Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jerusalem authorities fear Catholic-Orthodox clashes during Holy Wee

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

  • Jerusalem authorities fear Catholic-Orthodox clashes during Holy Wee

    Jerusalem authorities fear Catholic-Orthodox clashes during Holy Week

    Catholic World News

    Jerusalem, Mar. 21 (CWNews.com) - Public officials in Jerusalem are
    bracing for Eastertide conflicts between Orthodox and Catholic clerics
    at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, according to the London Daily
    Telegraph .

    Local officials have reportedly called in Catholic and Orthodox leaders
    for discussions in recent days, hoping to ward off a repetition
    of an ugly fight that occurred last September, when Orthodox monks
    charged and battered first Franciscan friars, then local police at
    the basilica. The Telegraph reports that a videotape of that incident
    shows the Greek Orthodox Patriarch Irineos instructing monks "to
    close the door of the Franciscan chapel by force."

    Custody of the Church of Holy Sepulcher has been shared among the
    Catholic, Orthodox, and Armenian churches for generations, on the
    basis of a complex agreement that has been enforced by successive
    governments in Jerusalem. Disputes among the monks who administer the
    basilica are commonplace, but the arrival of a new Orthodox patriarch
    has brought tensions to a new height.

    "We had good relations with the Greeks before now," one Catholic
    cleric told the Telegraph. But he said that Patriarch Irineos had
    been "a lightning-rod for trouble." This year, the Orthodox leader
    has announced plans for an Easter procession that would pass through
    the chapel that is in the custody of the Franciscans.

    Franciscans are appealing to the Israeli government for help, saying
    that the Orthodox procession should follow the traditional route, not
    impinging on the parts of the basilica controlled by Catholics. The
    Franciscans' case is complicated, however, by the Israeli courts'
    reluctance to become involved in religious disputes.

    The access of Catholic institutions to Israeli secular courts is
    one of the key questions being discussed by representatives of the
    Holy See and the Israeli government in the negotiations designed
    to produce a long-awaited agreement establishing the juridical and
    economic rights of Catholic institutions in Israel.
Working...
X