Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Can Housing Keep Christians In Middle East?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Can Housing Keep Christians In Middle East?

    CAN HOUSING KEEP CHRISTIANS IN MIDDLE EAST?

    AOL News
    http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/can-housing-preserve-mideasts-beleaguered-christians/19696200
    Nov 2 2010
    JERUSALEM

    Only days after a special Vatican Synod on the Middle East ended a
    week of deliberation about the rapidly shrinking Christian communities
    in the Arab world and Israel, Christians faced a massacre in Baghdad
    and renewed troubles in Jerusalem.

    Fifty-eight people including a priest were reported dead Sunday after
    Iraqi troops stormed the Catholic Sayidat al-Najat church in Baghdad
    where gunmen linked with al-Qaida had taken dozens of hostages and
    begun killing them. It was just the latest bout of the anti-Christian
    violence that has sparked a massive wave of emigration from the
    troubled country in recent years.

    In Jerusalem, it remained unclear what caused a blaze early Friday
    morning that swept through the Alliance Church on Prophets Street,
    next door to the Jewish ultra-orthodox neighborhood of Mea Shearim.

    The use of the church by evangelical and Jewish messianic groups
    aroused suspicions that the fire could have been started deliberately,
    but Jerusalem police said their initial investigation did not appear
    to suggest arson.

    Decades of discrimination, poverty and occasional violence have taken
    their toll on the Christians of the Middle East. Tens of thousands have
    left the region in recent years. Reversing the decline of the rapidly
    shrinking Christian communities in Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt and
    the Holy Land were high on the agenda of last week's Vatican Synod.

    While the problem of violence in Iraq and elsewhere seems intractable
    for many Christians, in the Holy Land, church officials have hit on
    a novel solution: real estate.

    Churches in Jerusalem and the West Bank, alarmed by the rapid rate of
    Christian emigration and the creeping loss of some church-owned land
    to Palestinian gangsters, have initiated a major building program to
    provide affordable housing to Christian families.

    A 2006 survey carried out by Sabeel, a Christian think-tank in
    Jerusalem, showed that the 2005 Christian population of 160,000
    in Israel and the West Bank had barely grown since 1945 due to
    massive emigration caused by continuous warfare, occupation and
    discrimination. More Palestinian Christians now live in Chile than in
    the Holy Land, where Christians account for less than 2 percent of the
    population. In cities like Bethlehem and Ramallah, which a generation
    ago had Christian majorities, they are now outnumbered by Muslims.

    "There is a glaring shortage of houses in Jerusalem, at least
    at affordable prices," said Father Ibrahim Faltas, bursar of the
    Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land. "We really want to help halt
    Christian emigration by making these houses available. Having a space
    of one's own and a house of one's own is an encouragement to put down
    roots and stay in this land."

    The Custody owns 500 homes in the Old City of Jerusalem and more
    than 200 outside the walls. A recent ceremony handing over the keys
    to 68 apartments in 20 three-floor buildings of three- to six-room
    apartments near Jerusalem went on until 5 a.m.

    "It was a magnificent night," said the Custos, Pierbattista Pizzaballa,
    lamenting only that there was a waiting list of 700 families who had
    hoped to receive one of the 68 homes.

    The Custody project "Jerusalem: Stones of the Memory" has completed 100
    refurbishments since 2007 at a cost of about $2 million. It has another
    320 housing units in the pipeline at an estimated cost of about $10
    million. Similar projects have been initiated by the Armenian, Lutheran
    and Orthodox churches in Jerusalem, Bethany, Bethlehem and Ramallah.

    "The real danger is that immigration has become the easy solution for
    all problems, a trend followed by the young and in many circumstances
    endorsed and encouraged by the older generation," notes the Arab
    Orthodox Charitable Society in Beit Sahour, near Bethlehem. "Beit
    Sahour, home to the largest Greek Orthodox community in the Holy Land,
    is at stake of losing its strong Christian identity, preserved by
    the community against all odds thus far. Bethlehem and Beit Jala
    have succumbed long ago to the temptation of immigration and lost
    their Christian majority." The society has its own building project,
    "Dwellings for Newly Married Young Couples."

    Monsignor William Shomali, auxiliary bishop at the Latin Patriarchate
    of Jerusalem, chairs a monthly gathering of Catholic church and
    charitable affiliates to monitor developments in the Catholic
    community. Among the projects under construction are 80 apartments
    in the southern Jerusalem neighborhood of Beit Safafa being built
    with the legal and technical assistance of the Patriarchate.

    "These people came to us and said, 'We are homeless. We can not own a
    house.' They were young, either newly married or about to get married,
    and they had a problem of housing. It is cheaper to build a housing
    project than for everyone to build his own house because of the
    land and building license. So they put the project under our care,"
    Shomali told AOL News.

    Christian families traditionally were not landowners in the villages
    that have now become suburbs of Jerusalem, Ramallah and other major
    cities. That put them at a disadvantage when the population began to
    grow and land prices started rising.

    Israeli restrictions on granting building permits to Palestinian
    residents of East Jerusalem have exacerbated the problem. Church
    figures show that while Palestinians make up 35 percent of the city's
    population, they receive only 7 percent of building licenses granted
    each year -- a policy that the church describes as "demographic
    control."

    Sponsored Links "The Christian families used to live in the Old City
    where there was not a lot of space to expand," Shomali said. "They
    were satisfied. They were in houses owned by the Franciscans or
    the Greek Orthodox Church. So they didn't think to buy outside the
    Old City when land was less valuable than it is today. Fewer people
    thought of it. This is the error committed by our community."

    Jack Amer, 27, is hoping to move to his new home in the Beit Safafa
    project with his wife of two years and their infant son in 2012,
    thanks to a $150,000 mortgage from the Arab Bank. Amer, a native
    of Jerusalem who is now chief accountant at the Latin Patriarchate,
    told AOL News that it would have been impossible to raise a mortgage
    without the backing of the church.

    "No banks can give us the loans that will help us because we have no
    guarantees," Amer said. "The church is helping Arab people to stay
    in Jerusalem and to let their sons and daughters stay here also.

    "The Patriarch and the priests are taking all their time to help
    people stay in this place. We need to stay in Jerusalem. It's like
    you are in a war. You have to protect your rights," he said.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X