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Muslim keeps the keys at the holiest site in Christendom

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  • Muslim keeps the keys at the holiest site in Christendom

    Scripps Howard News Service
    March 23 2005

    Muslim keeps the keys at the holiest site in Christendom
    By MATTHEW KALMAN
    Scripps Howard News Service
    March 23, 2005

    JERUSALEM - Every day at 4 a.m., Wajeeh Nuseibeh walks through the
    walled Old City of Jerusalem to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the
    holiest shrine in Christendom. Most Christians believe it is the site
    of the crucifixion, tomb and resurrection of Jesus.

    Nuseibeh takes an ancient 12-inch iron key, climbs a small ladder and
    opens the huge wooden doors.

    Every evening at nightfall, after three raps of an iron door knocker
    spaced out over half an hour, Nuseibeh closes up for the night and
    places the key in safekeeping.

    He inherited the job from his father and grandfather, part of a chain
    stretching back more than 1,300 years.

    But surprisingly for the doorkeeper of the site of the Crucifixion,
    Nuseibeh, 55, like his ancestors, is a Muslim.

    "It goes from father to son, from one generation to the next," said
    Nuseibeh, a small, dapper man in a suit and tie, with a dark
    mustache. "I was 15 when I first opened the church. I thought it was
    fun. As I grew up I realized it is a big responsibility."

    The Holy Sepulchre is a vast warren of chapels, tunnels and caves
    with pieces of church architecture dating back to the fourth century
    and spanning a broad range of traditions from the Westernized
    cathedral of the Catholics to the Eastern brass and icons of the
    Orthodox churches.

    It houses the final stations on the Via Dolorosa - the journey of
    Jesus to his crucifixion - and attracts hundreds of thousands of
    pilgrims and sightseers every year.

    The church is jealously managed by five competing and often warring
    Christian denominations. Sometimes the tensions over the right to
    clean or pray in an area of the church spills over into violence.

    Nuseibeh's family has helped keep the peace between them since Caliph
    Omar Ibn Kattab first conquered Jerusalem for the Muslims in 638. The
    only gap was 88 years of crusader rule in the 12th century. According
    to the family history, when Salah A-Din recaptured Jerusalem in 1191,
    he promised Richard the Lion Heart he would invite the Nuseibeh
    family members to resume their role as custodians. Since that time,
    Judeh family members, also Muslims, have been given the key for
    safekeeping overnight. The two families have shared the position ever
    since.

    Once a year, the three biggest denominations - Greek Orthodox, Roman
    Catholic and Armenian - publicly renew their request to Nuseibeh to
    be the "custodian and door-keeper" as written on his business card
    and multimedia Web site.

    About 100 years ago, the key was stolen. Now they keep a spare inside
    the church. Nuseibeh receives $15 every month for his labor, but the
    ancient honor is worth more to him than the token payment. When
    tensions boil over between the churches, Nuseibeh is the one who
    calms the waters.

    "Like all brothers, they sometimes have problems. We help them settle
    their disputes. We are the neutral people in the church. We are the
    United Nations. We help preserve peace in this holy place," he said.

    Nuseibeh said he still becomes anxious before big ceremonies, or when
    important visitors arrive.

    "I realize there are thousands of people waiting to go into the
    church and they are waiting for me to open it, and I start to imagine
    what will happen if the lock will be broken or the key is damaged and
    I can't open the door," he said.

    But it has never happened in the 20 years since he took over from his
    father. He hopes that one day his son Obadah, now 21, will step into
    his footsteps, but it's not certain.

    "He is at college, studying to be a sports trainer," said Nuseibeh.
    "Maybe he will not follow me, and then my brother or my cousin will
    take over."

    Easter celebrations at the Holy Sepulchre will place the diminutive
    Muslim center-stage as thousands flock to the church for services,
    processions and the ancient ceremony of the Holy Fire, in which
    Nuseibeh plays a central role.

    The ceremony is held each year on Easter Saturday and symbolizes the
    resurrection of Christ. Thousands of worshippers pack into the church
    around the marble-clad tomb where Jesus' body was laid. The oil lamps
    inside the empty tomb are extinguished and a huge stone rolled across
    the entrance, which is then sealed shut by Greek Orthodox priests.

    "If there are no oil lamps lit, the tomb will be sealed with wax. I
    am the witness. I put my stamp, the name of the family, in the wax on
    the tomb," Nuseibeh said.

    What happens next looks like a miracle. The Orthodox patriarch begins
    to pray, and a bluish Holy Fire begins to emanate from within the
    tomb, lighting the lamps and sometimes flying around the church, over
    the heads of the assembled worshippers, lighting the candles of
    believers.

    Nuseibeh, who has been the official witness at this ceremony for more
    than 20 years, said he was deeply touched by the Christian rituals
    and felt a close affinity with the church, but he does not pray
    there.

    "I know every stone. It is like my home," he said. "But I go to pray
    at the Omar Mosque next door."
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