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Church Flap In Jerusalem: Bad Blood - And Saliva

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  • Church Flap In Jerusalem: Bad Blood - And Saliva

    Forward, NY
    Oct 21 2004


    Church Flap In Jerusalem: Bad Blood - And Saliva
    By Eric J. Greenberg
    October 22, 2004

    It has been Jerusalem's dirty little secret for decades: Orthodox
    yeshiva students and other Jewish residents vandalizing churches and
    spitting on Christian clergyman as they walk along the narrow,
    ancient stone streets of the Old City.

    Now, however, following a highly publicized fracas last week between
    a yeshiva student and the archbishop of Jerusalem's Armenian Church,
    the issue is generating unprecedented media attention in Israel. The
    fight started after a yeshiva student at the respected Har Hamor
    yeshiva spat on Archbishop Nourhan Manougian during a Christian holy
    procession in the Old City.

    In the wake of the incident, a top Armenian Church official told the
    Forward that his church is calling on the Israeli government and on
    rabbis around the world to help put a stop to the offensive,
    decades-long abuse.

    "These ultra-Orthodox Jews are the ones causing this scandal, those
    that live here in our neighborhood and the ones that come visit the
    Western Wall," said the church official, Aris Shirvanian, in a phone
    interview Monday. He spoke from the patriarchate's world headquarters
    in the Armenian Quarter, one of the famed four quarters of the Old
    City of Jerusalem.

    "We would like to see the authorities... become more strict with the
    offenders," said Shirvanian, director of ecumenical and foreign
    relations of the Armenian Patriarchate. "We would also ask rabbis to
    get involved in educating this one sector of the Jewish society."

    Har Hamor is one of the leading institutions of religious Zionism,
    Israel's equivalent of Modern Orthodoxy. Most sources interviewed for
    this article suggested that the abusive practices were more common in
    the ultra-Orthodox or Haredi community, which is characterized by
    greater insularity.

    The controversy comes as the Israeli government and Diaspora Jewish
    organizations have been viewed for this article suggested that the
    abusive practices were more common in the ultra-Orthodox or Haredi
    community, which is characterized by greater insularity. But sources
    told the Forward that the pratice has recently been picked up by
    other segments of the Orthodox world, including visiting American
    yeshiva students.

    The controversy comes as the Israeli government and Diaspora Jewish
    organizations have been attempting to focus international attention
    on what they describe as a surge in antisemitism across the globe.
    Beyond potentially undermining these efforts, the reports of
    anti-Christian harassment could weaken Israel's claim to be an
    effective guardian of Christian and Muslim rights in Jerusalem.

    "Protection of everything sacred to other religions is one of the
    justifications for Israel's sovereignty in Jerusalem, whose
    legitimacy will be undermined if this spitting becomes prevalent,"
    said a former Israeli chief rabbi, Israel Meir Lau. Lau condemned the
    harassment, and warned that such incidents could fuel antisemitism
    outside of Israel.

    Besides the Armenian rite, clergy of other Christian churches have
    been targeted, Shirvanian said. "This is not happening only to
    Armenian clergy, but also to the Catholics, Syrians, Romanians and
    Greek Orthodox."

    Following the incident involving Manougian, numerous Israeli
    government officials and Jewish religious and organizational leaders
    have stepped forward to condemn the acts.

    Interior Minister Avraham Poraz called the yeshiva students' behavior
    "intolerable," and asked Internal Security Minister Gideon Ezra to
    "take all the necessary steps to prevent these incidents in the
    future."

    The chairman of the Knesset's Interior and Environment Committee,
    Yuri Stern, said the incidents resulted from ignorance and stupidity.
    He called for changes in how Christianity is taught in Israeli
    schools.

    Jerusalem mayor Uri Lupoliansky, the city's first ultra-Orthodox
    chief executive, announced that he would appoint an adviser to deal
    with the problem of Jewish harassment of religious minorities in
    Jerusalem and to provide recommendations to improve interfaith
    relations in the city.

    According to Shirvanian, church officials are frequently subjected to
    spitting, from yeshiva students as well as from ultra-Orthodox women
    and young children. He said ultra-Orthodox Jews also throw garbage on
    church doorsteps and break windows at churches and at Christian
    homes.

    Daniel Rossing, a former adviser on Christian affairs at Israel's
    Religious Affairs Ministry, said there has been an increase in the
    number of such incidents recently, "as part of a general atmosphere
    of lack of tolerance in the country."

    "I know Christians who lock themselves indoors during the entire
    Purim holiday" for fear of being attacked by Jews, said Rossing, now
    the director of a Jerusalem center for Christian-Jewish dialogue.

    A spate of recent incidents has been reported in the press:

    - A few weeks ago, an elderly man wearing a yarmulke spat on a senior
    Greek Orthodox cleric who was entering a government office in
    Jerusalem's Givat Shaul section.

    - Stars of David were spray-painted on the entrance to the Monastery
    of the Cross, not far from the Knesset. The Holy Trinity Russian
    Orthodox Cathedral, near Jerusalem police headquarters in the
    so-called Russian Compound in downtown Jerusalem, suffered similar
    vandalism.

