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Holy Spit: Why Do Ultra-Orthodox Jews Spit At Christians?

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  • Holy Spit: Why Do Ultra-Orthodox Jews Spit At Christians?

    HOLY SPIT: WHY DO ULTRA-ORTHODOX JEWS SPIT AT CHRISTIANS?
    By Shalom Goldman

    Religion Dispatches
    http://www.religiondispatches.org/archi ve/religionandtheology/2401/holy_spit:_why_do_ultr a-orthodox_jews_spit_at_christians
    April 7 2010

    A bold new forum was recently organized to confront a persistent
    problem in Jewish-Christian relations in Jerusalem. But why are
    Ultra-Orthodox Jewish teens spitting on Christians in the first place?

    A very embarrassing and persistent problem has arisen in some of the
    sacred sites in Jerusalem where Christians and Jews cross each other's
    paths. Teenagers from a small sector of the city's many Ultra-Orthodox
    ("Haredi") Ashkenazi Jewish communities have taken to spitting at
    clerics wearing prominent crosses and dressed in traditional garb.

    Assaults have been recorded at the Jaffa and Damascus Gates of the
    walled Old City, an area with many historic churches and monasteries,
    including the Polish Church of St. Elizabeth. To address the problem
    a remarkable interfaith forum, appropriately titled "Why do do some
    Jews spit at Christians in the Old City," under the auspices of the
    Interreligious Coordinating Council in Israel and the Jerusalem Center
    for Christian-Jewish Relations.

    These spitting assaults have been going on for at least a decade, and
    like many expressions of tension in Jerusalem, the attacks represent
    scores that many observers thought were settled long ago. For
    spitting at crosses and clerics was not unknown in those parts of
    Christian Europe where Jews and Judaism were often persecuted and
    where this represented the only recourse for a powerless people to
    express contempt.

    In the thinking of many less-acculturated European Jews--particularly
    in Eastern Europe--spitting or cursing was a way to express disdain
    for a religion which sprang from Judaism and then persecuted it. The
    official Israeli Rabbinate (to whom the members of the Ultra-Orthodox
    communities don't profess any loyalty) has condemned the assaults.

    Last year the state-appointed Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, Yonah Metzger,
    called the spitting attacks "an evil affliction," though the Haredi
    rabbis refused to issue a similar condemnation.

    Leaders from several Christian groups (among them were Catholic,
    Armenian, and Greek Orthodox clerics and seminarians) have been
    complaining to the Israeli police about the assaults for years. But
    the police, who are very skittish about entering interreligious
    disputes, have done little to stop the assaults. Last September,
    after two Armenian seminarians were spit upon by two Haredim, they
    fought back--with their fists--and were subsequently arrested for
    assault. It was only after the highest Christian authorites in the
    city intervened that the Israeli government rescinded its order that
    the Armenian seminarians be deported from the country.

    While Jewish-Christian relations in the city surely are in need of
    some repair, these problems seem small in the face of deteriorating
    Jewish-Muslim relations. But while Jewish-Muslim tensions dominate
    the headlines, most Israeli liberals feel that there is little that
    they can do to improve that situation; a situation (hamatzav, or the
    situation in Hebrew) enmeshed in political and military consideration.

    The excacerbation of Jewish-Christian tensions, on the other hand,
    seems like a problem that ordinary citizens can address--and some
    Christians and Jews are doing just that.

    The forum's most impressive speaker, Armenian Bishop Shirvanian, is
    the designated leader of the procession from the Armenian monastery to
    the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Perhaps the most shocking moment of
    the evening was the Archbishop's statement that he had been assaulted
    by two Haredi teenagers on the very day of the forum while standing
    in front of the Armenian Cathedral of St. James. The Bishop told the
    audience that "I had hoped to come here this evening to tell you that
    the assaults on the clergy had stopped. But I'm afraid I can't."

    What then, asked the forum's organizers, was behind these assaults?

    Different opinions were offered. Some mentioned the reversal of
    the traditional Christian-Jewish power relationship. The centuries
    old-experience of European Jewry (in which Jews and Judaism were often
    denigrated) has in modern Israel been upended. In the historical past,
    Jews may have denigrated Christians and Christianity, but they had no
    way to publicly express their disdain for the dominant religion. And
    there was certainly no possibility of publicly expressing one of
    the prevalent Jewish ideas about Christianity: that it is a form
    of idolatry.

    In Israel, Jews are in charge, and the Christian clergy, especially
    in East Jerusalem, are subject to the dictates of the Israeli
    administration. This new power relationship seems to have emboldened
    some Haredim to express their contempt for Christianity openly--and
    in a manner that is culturally familiar to them from other hostile
    encounters. When Ultra-Orthodox Jewish demonstrators objecting to
    government policies confront the Israeli police, for example, they
    often spit at them, as they did this past October when they took to
    the streets of Jerusalem to protest the opening of a local parking
    lot on the Sabbath.

    Other speakers descried the growing xenophobia in Israeli Jewish
    society, especially among the young; one cited a recent Israeli
    public opinion poll that found that 56% of Israeli Jewish high school
    students polled did not think that Israeli Arabs are entitled to the
    full rights of citizenry.

    But despite the pessimistic tone taken by many, the
    organizers--committed to peaceful conflict resolution--ended the
    forum by announcing a series of lectures, tours, and encounters that
    would introduce Israeli Jews to the lives and concerns of their
    non-Jewish neighbors. And, somewhat encouragingly, they informed
    the attendees that the Rabbinical Court of the Edah Haharedit (one
    of the more powerful of the ultra-Orthodox rabbinical authorities)
    had issued an edict condemning the spitting assaults. Thus a year
    after the "government rabbis" tried to stem this obnoxious behavior,
    some Ultra-Orthodox rabbis followed suit. Whether this letter will
    have the desired effect on people's behavior in this far-from-united
    city remains to be seen.
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