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JERUSALEM: Christians Anonymous

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  • JERUSALEM: Christians Anonymous

    CHRISTIANS ANONYMOUS
    By David Smith

    Jerusalem Post
    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12 01523800918&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
    Feb 1 2008

    Anonymous. The word comes to mind when researching Jerusalem
    Christians, likely the world's oldest Christian community.

    Finding hard statistical data on native Jerusalem Christians is
    no easy task. Demographic statistics at the Jerusalem Municipality
    categorize them as "non-Jews," lumping them together with Muslims,
    Druse and expatriate Christians.

    While the municipality kept statistics on its Christian population
    until 1995, it no longer considers such a division necessary, according
    to a city spokesman.

    Balancing municipal numbers with data from the Central Bureau of
    Statistics (a bit tricky because the city makes no distinction between
    native and expatriate Christians while the CBS is concerned with the
    Jerusalem district, not the city), one finds the numbers have slightly
    increased since 1967.

    The CBS proposes that there are presently 12,600 native Jerusalem
    Christians (mostly Arab and Armenian Christians); the Jerusalem
    Institute for Israel Studies has found about 14,000.

    Perhaps more important than the numbers is the proportion of Christians
    relative to the other faiths in the city since 1967. While the
    Christian population has increased slightly, Muslim numbers quadrupled
    and the Jewish community increased by 75 percent, rendering Christians
    about 2% of the total.

    The disparity is most clearly seen in Jerusalem's Old City, where
    the number of Christians has dropped by about 400 but the percentage
    has decreased from 30 to 18. Even the Christian quarter is almost 25%
    Muslim, while shops in the area are 90% Muslim.

    MORE TELLING than the demographics is the vulnerability perceived by
    the Old City Christians, which contributes to their anonymity. No
    members of the Christian community interviewed were willing to use
    their own names.

    Last August, when a shooting in the Christian Quarter between a
    Muslim assailant and Israeli security guards resulted in 11 wounded -
    most of them Jerusalem Christians - many Christians felt the incident
    illustrated their predicament.

    Samir, a professional working in the Old City, says: "We're trapped
    between two larger peoples that don't like each other... and they
    don't like us either."

    "To the Arabs, we're Christians, which means Crusaders, and to the
    Israelis we're Arabs, which means terrorists," adds Jack, an Old
    City shopkeeper. "We're not able to trust anybody. I haven't been to
    confession in 15 years because I don't trust any priest!"

    One indication Christians are sensing their diminished presence is
    their willingness to marry outside their denomination. Children are
    raised according to the denomination of the father.

    Typically Christian girls never married Muslims, "but now you hear
    about it every few months," says George, who works in the Old City.

    "There aren't enough boys to go around."

    Maria, a Syrian Orthodox resident of the Old City, agrees that there
    are more boys than girls, but attributes the intermarriage to "the
    naivete of those girls."

    Two Roman Catholic brothers said they can't find wives in Jerusalem
    "because all these girls want to leave. If you want to stay in
    Jerusalem you can't find a girl to marry you."

    Maria agrees. "Most, maybe 80% of the girls, would like to leave."

    She adds that she is among this majority. "I wouldn't hesitate [to
    leave Jerusalem]," she says.

    Maria says Christian girls face unique problems in Jerusalem because
    "in the market, the Muslim boys say things they would never say to
    Muslim girls." She adds that occasionally, in the crowded market
    after Muslim prayers on Fridays, "someone will reach out and
    [inappropriately] touch" a Christian girl.

    Another symptom of Christian insecurity is the low birthrate among
    Christian women; it is the lowest of the three communities and
    decreasing drastically. In 1995 the average Christian woman bore 2.7
    children, but in 2006 that number dropped to 2.1 - representing a 22%
    decrease in a decade.

    In November the Interior Ministry reported an increase "in the
    hundreds" of Arab applications for Israeli citizenship. Most experts
    agree the increase stems from speculation that east Jerusalem might
    fall under Palestinian Authority control.

