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Palestinian Christians Are Hopeful About Statehood (2054)

Mahmoud Abbas asked for sovereignty at the United Nations, and residents back home look to the future.

09/30/2011 Comments (5)
Jamie Lynn Ross/Flickr Creative Commons

Palestinian Christians in the Old City of Jerusalem on Palm Sunday.

– Jamie Lynn Ross/Flickr Creative Commons

JERUSALEM — Salim Manarious, a retired former school headmaster, believes there will be a sovereign Palestinian state in his lifetime.

“I believe it because I’m a Palestinian,” the 72-year-old Orthodox Christian said Sept. 23, the day Palestinian National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas applied for full membership in the United Nations.

Palestinians currently have observer status at the U.N.

The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to hold preliminary talks today on the Palestinian application. The United States has pledged to veto the proposal if it comes up for a vote in the Security Council. The U.S. has called for a return to Israeli-Palestinian negotiations as a way to resolve the issue.

Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, the Vatican’s number two State Department official, called Sept. 27 for a two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict in remarks delivered in New York, according to Catholic News Agency. He insisted that “if we want peace, courageous decisions have to be made.” Archbishop Mamberti, whose official title is Secretary for Relations with States, encouraged “the realization of the right of Palestinians to have their own independent and sovereign state, and the right of Israelis to guarantee their security.” He also insisted that both states be “provided with internationally recognized borders.”

But Manarious, whose family fled Ramle, a town in what is now Israel, in 1948, isn’t overly optimistic his clan will be able to reclaim their home.

“The house is still there. I’ve visited it twice, but I don’t think I’ll get it back, even though it’s my right,” Manarious said in the shady garden of his home in the Old City of Jerusalem just prior to Abbas’ speech. 

Now that the “Palestine” issue is front and center at the U.N., Palestinians, including Christians, are grappling with what a future Palestinian state might mean for them.

Hanni is the father of three grown children, and he lives in Beit Sahour, a largely Christian town next to Bethlehem. In his case, an independent Palestinian country could bring his oldest son, a physician who moved to France in 1993, back home.

“If there is peace and a job, I think he’ll come back and work in a Palestinian hospital,” Hanni said hopefully as he shopped in a Beit Sahour hardware store. The 63-year-old Greek Catholic did not want his last name published. “He left because he couldn’t find work in the West Bank, and the Israelis wouldn’t issue him a permit to work in Israel.”

Israel began severely limiting the number of work and visitor permits it issues at the start of the first intifada (Palestinian uprising) in 1988. 

Bassam, a father of three who also requested anonymity (“I don’t want the Israelis to withhold a travel permit”), said Palestinian sovereignty is synonymous with freedom.

Chain-smoking during an interview at the modest housewares store he owns, Bassam said freedom means “we will have enough work and that we won’t have to go through checkpoints everywhere. It means being in control of our own water resources.”

Bassam, whose family has lived in the Bethlehem area for generations, blamed both the Israeli and Palestinian governments for the West Bank’s chronic water shortage.

“First, the Israelis give water to the settlers, and whatever’s left over goes to us,” he asserted. “And I suspect that the Palestinian Authority gives more water to ‘important’ people than to the rest of us.”

The Israeli government says it provides essential services to the best of its ability.


‘Times Have Changed’

Despite this criticism, Bassam is convinced that the Palestinian leadership is ready to run a country.

“The only reason our leaders aren’t leading a Palestinian state is because the Israelis don’t let them,” he said. 

Angry though he is at the Israeli government, Bassam does not advocate armed struggle against the “occupation.”

“Twenty years ago I was a follower of George Habash,” founder of the militant Palestinian group Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. “Today I have a family and a future,” Bassam said.

Nizreen Manarious, Salim’s daughter-in-law, also believes violence will only hurt the Palestinian cause.

“Times have changed. I think as Palestinians we shouldn’t fight in a violent way. Violence only serves the Israelis’ needs,” said Nizreen, who is 34 and pregnant with her third child, as she watched her two young sons chasing each other around the olive tree in the family’s garden.

Nizreen said she has experienced violence throughout her life. She was born and raised in the West Bank town of Beit Jala near Bethlehem. During the Palestinian uprisings, Israeli soldiers and Palestinian militants waged many battles. 

“In 1988, Israeli soldiers shot my father dead during a peaceful demonstration in Beit Jala at the beginning of the first intifada,” Nizreen recalled. “He was a peaceful activist. We saw someone being shot but didn’t know it was him until later.”

