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Economist: Christian Jerusalem: Ridiculous and sublime

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  • Economist: Christian Jerusalem: Ridiculous and sublime

    Economist, UK
    March 23 2005

    Christian Jerusalem

    Ridiculous and sublime

    IN EVERY place where Palestinian Christians live, church choirs are
    getting ready to celebrate what they regard as the defining event in
    local history. Some will mark Easter along with the western Christian
    world on Sunday; the majority, followers of the eastern calendar,
    have another five weeks to wait before their rich Arabic voices take
    up the Hebrew poetry of the Paschal hymn: ~SShine, shine, Oh new
    Jerusalem, for the glory of the Lord has dawned upon you!~T

    Christ himself counselled people not to be too concerned with the
    specifics of holy places; it was more important to offer prayers ~Sin
    spirit and in truth~T than to pray on the right mountainside or in the
    right city. But Palestinian worshippers would hardly be human if they
    did not give a rather literal interpretation to the words they were
    singing. As a tiny minority within a minority whose lives have been
    turned upside down since the intifada began, they yearn to travel
    more easily to and from the earthly Jerusalem of family, friends and
    cherished places of worship.



    Israel



    Religion



    Macmillan, Ms Clark~Rs publisher, has information about her book.







    But not all of Jerusalem's Christians sympathise with them. While the
    Christian communities of the Old City (Armenians and Ethiopians, as
    well as Palestinians) dwindle in numbers and morale, there is a
    powerful new force on the religious scene: a dynamic body of
    evangelical Christians, many of them American, who side with the far
    right of Israeli politics. They believe that the Jews are the only
    people with a right to the land of Israel as defined by scripture,
    and that all others should leave. Many of the older Christian
    communities find it hard to regard these newcomers as their
    co-religionists.

    This tension is one of the many themes investigated by Victoria
    Clark, who spent a year and a half as a part-time resident of the Old
    City, staying in a damp ex-monastery as lodger and friend of two
    Palestinian Christian sisters with an endearing attachment to gossip
    and cigarettes. Against a background of violence, fear and economic
    depression, Ms Clark has written a rich and insightful essay on
    Christian Jerusalem, harking back as far as 325AD, when the Emperor
    Constantine and his mother, Helena, are said to have announced the
    discovery of Christ's tomb.

    Ever since, this tiny shrine has drawn hundreds of thousands of
    people, some as conquerors using the Holy Sepulchre as an excuse for
    military adventures, others believing that they could be redeemed
    both by the journey and the destination. The conquerors insisted that
    only by possessing the shrine, and killing everybody who stood in
    their way, could Christian powers be guaranteed access to the holiest
    place of their faith. The reality experienced by ordinary believers
    was different. For at least two centuries after Muslims took control
    of Jerusalem in 638AD, Christians enjoyed uninterrupted visits to the
    Sepulchre and the sacred sites around it. Another period of peaceful
    access was the 400 years of Ottoman rule; the Sultans were cheerfully
    venal about who administered the holy premises, and gave the lion's
    share to the Greeks who were the best payers.

    In the 19th century, Anglo-Saxon Protestants were horrified by the
    annual Easter ritual of the Holy Fire. This is a ceremony in which a
    flame~Wkindled in some mysterious way in the heart of the tomb~Wis used
    to light the candles of thousands of excited believers from every
    corner of eastern Christendom.

    As Ms Clark points out, there is indeed something close to farce
    about many aspects of the Sepulchre, including the regime under which
    six Christian communities co-exist in an atmosphere of intense mutual
    suspicion, which can degenerate into fisticuffs.

    In any description of elaborate ritual conducted by fallible human
    beings, the ridiculous is never far away and no description of
    Christian Jerusalem would be complete without a dose of slapstick. Ms
    Clark provides plenty: Cypriot monks with halitosis, Franciscans who
    ~Shitch up their skirts~T as they sit down, and Armenian tour guides
    with wandering eyes.

    But what about the sublime? Striking by its absence from her book is
    any word from pilgrims who are transformed by the visit. She focuses
    instead on Victorian travellers, full of contempt for the Greek and
    Russian peasants who thronged the Sepulchre. One traveller, Robert
    Curzon, watched in horror in 1834 as the ceremony of the Holy Fire
    led to a stampede in which many people were killed. Small wonder, as
    Ms Clark points out, that most Victorian visitors preferred to spend
    their time outdoors, mapping biblical sites.

    But not every modern pilgrim treats the Sepulchre with such disdain.
    One very recent visitor, a well-educated American nun whom Ms Clark
    did not meet, said she was utterly overwhelmed by the place:
    ~SPressing your forehead against the cool marble slab, you know beyond
    reason and sentiment that this tiny shrine is the precise spiritual
    centre of the universe, and that all beauty, all religious truth and
    every created being spins on an inner axis around this sun.~T

    What such descriptions evoke is the mystery at the heart of all holy
    places. They may be located in specific points on the map, but they
    are also thresholds which take the pilgrim into a reality beyond time
    and space. The holiness of such places~Wtheir role as gateway to an
    entirely different reality~Wis organically connected to the worldly
    battles they trigger, but is also entirely separate. While earthly
    movements, of which the ultra-Zionists are only the most recent, view
    the Holy Land as a place to possess and transform, pilgrims down the
    centuries have experienced it as a place where they undergo
    transformation. The Palestinian Christians have a healthy instinctive
    sense of this paradox. They adore the Holy Sepulchre, while
    maintaining a lively disrespect for most of the Greek bishops who
    lord and squabble over it.

    http://www.economist.com/books/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3786275

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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