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God's Politics

Obama Reaches Out to Palestinian Christians

by Daoud Kuttab 06-05-2009

It is undeniable that the Palestinian people — Muslim and Christians — have suffered in pursuit of a homeland. For more than 60 years they have endured the pain of dislocation. Many wait in refugee camps in the West Bank, Gaza, and neighboring lands of a life of peace and security that they have never been able to lead. They endure the daily humiliations — large and small — that come with occupation. So let there be no doubt: the situation of the Palestinian people is intolerable.
—President Barack Obama, Cairo, June 4

The above words were spoken to millions of people around the world. Never before had a U.S. president even admitted the existence of Palestinian Christians, let alone spoke of their suffering.

For years Americans were fed the stereotypical image of Palestinians as nothing less than Islamic terrorists. Jewish Israelis, on the other hand, were presented to Americans as people with similar values, part of the Judeo Christian heritage. Right-wing Christian televangelists and Christian Zionists portrayed the “evil Palestinians” who were somehow an obstacle to the fulfillment of biblical prophecies. These Christian Zionists never admitted the existence of fellow Palestinian Christians, let alone admit that they were suffering at the hands of the “chosen” Jewish people.

In his speech at Cairo University, President Obama spoke in general terms about the rights of other Christian communities, including Egyptian Coptic Christians and Lebanese Maronites.

In the past month the issue of Arab Christians was raised in public during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI. In welcoming the pope at the King Hussein Mosque in Amman, Prince Ghazi Bin Mohammad made special reference to Arab Christians: “Christians were in Jordan 600 years before Muslims. Indeed, Jordanian Christians are perhaps the oldest Christian community in the world, and the majority have always been Orthodox.”

Statistics regarding Arab Christians vary. Christians today, according to some sources, make up 9.2 percent of the population of the Near East. In Lebanon, they now number around 39 percent, in Syria from 10 to 15 percent. In Egypt, they constitute between 9 and 16 percent of the population (government figures put them at 6 percent). In Palestine before the creation of Israel, estimates range up to as much as 40 percent, but mass emigration has slashed the number at present to 3.8 percent.

Although the number of Christian Palestinians in Jerusalem and the occupied territories has dwindled over the years, they are still a key component of the Palestinian and Arab peoples of the region. Activists blame violence, occupation, and uncertainty, coupled with the lack of work, as the main reasons for the flight of Christian Palestinians. Unlike followers of the Jewish and Muslim faiths, Christians have little religious attachment to physical locations. Scholars refer to the response of Jesus to the Samaritan woman’s question about whether to worship in Jerusalem or in the Sumerian mountains. Jesus replied to her: “Neither in this mountain, nor in Jerusalem. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.”

A survey issued by the U.N. Office of Humanitarian Aid, just prior to the visit of the pope in May, showed that Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christ, is being choked. In its report, the U.N. showed how the 176,230 Palestinians who live in the Bethlehem District amid 86,000 Israelis stood to lose even more of their land to 19 settlements and 16 outposts.

“The physical and administrative restrictions allocate most of Bethlehem’s remaining land reserves for Israeli military and settler use, effectively reducing the space available to the Palestinian inhabitants of Bethlehem,” the report stated. Bethlehem’s potential for residential and industrial development had been reduced, as had its access to natural resources, it said. According to the report, the security wall has also made it difficult for Christians and Muslims to travel to religious sites outside of the city. The once predominantly Christian town a few kilometers south of Jerusalem today boasts only a 40 percent Christian population.

While it is safe to say that the U.S. administration still views the Middle East conflict in political rather than religious terms, it is refreshing to hear a U.S. president give recognition to a small but faithful Palestinian Christian community.

Daoud Kuttab is a Palestinian Christian journalist and a former Ferris Professor of Journalism at Princeton University. His email is info@daoudkuttab.com.

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  • Don Wagner, of Evangelicals for Middle East Understanding, had a great book in 01, Dying in the Land of Promise, in which he traces the development of Christianity from the Year 1 to 2000, with a heavy emphasis on the last century. See http://www.amazon.com/Dying-Land-Promise-Palest... Really brings out the Palestinian Christian history.
  • ando
    It looks like a really good book to read. BTW: New Glarus?! That's a great place. Was just there at the park with my girls.
  • This is really a good news, I am sure he would have been welcomed!

    Donna
  • quiet_heart
    Voice of the Martyrs has recently produced some great stuff on the Palestinians Christians and has been helping them out for a while now. Glad to see the President mentioning their plight.
  • Roaman_Traveler
    I have just read an excellent book by a Christian Palestinian that describes his experiences before, during and after the creation of modern day Israel. It describes how he has made peace with the situation and the actions he took to be able to forgive and make his world a better place for all peoples living in the area. The book is called 'Blood Brothers' by Elias Chacour. A very worthwhile picture on this whole devestating situation.
  • joyceantila
    When I went to Bethlehem two years ago, I met with several professors at the Bethlehem Bible College. They decried Christian dispensationalism and its role in supporting Jewish settlement expansion in the West Bank and the remakring of boundaries. The wall that the Israelis built and that stands in Bethlehem actually says "Welcome to Jerusalem" when that city is at least 3 miles away. I hope that the comments by Obama indicates a change in U.S. policy and provide support for this battered minority.
  • jonabark
    The words of the US president are without substance. They are, in effect a call for Palestinians to accept the settlements and to try to get a chopped up Palestinian "state" with no right to any of the normal functions of a sovereign government and most of the water under Israel's control. The president shows no intent to stop financial support as Israel continues settlement expansion. This is like telling your teenage son with a drug problem to stop using cocaine while you give him a thousand dollar a week living allowance.

    Obama works for the same people Bush worked for. Sop fooling yourselves.

    Peace in Iraq or Afghanistan?: no to the people

    Government health care system?: no to the people

    Economic justice after banker fiasco?: no to the people

    political accountability for graft lies and torture?: no to the people

    The Onion has it right:
    In a slight shift from his campaign trail promise, President Obama announced Monday that his administration's message of "Change" has been modified to the somewhat more restrained slogan "Relatively Minor Readjustments in Certain Favorable Policy Areas." "Today, Americans face a great many challenges, and I hear your desperate calls for barely measurable and largely symbolic improvements in the status quo," said Obama, ...
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