“We tried armed resistance against the Israelis, and it didn’t work,” agreed George Manarious, Nizreen’s husband, the resource manager of the Latin Patriarchate in Jerusalem. 

George believes the American government could be doing much more to bring about the creation of a Palestinian state.

“It’s clear President Obama is against us. He promised us a state in the U.N. last year, but now he’s threatening to cast a veto once the vote occurs.”

Nizreen said peace is vital.

“Growing up, I didn’t have a normal childhood. I want a normal, happy childhood for my children.”

Lubnah Shomali, an officer for the Beit Sahur Municipality, was 5 years old when her parents moved the family from the West Bank to the United States.

Shomali, a Catholic with three children, moved back to the West Bank with her Palestinian husband and their children three years ago “to give my children their cultural identity.”

The young couple also wanted their children “to see what is really going on, as opposed to what others say. I wanted them to see that Palestine really does exist.”

Like other Palestinians, Shomali doesn’t expect a Palestinian state to be born overnight.

“We are growing as a government and as a nation, reaching closer to independence every day,” Shomali said. “I think we’re heading down the right path.”

Register Middle East correspondent Michele Chabin writes from Jerusalem.

 

 

Filed under israel, mahmoud abbas, palestine, palestinian christians, united nations

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Thank you for this interesting article. One forgets the Christian element in the Middle East. Very important to remember our heritage there.

Thanks for this article.  It’s important that we remember our roots.  We must also remember that this struggle is brother against brother, sister against sister for we are all descendants of Abraham.  This has gone on far too long.  But will the U.N. recognizing Palestine as a state really create this miracle of open borders and work in Palestine or will the militants continue to attack Israel because they believe that they do not have a right to exist?  I think it is much more complicated than these people believe and their expectations are too high.  I fear they will be disappointed. 

God grant wisdom to the leaders of Israel, Palestine and the U.S.  God please open the hearts of the militant muslims and show them that their violence is against Your Holy Will!

Read Zech 12:3; Joel 3:1-2. Israel’s land belongs to the sons of Jacob. Remember, He will “bless those who bless you, and curse those who curse you”. Do NOT speak, act, or do anything not biblical to God’s Israel, whether as a people or country. You’ll be doomed. Period.

One has to wonder where Christians or any religious minority flourishes under an Islamic majority?  How many times do we hear Christians leaving Islamic dominated countries in droves?  I predict that when the terrorists get their own state in Palestine it will be worse for this Christian and his family.

Iam sure that if the PLO and it’s remnant would stop fireing rockets into Israel for say ANY OF THE TIMES THEY REACHED A CEASE FIRE AGREEMENT for at le4ast as long as the time period that was agreed upon…and say just quit blowing up things.. the palestininen people would have long ago had more freedom in crossing… it is not the people of palestine.. it is the thugs there that are the reason for the restrictions. I live in florida..if the State of georgia started lobbing rockets at Florida because they did not recognize a “WINNER” IN THE CONFLICT OF THE PANHANDLE in Florida… we the State of Florida would impose strict restrictions in the movment of any one from Georgia. WWII is over ... the Imam’s supported Hitler ... Hitler Lost…so did they… then again in 1967 the surrounding Countries decided to go to war ..again.. for the same reson.. to destroy any one of Hebrew desent… sounds alot like Hitler… I beleive the Islamic armies “were going to drive the hebrews into the sea” again Israel won….when will the PLO and those supporting it..ever finally realize the WAR IS OVER..evey time the State of Israel pulls back to PROVE they ant peace the opposition move their rockets closer….all the people of that region desire peace.. but only some groups have put the Land Where ther mouth is!! I have an associate that delivers food and much needed supplies to the “refugees”  and she has had her car burned her building blown up.. on several occassions…not by the IDF but by the PLO ..they DID NOT WANT THE REFUGEES COMFORTED….THE idf AT FIRST WAS SUSPICIOUS OF HER AND HER GROUP OF PROTESTANT CHRISTIANS… AND Delayed her on many occassions… but never burned any thing..in fact once they the IDF knew for sure what she was doing.. the assisted her to the point that they could…as ther are places in the refugee area’s that the IDF will not go..UNLESS it is to retatliate…Pray for the Peace of Israel…...PS there are many Arabs doing quite well in Israel…and would not want what the PLO calls government…but will not speak out publicly   FOR FEAR OF DEATH FROM THEIR ISLAMIC “BROTHERS”

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