Showing posts with label Israeli Christians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Israeli Christians. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2016

How Israeli Christians are Coping With the Wave of Terror By Shalle’ McDonald JNS - BREAKING ISRAEL NEWS

Eastern Orthodox Christian nuns hold candles and flowers as they walk along the Via Dolorosa in the Old City of Jerusalem on Aug. 25, 2015. (Photo: Micah Bond/Flash90)

Eastern Orthodox Christian nuns hold candles and flowers as they walk along the Via Dolorosa in the Old City of Jerusalem on Aug. 25, 2015. (Photo: Micah Bond/Flash90)


How Israeli Christians are Coping With the Wave of Terror

“The bows of the mighty men are broken, and they that stumbled are girded with strength.” (1 Samuel 2:4)
By: Shalle’ McDonald
For two of the three major monotheistic religions, the connection to Israel’s current wave of terror—whose latest and 29th victim was Dafna Meir, a mother of six stabbed to death in her home—is clear. While Jews like Meir have been targeted by numerous stabbing, shooting, and car-ramming attacks, the Israeli government points to Palestinian incitement over an Islamic holy site, the Temple Mount compound’s Al-Aqsa mosque, as a root cause of the violence.
But how do the 166,000 Christians living in Israel fit into the picture?
Comprising 2 percent of the country’s population, Christians are fully integrated members of Israeli society—including their rising voluntary enlistment in the Israel Defense Forces—standing in stark contrast to the widespread persecution of Christians elsewhere in the Middle East. For the following Israeli Christians interviewed by JNS.org, daily life during the terror wave essentially goes on as normal, but with extra vigilance and a little more faith.
Callie Mitchell, a mother of two, says she has needed to re-map the daily route she takes to her son’s kindergarten near Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate, an area where many of the recent terror attacks have occurred.
“The new route has added 20-30 minutes of travel both in the morning at drop-off, and the afternoon at pickup,” she says. “That’s nearly an hour more on the bus each day, and I feel that difference—emotionally, in our patience levels, since little children do not love sitting on a bus, and very practically in simply having a little less time to care for our home.”
Other Israeli Christians are trying to maintain normalcy.
“Israelis are quite used to threats in many different forms. I have learned from them to embrace every day and to live it to the fullest. This generally means going about life as usual…but with some precautions,” says Kasey Barr, a political psychology researcher who lives with her husband and newborn baby in Kfar Saba.
For Barr, “precautions” range from praying for protection to being more alert, or even avoiding certain areas on her daily stroller walks with her son at road crossings, especially because of the threat of car-rammings. She feels particularly vulnerable because she’s a new mother, but also because of the realization “that attacks are just as likely to happen even in so called ‘non-disputed’ areas such as central Israel, where I live.”
Leora, a Christian mother of three who asked that her last name not be published, was born and raised in Israel and believes that “life goes on.” She’s careful to not let her girls play outdoors unsupervised, but is determined not to allow fear to grip her.
Besides avoiding the gruesome news headlines, Leora focuses on scripture, praying, and making wise choices.
“Although I make situation-related decisions about where I go and what I do, I’m calm about it. I still haven’t ventured to my mechanic in an Arab neighborhood, even though I need to get the car fixed, but I have ridden buses and the light rail and I’ve been to the Old City [of Jerusalem]. Life goes on, and these [attacks] aren’t happening 24/7,” says Leora.
Daniel, who works in the media and also asked to remain anonymous, has lived in Jerusalem for seven years with his wife and toddler son. He has made practical adjustments as a father to try to protect his family.
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“I don’t let her (his wife) and the boy go anywhere without me if I can help it. I started carrying pepper spray and a collapsible baton, in addition to the pocket knife I’ve been carrying for years,” he says.
In many Israeli apartment complexes with secure entrances, doors are propped open with a stone, especially on hot days. But Leora says her building’s management recently put up a sign telling residents to keep the door closed. After she heard about the murder of Dafna Meir, Leora found it wise to heed that advice.
