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Christians mourn Arafat's loss to Palestinians; see risk, opportunit

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  • Christians mourn Arafat's loss to Palestinians; see risk, opportunit

    Ecumenical News International, Switzerland
    Nov 12 2004

    Christians mourn Arafat's loss to Palestinians; see risk, opportunity


    Michele Green
    Ramallah, West Bank (ENI). Christian leaders in the Holy Land have
    expressed sorrow at the death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and
    said they would be present at his funeral in Cairo and burial in
    Ramallah.

    In reactions from around the world, some church leaders noted that
    Arafat's death presented both opportunity and risk to the peace
    process in the region.

    Hailing Arafat as the man who put the Palestinian people on the world
    map, Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah, the most senior Roman Catholic
    cleric in the region, said his death due to an unknown illness at a
    hospital in France on Thursday "was a great loss to the Palestinian
    people".

    "He succeeded in the recognition of the rights of the Palestinian
    people so today everyone, all the governments even Israel, is
    convinced that one day a Palestinian state must be created for the
    Palestinian people," said Sabbah, the first Palestinian to head the
    Catholic Church in the Holy Land.

    He said Arafat had tried to help Palestinian Christians by attending
    Christmas services at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem and
    also by taking political measures to assist the stature of the
    dwindling number of Christians in the Holy Land.

    Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican secretary of state, said: "The
    holy father [Pope John Paul II] prays to the prince of peace that the
    star of harmony will soon shine on the Holy Land and that the two
    peoples dwelling therein may live reconciled among themselves as two
    independent and sovereign."

    Anglican Bishop Riah Abu El-Assal from St George's Cathedral in East
    Jerusalem, said, "The death of Yasser Arafat is a great loss
    certainly to the Palestinian people but also to all who are after
    peace with justice." He noted, "We as members of the Christian
    community feel the same loss if not more because of his real concern
    for the Palestinian Christians, institutions and holy places."

    Bishop Arris from the office of the Armenian Patriarch in Jerusalem
    said the Armenian community had always respected Arafat as the
    elected leader of the Palestinian people. "He has always been a good
    listener to the Christian requests and seemed to be the voice of
    moderation in this regard," he said.

    Members of all the local churches said they would send high level
    delegates to Arafat's military-style funeral in Cairo and burial at
    his battered compound in Ramallah on 13 November.

    "Yasser Arafat was a man who will be remembered in radically
    different and often contradictory ways," said Lutheran World
    Federation President Bishop Mark Hanson and General Secretary Rev.
    Ishmael Noko in a joint statement.

    "For many, he was the personification of the Palestinian struggle for
    self-determination and independence, a freedom-fighter, an heroic
    leader, a father figure," they said. "For others he was an implacable
    foe, an obstacle to peace. For Palestinian Christians, he was a
    strong supporter of their religious rights and freedoms, and always
    attentive to their place and their importance in the Holy Land."

    The Lutheran leaders said although the consequences of Arafat's death
    were unpredictable, it presented "opportunity as well as risk". They
    called on the Israeli and Palestinian leadership to grasp the
    opportunity to renew active commitment to dialogue instead of
    violence.

    They also called on the US government and the other members of the
    Quartet - the United Nations, European Union and Russia - involved in
    shaping an international policy towards resolution of the
    Israel-Palestine conflict, to re-engage in the search for peace.

    Peter Weiderud, director of the World Council of Churches' commission
    on international affairs said: "In solidarity with the Palestinian
    people, the World Council of Churches will continue to work for human
    rights, sustainable livelihoods, medical care and basic freedoms, in
    the days and years that lie ahead and until there is peace."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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