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PA Rethink Mollifies Armenians, Heralds Return to Status Quo

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  • PA Rethink Mollifies Armenians, Heralds Return to Status Quo

    Palestine News Network (PNN)
    January 7, 2013 Monday

    PA Rethink Mollifies Armenians, Heralds Return to Status Quo

    by Arthur Hagopian


    On Sunday 6th January, the Palestinian Authority (PA) in Bethlehem has
    had a rethink regarding its stance vis-a-vis the protocols in practice
    at the city's Nativity Church, rescinding a recent decision that had
    threatened to pit one Christian church against another. The PA move,
    which comes after intense pressure, heralds the onset of a palpable
    peace between two brother churches, the Armenians and the Greek
    Orthodox. The two have been embroiled in a territorial dispute in the
    church for years, arising out of what the Armenians claim is an
    attempt by the Greeks to encroach upon their traditional standing and
    position within the church. The issue involves disagreement over the
    annual cleaning procedures, culminating in ugly brawls, that last year
    necessitated police intervention, and a PA edict Armenians saw as
    biased against them.

    The Armenians accused the Greeks of breaching the tenets of the Status
    Quo of the Holy Places, a "fait accompli" which has ruled relations
    between churches and governments since the Ottoman era, and which
    spells out in minute detail the rights and privileges of the Christian
    churches in the Holy Land, as well as the manner and timing of
    celebrations of certain rites and ceremonies.

    The three Guardians of the Holy Places (the Latin Custodia, the Greek
    Orthodox and the Armenian Orthodox churches), as well as the dozen
    other Christian denominations of the Holy Land, are bound by the
    tenets of the set of agreements thrashed out by the Ottoman Sultans
    with the aim of safeguarding Christian rights and avoiding internecine
    clashes. Though rare, deviations from the Status Quo are viewed with
    concern and alarm. The Armenians claim that in December 2007 the
    Greeks created facts on the ground by moving a ladder used to clean
    the walls of the church from its assigned place. (To an impartial
    observer, the sweeping of a neighbor's tile, or the movement of a
    ladder from one part of a wall to another, may seem trivial and no
    cause for resentment, but to the owner of the tile or wall, in the
    troubled Holy Land, the action is viewed as an unwarranted intrusion
    on its territorial rights).

    In the event, in the spirit of brotherly feeling, they were ready to
    consider this a one-off, a temporary realignment with no provision for
    an encore. But the Greeks thought otherwise and, according to the
    Armenians, wanted to enshroud the variation in the cleaning routine in
    a new status quo. When the Armenians complained to the PA, the answer
    they received was simple and blunt: this is a matter between you and
    the Greeks to resolve. Hanna Amireh, head of the PA's Presidential
    Committee for the Christian churches, declared that the "same
    arrangements which were reached last year are the most suitable
    arrangement for this year too."

    He warned that the decision of the Palestinian Authority "shall remain
    unchanged and the Armenians must submit to the Authority's decision,"
    warning it will "take all measures against those who dare to cause any
    kind of clash," this correspondent was told. Unfazed, the Armenians
    applied more pressure on the PA to reconsider, until the PA finally
    relented. In a written pledge delivered to the Armenians earlier this
    week, the PA conceded 2012 would be the last time the Greeks would
    clean the church the new way, and that come December 2013, things
    would go back to what they were before and in accordance with the
    Status Quo.

    To ensure nothing untoward occurred this year, the PA allowed the
    cleaning on January 2 to proceed under strict supervision, with a
    special police unit on standby outside the church, just in case. "Both
    sides (Greeks and Armenians) were on their best behavior," a source
    close to the Armenian church said. "When all is said and done, both
    churches share a common history and destiny. For instance, before the
    invention of the Armenian alphabet in 405 CE, Armenians wrote in
    Greek." However, he confided that the Armenians still have pending
    issues "pertaining to our rights in the Nativity church." Six months
    ago, one of the lamps that belong to the Armenians, located under the
    altar and on the Star of Bethlehem, dropped down along with the nail
    from which it hung, promptly spawning a new dispute with the Greeks.
    Who had the right to put the lamp back up? Once again, it would be up
    to the Palestinian Authority to find a way out of this potential
    minefield.




    From: A. Papazian
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