    Based on the well-publicized Christian exodus from Bethlehem and
    persecution against Christians in Gaza - both cities under PA control -
    it is assumed many of these applications are from Christians.

    In Hamas-run Gaza, Christian worker Rami Khader Ayyad was murdered
    in October after an elderly Christian woman was beaten, robbed and
    accused of being an "infidel." And in the past year, both a church
    and the Bible Society bookstore have been firebombed.

    Most Christians report some harassment when residing in a Muslim
    neighborhood, saying that Muslim children enter their gardens and
    they are helpless to expel them. One local Christian, Salim, says a
    local entered his home and knocked his grandmother to the floor while
    trying to steal her jewelry. In response, the local mukhtar (head of
    the Muslim community) advised him to install burglar bars, he says.

    Another Jerusalemite Christian, Samir, moved from the Muslim majority
    neighborhood where he and his mother lived to a Jewish neighborhood
    "where nobody knows who you are" as a result of Muslim hostility. Now
    married and living near his mother, he says he would leave Jerusalem
    but needs to take care of her. Still, he says he has made preparations
    to leave by getting licensed to practice his profession in Canada.

    While the implications of Christian exodus have been only talk and
    speculation to date, Samir thinks Palestinian governance of east
    Jerusalem would be "the feather [translating from Arabic] that breaks
    the camel's back."

    Other interviewees agreed, insisting Christians would "automatically
    leave" or would prefer Israeli citizenship, although older interviewees
    suggested Christians would try to live under Palestinian rule "and
    then make up our minds."

    While most called Israel a better option, all recognize that, as
    Arabs, they are the object of racism in Israel as well. Jack cites
    administrative hassles, but says if an Israeli friend goes with him,
    he gets better service. He also believes Arabs are discriminated
    against in the job market. Samir says he is hassled at checkpoints
    and the airport.

    A recent survey by the Israeli Association of Civil Rights bears out
    such allegations.

    CHRISTIANS WORLDWIDE are also unaware of Palestinian Christians.

    Samir says he meets Americans in the Old City who are shocked to find
    he is both Arab and Christian.

    All interviewees concur that this anonymous Christian community is
    characterized by lack of support from sister churches.

    "Jews [worldwide] support the ultra-Orthodox who don't work but just
    study and have five children to a family. The Muslims have large
    extended families who help each other out, and even they receive help
    from churches. We're a small community and don't receive anything,"
    says Jack. "We don't want handouts, but they could help establish
    businesses or provide scholarships."

    Justus Reid Weiner, a human rights lawyer, recently echoed these
    remarks while addressing the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.

    Weiner says there will be no more Christians in the PA-controlled
    territories in 15 years unless Western institutions help with jobs.

    "The systematic persecution of Christian Arabs in Palestinian areas
    is being met with nearly total silence by the international community,
    human rights activists, the media and NGOs," he says.

    Weiner attributes this silence to local Christian leaders who "sing
    the PA's tune."

    Prof. Petra Heldt, who teaches "Christian Communities in Jerusalem"
    at Jerusalem University College, says this loyalty to the PA stems
    from "the dhimmi atmosphere." (Dhimmi is the protective status given
    to non-Muslim minorities in exchange for loyalty and subjugation to
    the Muslim majority.)

    "The world only hears the party line, which says that everything
    is fine with the exception of Israel," says Heldt. "Since the real
    suffering of the Christians has very little to do with Israeli
    politics, and the reality is not talked about, nobody really knows."

    Interviewees were divided by age on the question of leaving Jerusalem,
    with younger people seeing emigration as a legitimate option and the
    older generation considering it "disgraceful."

    Hanna, an east Jerusalem businessman who once gave a Bible to Yasser
    Arafat, says: "I have a calling in order to serve God in what I am
    doing now and remain a good witness to non-Christians here.

    "If you are a loyal Christian you will definitely not leave this
    country... you will stay," he continues. "If you leave, you will
    betray both your faith and your nation."

    Another local businessman agreed, saying he would remain regardless
    of who governs. "I don't care if their big sheikh comes, I'm staying!"
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