“We can’t live in fear, but we have to be sensible and not take unnecessary risks,” she says.
For Israelis who don’t actually experience or witness a terrorist attack, they’re certain to be nearby or know someone who was there.
“On one occasion, my husband, children, and I were sitting at a bus stop in the evening, in the dark,” recalls Callie Mitchell. “While waiting for the bus we heard the sirens, then we saw them pass and stop at the central bus station…while we waited, my head filled with worry about whether or not the terrorist had been apprehended, or if he or she would show up at our bus stop….Once we finally got on the bus, I started singing with my son, ‘Do not fear for I am with you, do not be dismayed for I am your God,’ out of Isaiah 41:10. It made a huge difference on the ride home. The kids and I took the next day off to re-gather and feel physically safe.”
Daniel has also found himself near terrorist attacks. “I’ve seen blood splattered on the ground and concrete walls pocked by shrapnel, and all that stuff. The first time is the hardest and has the most potential to make one freak out. After that you don’t ‘get used to it’ exactly, but your system doesn’t go into shock and you’re generally calmer about the whole thing,” he says.
On a recent walk home, Daniel heard shots and sirens only a few blocks away. It wasn’t until later that he discovered police had shot a terrorist who stabbed an 82-year-old woman. “I just continued walking home. What else was there to do?” he says.
Indeed, many Israelis like Daniel must be quick to move past the shock of witnessing a terror attack. But according to a study by the Israel Trauma Coalition, 8,000 Israelis have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a result of the current terror wave.
Chad Holland, senior pastor of the King of Kings Community Church in Jerusalem, says the church has a “channel of help ready should someone need it. We would recommend them to our counseling center, called Anchor of Hope, right here in our building in Jerusalem.”
While they may deal with fear and anxiety in different ways, the common thread among the Israeli Christians interviewed by JNS.org is the belief that ultimately, they are safe in Israel.
Kasey Barr focuses on trusting God, but she doesn’t believe Christians “are guaranteed to be protected.”
“In fact, Christians throughout the Middle East are suffering incredible persecution,” says Barr. “Israel is the only nation where the Christian population is growing and not shrinking, and where there is religious freedom. But even though there is religious freedom, and we know we are under God’s sovereign care, we also realize that none of us are guaranteed tomorrow and we need to keep our house in order.”
Daniel believes that safety in Jerusalem is a matter of trusting God, but also a matter of math. “Yes, I feel safe. I’m a great student of statistics and I know I’m statistically safer in Jerusalem than almost any city of comparable size anywhere else on Earth, including several I’ve lived in and/or visited in North America and Europe,” he says.
Leora, who works as a travel coordinator, says Christians shouldn’t be afraid to visit the Jewish state. “Israel is doing everything in its power to protect tourists and tourism sites around the country….Our organization has had [tour] groups cancel, but we also had groups come despite the situation and have a blessed and spiritually enriching time with no incident,” she says.
Pastor Holland explains that if someone is “waiting for a time in which there was no conflict in Israel, they may never be able to visit. At this point, we have not discouraged anyone from coming, but just encourage them to have security measures in place, for groups to stay together and for everyone to be on alert for those around them.”
Mitchell calls it “encouraging for us to see tour groups present, and it stimulates our economy.” “Coming on a tour is definitely a way to bless Israel,” she says.
“As we see, lone-wolf terror attacks are becoming common even in the U.S. and Europe,” adds Barr. “It is important to stand with Israel right now, and one major way to do that is by expressing solidarity by visiting the country….It is also an incredible opportunity to begin to understand the facts on the ground here. And even with the increase in terror attacks, life here is full of beauty and joy, and even peace most days. If people feel God is opening the doors for them to come, I say don’t delay and book the ticket!”