    - Officials at a church located near several yeshivas complained that
    the students were watching them through binoculars and making
    offensive gestures when they passed by. Churches located in several
    Orthodox neighborhoods in Jerusalem complained that neighbors had
    thrown garbage into their yards.

    The Armenian call for action comes several days after Manougian was
    spat upon while leading a procession marking the Exaltation of the
    Holy Cross near the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in the Old City.

    In response, Manougian slapped the yeshiva student, Natan Zvi
    Rosenthal, 21, a resident of Beersheva. During the ensuing brawl
    Manougian's cross medallion, worn by Armenian archbishops since the
    17th century, was damaged.

    Police questioned both men. The Jerusalem District Court barred
    Rosenthal from entering the Old City for 75 days.

    Israel's failure to impose a harsher penalty drew sharp criticism
    from Manougian. "When there is an attack against Jews anywhere in the
    world, the Israeli government is incensed," the patriarch was quoted
    as saying. "So why, when our religion and pride are hurt, don't they
    take harsher measures?"

    Rosenthal later apologized to Manougian during a special meeting at
    Jerusalem police headquarters late last week. In apologizing, he said
    he had been raised to view Christianity as idol worship, which is
    forbidden by the Torah.

    Shirvanian later said the church had accepted Rosenthal's apology, as
    required by its religious tenets. "We had to forgive him in the
    Christian spirit," Shirvanian said, adding that the church now favors
    canceling Rosenthal's punishment.

    On Sunday, Israel's Knesset held an emergency meeting and launched an
    investigation into the apparently rising level of assaults against
    Christian clergy and churches.

    But by then, the incident was reverberating throughout the world,
    with more stories in the Israeli press of harassment and vandalism
    directed by Orthodox Jews against several denominations.

    Even as the Knesset's Interior and Environment Committee was
    interviewing Christian leaders and Jerusalem officials, a 6-year-old
    Haredi boy spat on a young Armenian priest, Shirvanian told the
    Forward.

    In keeping with a long-standing approach, the church did not report
    the second spitting incident to the police. "When a little boy and
    little girl do this, they are being taught by their parents,"
    Shirvanian said. "Shall we punish them? It's more a matter of
    educating them and educating the adults."

    The spitting on priests has been occurring "since the unification of
    Jerusalem in 1967," Shirvanian said.

    Scholars contacted by the Forward cited several ancient rabbinic
    sources as potential sources of anti-Christian attitudes.

    At least one talmudic passage advises Jews to say pejorative things
    when passing the homes or graves of idolators, and while most
    rabbinic authorities have denied Christianity was intended, some
    medieval commentators seem to suggest that some Jews viewed it that
    way, presumably reflecting Jewish resentment of Christian
    persecution.

    Shirvanian said the Armenian church has generally "tried to ignore"
    the spitting incidents. He said most Christians do not report the
    incidents to the police because the authorities ignore them. "They
    just take the reports and of course, they release the offenders."

    A Jerusalem police spokesman, Gil Kleiman, said that before the
    recent altercation involving the Armenian patriarch, it had been two
    years since the police handled a spitting incident.

    Kleiman confirmed that Christian clergy complain the harassment is
    frequent. But it took the attack on the Armenian leader to transform
    the matter into a public issue and national embarrassment.

    Shmuel Evyatar, a former adviser on Christian affairs to the mayor of
    Jerusalem, called the situation "a huge disgrace," adding that most
    of the instigators are yeshiva students studying in the Old City who
    view the Christian religion with disdain. "I'm sure the phenomenon
    would end as soon as rabbis and well-known educator denounce it. In
    practice, rabbis of yeshivas ignore or even encourage it," he said.

    Rabbis from the Har Hamor yeshiva said that Rosenthal was the first
    student at their institution to be charged with such an offense. They
    said that they educate their students to be courteous to others and
    expressed regret over the spitting incident.

    Rabbi Avi Shafran, a spokesman for Agudath Israel of America, the
    leading advocacy organization of ultra-Orthodox Judaism here, said he
    was unfamiliar with assaults on Christians and his organization has
    no role to play in stopping the harassment.

    "Were something of the sort to occur in the United States, our
    rabbinic leadership would likely address the issue," Shafran said.
    "Since, though, the incident and the accusation of more widespread
    abuse have taken place in Israel, our rabbis would leave any response
    to the incident and to the demands of Armenian clergymen to the
    rabbinic leaders in the Holy Land."

    Another American organization, the Anti-Defamation League, is
    speaking out on the issue. The ADL sent a letter to Israel's two
    chief rabbis, urging them to take quick and forceful action.

    Rabbi David Rosen, the Jerusalem-based international director of
    interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Committee, said his
    Christian counterparts are "extremely upset" over the recent
    incidents. At the same time, he added that "they are also content, in
    a way, that the matter is now being taken seriously by the Israeli
    authorities."
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