more than a decade, in which the militant group Hamas
took power.
The mayor of Bethlehem, Victor Batarseh, greeted the United Methodists and
expressed gratitude for their willingness to spend 10 days in Bethlehem during a
time when most tourists are afraid to cross through the checkpoints to visit
holy sites. “Your presence grants us extra courage and the will to stand in our
struggle to pursue peace,” he said.
Lack of access
Batarseh described difficulties Palestinians in Bethlehem face, including
being surrounded by “22 illegal Israeli settlements,” a 30-foot high concrete
“separation” wall and settlers’ roads and checkpoints that “cut Bethlehem into
slices.”
“The wall erected by the Israelis is a great violation of human rights and
international law,” Batarseh said. He explained that most Palestinians are not
allowed access to their farmlands, jobs or relatives located on the other side
of the wall. “Today we live in a big prison.”
The Israeli government has said the wall is a security measure intended to
curb attacks by militant groups.
Batarseh said the only way to peace is by establishing a “fully sovereign
Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital,” withdrawing Israeli
settlements from Palestinian land, removal of the segregation wall, and allowing
Palestinian refugees to return to Israel.
“We don’t need walls of separation,” Batarseh said. “We just need bridges to
peace.”
Numerous speakers and conference participants said most Americans are unaware
of the Palestinians’ situation, and they attributed that to lack of coverage by
the U.S. media.
“Some of the information we received pointed out to me, personally, just how
naïve I have been with relation to understanding the plight of Palestine,” said
J.P. McGuire, Volunteers in Mission director for the California-Nevada
Conference. “I feel I have lived my years with blinders on — somewhat aware of
the atrocities of Israel toward Palestine, but at the same time, seeming to file
that knowledge in a back drawer for a later date. I am afraid that drawer has
now come open in an explosive way.”
Many on the trip expressed dismay when they first visited the wall the
Israeli government is building around Palestinian villages. Lonnie Chafin of
Chicago said he was “shocked.” “It’s hard to see how this is different from
apartheid.”
Fewer Christians
Chafin said he was also concerned about the number of Christian sites being
destroyed in Israel’s expansion of settlements. “And I am saddened by how many
Palestinian Christians are being driven from their historic villages,” he said.
He spent the night with a family in the Palestinian village of Taybeh. “Of
the 10,000 people who lived in that Christian village, only 1,000 remain because
there is no future for them in Palestine,” Chafin said. “The Palestinians are
being economically forced off their land. By making life impossible, the
Israelis are driving the Palestinians off the land their families have owned for
centuries.”
Wildman noted that the 2004 General Conference, the denomination’s top
policy-making body, passed a resolution on the situation in the Middle East,
calling on church members to engage in advocacy and study, to support programs
providing financial support to the Palestinian people, and to engage in
interfaith dialogue promoting justice and peace in the Holy Land. The January
event was part of the board’s effort to help annual conferences “move the
General Conference from words to action,” he said.
The trip had a profound impact on the Rev. Alka Lyall, pastor of First United
Methodist Church in Freeport, Ill. “I had never seen or experienced anything
like this before and was certainly not aware of the extent of humiliation and
torture — plain, simple torture — that the Palestinians endure on a daily basis.
“This trip was life-changing for me,” Lyall added, “and, now that I am home,
I have already started to talk about it to as many people as I have encountered
so far.”
*Rhodes is director of communications for the Northern Illinois Annual
Conference of the United Methodist Church.
News media contact: Tim Tanton, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org
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