Thursday, December 24, 2015

This Christmas, Israel Celebrates New Trend of Israeli Arab Christians Joining IDF By Abra Forman - BREAKING ISRAEL NEWS


Father Gabriel Naddaf hosts a Christmas celebration for Arab Christian IDF soldiers. (Photo Credit: Courtesy of Israeli Christians Recruitment Forum.)

Father Gabriel Naddaf hosts a Christmas celebration for Arab Christian IDF soldiers. (Photo Credit: Courtesy of Israeli Christians Recruitment Forum.)


This Christmas, Israel Celebrates New Trend of Israeli Arab Christians Joining IDF


“Now it came about when Joshua was by Jericho, that he lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, a man was standing opposite him with his sword drawn in his hand, and Joshua went to him and said to him, ‘Are you for us or for our adversaries?’ He said, ‘No; rather I indeed come now as captain of the host of the LORD.’” (Joshua 5:13-14)
As Christmas approaches, an Israeli priest is spearheading a program to dramatically increase the number of Christian Arabs enlisting and serving in the Israeli Defense Forces. The Israeli Christian Recruitment Forum, led by Greek Orthodox priest Father Gabriel Naddaf of Nazareth, aims to double the number of Christian Arabs enlisting and serving in the Israeli Defense Forces.
The Forum, which is supported by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, has seen a huge jump in numbers since it began its work. It saw a 50% increase from its founding year in 2012, in which only 40 Christian drafted to the Israeli army, to 2014, when over 100 drafted. In March of 2015 alone, 102 Christian Arabs entered the IDF due to the work of the Forum.
Israeli law does not require minorities in the Jewish State to serve in the IDF, so all of the Arab Christians recruits are choosing to volunteer. A notable exception has always been the Israeli Druze community, which is proudly Zionist and has served in the IDF since the state’s creation in 1948. Now, Father Naddaf hopes that some of the 165,000 Arab Christians in Israel will follow in the Druze’s footsteps.
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The initiative is really part of a larger movement by Father Naddaf to recast the entire Arab Christian population as a group which, like the Druze, identifies as patriotic Israelis, rather than enemies of Israel. He aims to integrate the minority into mainstream Israeli society. Father Naddaf has even coined a new moniker for the community, calling its members “Israeli Christians” rather than Arab Christians.
He explained, “Calling them ‘Arab-Christian’ puts them on the side of Palestinians and terrorists, when in reality they’ve lived in Israel for generations and just want to live in peace and security.”
While the Forum, which also gives financial aid to needy Christian families in Israel and discharged IDF soldiers, does not receive government support, Father Naddaf and the Fellowship were recognized by Israel’s Defense Minister, Moshe Ya’alon, in a Jerusalem ceremony last week.
At the ceremony, Father Naddaf thanked “Christian donors around the world” for supporting him through the Fellowship, saying, “Your assistance is essential for the strength of Israeli society.” He added, “This society will achieve peace and defeat evil.”

Father Gabriel Naddaf hosts Arab Israeli IDF soldiers in a Christmas celebration. (Photo Credit: Courtesy of Israeli Christians Recruitment Forum.)
Father Gabriel Naddaf hosts Arab Israeli IDF soldiers in a Christmas celebration. (Photo Credit: Courtesy of Israeli Christians Recruitment Forum.)

On Monday, Father Naddaf hosted a festive Christmas party for some of the Israeli Christian soldiers that the Forum has helped to enlist, distributing holiday treats and thanking them for their service to Israel.
The Christian population of Israel is one of the largest Arab Christian communities in the world, and the only one in the Middle East region which is actually showing signs of population growth. While Christians are often persecuted for their religious beliefs in the Middle East, to the point of kidnapping and wholesale murder in the case of the Islamic State, Israel’s Christian population is free to worship as it wishes. It is also one of the best-educated populations in the country.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

The Christians of Israel: A Remarkable Group


The Christians of Israel: A Remarkable Group

 
Professor, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver

Posted: Updated: 

In the nightmarish maelstrom that defines the Middle East today, there are few places of refuge for Christians. While Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Sudan and Libya are disintegrating and Egypt is embattled, the Christians are in dire trouble in a region that is increasingly Islamic radical.
Yet, abandoning the Middle East would be painful for most Christians. Jesus of Nazareth was born in Bethlehem, lived in the Galilee and was crucified in Jerusalem. Many Christian holy places from the Via Dolorosa to the Church of the Annunciation are in Jerusalem and others are in Israel or the West Bank.

In Iraq and Syria Christians face enslavement, torture, massacres and crucifixion at the hands of ISIS. ISIS sees them as the dread Crusaders who need to be destroyed or repressed. ISIS marks Christian houses with an N for Nazarene to single out their victims.

Unlike the Jews after 1948, the Christians have no state to go to. Only Lebanon could be a place of refuge but the Christian population has plunged in 100 years from 78% to 34% of the country.

In the 12 years since Saddam Hussein was overthrown by American military intervention, almost a million Iraqi Christians have fled Iraq or been killed. Barely 500,000 Christians remain behind. In Iraq Christians are less than 4% of the population but 40% of the refugees. In Syria, 30% of its 1.5 million Christians have fled the country.

The Arab Christians are further divided between Eastern and Western Churches in over a dozen denominations. In Lebanon some Christians support Hezbollah while others oppose the radical pro-Iranian Shiite group.

The Christian population, through low birth rate and massive emigration, has dropped from 20% of the Middle East in 1900 to 4% today and will drop to 3% by 2050. The stateless Christians, unlike the Jews after 1948, lack a military, secret police or government. Without a strong state or patron they are often hopeless in the face of repressive states or movements.

The United States and Europe, though heavily Christian, have provided little military protection or financial aid to the embattled Christians. President Obama won't even label ISIS as Islamic fundamentalist.

By contrast, the 160,000 Israeli Christians live as citizens in a democratic First World country with freedom of religion, rule of law and open elections. Christians can move anywhere, even building a number of churches recently in Tel Aviv. The government safeguards the Christian holy places and is lenient on the right of return of Christian refugees. Since 1967 Christian, Islamic and Jewish holy sites are open to pilgrims of all religions. The Christian churches own a significant part of Jerusalem, including the land on which the Knesset sits.

Their greatest problem often comes from the Muslims. Most Arab Muslims are relatively satisfied with Israel but a growing minority, especially in the north, is virulently anti-Christian, using physical attacks, provocative speech and seditious billboards. These radicals call the Christians, "the descendants of apes and pigs." While Bethlehem was once 90% Christian, today it is 65% Muslim.

After 2007 the Hamas takeover of Gaza led to the remainder of the Christians fleeing to the West Bank. While the Christian element in Israel dropped from 8.0% in 1910 to a projected 1.8% in 2025, the Christians plummeted from 11.6% of the West Bank and Gaza in 1910 to a projected 1.0% in 2025.

Today 60% more Christians live in Israel than in the Palestinian territories. A small new Christian party, B'nai Brith, calls on its youth to serve in the Israeli army and hundreds each year do so. Its leader, Reverend Nadaff, declares, "We love this country."

Israeli Christians have several problems. One is lacking the benefits given to Israelis who serve in the army. Another is the provocative defacing and vandalizing of Christian monuments and cemeteries by a group of radical Jews. Christians complain of the high cost of land and housing. Their small size and internal divisions make them a peripheral political force.

Outside of the Gulf States with over a million mainly Asian Christians laborers, Israel is the only place in the Middle East where the Christians are growing in number. They are excelling in education, doing well in business and feeling relatively safe from their radical tormentors.

In today's troubled Middle East, that is a remarkable feat.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Confronting BDS: Israeli Christians and the State of Illinois

Confronting BDS: Israeli Christians and the State of Illinois

Courtesy CEC
JERUSALEM, Israel -- The biblical accounts of the angel Gabriel portray him as a messenger imparting God's plans, first to the prophet Daniel and later to the priest Zechariah and his long-awaited offspring, John the Baptist.
Like his biblical namesake, Father Gabriel Nadaf, an Arabic-speaking Greek Orthodox priest from Nazareth, the town where Jesus spent his childhood, has made it his life's work to help Christians better understand his homeland, the Jewish state of Israel.
The Christian Empowerment Council in Israel published a new guideline this week to help Christians respond to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel.
Entitled "Test the Spirits: A Christian Guide to the Anti-Israel Boycott Movement," the 12-page pamphlet, can be downloaded as a PDF file from CEC's website.
Father Nadaf serves as the organization's spiritual leader.
"As the spiritual leader of the Christian Empowerment Council here in Israel, it is my responsibility to encourage Christians around the world to think about Israel in biblical and moral ways," Father Nadaf writes in the introduction. He encourages Christians to consider their personal views toward Israel, asking that God guide them "in great wisdom."
According to its website, CEC has made headlines internationally "for its pioneering work integrating Israel's Christian community into the wider Israeli society and supporting and guiding young Christians in the IDF  [Israel Defense Forces] ."
In 2013, Father Nadaf's 17-year-old son was brutally beaten by a 21-year-old affiliated with the anti-Israel Hadash Party near his home in Nazareth. At the time, his father said their goal was "to intimidate me and my family."
In an interview earlier this year, Father Nadaf told CBN's Scott Ross, "Despite all the threats and incitement against me, I will not turn back from my way." 
 
In addition to its work in Israel, CEC also monitors Christian denominations abroad, such as the Episcopalian, Mennonite andUnited Church of Christ that have adopted BDS. 
"There is much confusion in the global church about Israel, and God is not the author of confusion," Father Nadaf writes in the introduction.
"Rather, God wants us to seek after his heart, to get wisdom and to get understanding. God does not want his church to be ignorant about such an important topic as Israel; yet, there are many in the church today sowing confusion, spreading hatred of the Jewish state," he writes.
Meanwhile in America Thursday, Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner made history signing an anti-BDS law, the first state to pass such legislation.
In the press release, the governor said "We need to stand up to anti-Semitism whenever and wherever we see it."
"This historic legislation is an important first step in the fight against boycotts of Israel, and I hope other states move quickly to follow our lead," Gov. Rauner said.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Israeli Christians: We'll No Longer Live a Lie

Israeli Christians: We'll No Longer Live a Lie

Thursday, March 19, 2015 |  Yossi Aloni   ISRAEL TODAY
The National Zionist Congress for Youth convened last week to discuss the phenomenon of emigration from the Land of Israel. On what turned out to be a fascinating panel were Mia Morano, widow of IDF special forces officer Emanuel Moreno who was killed in the Second Lebanon War, Israeli priest Father Gabriel Naddaf and IDF Major Elias Karam, the first Arab Christian to join the naval officers’ school.
Naddaf opened the panel by recalling that he was born in Nazareth when the population was predominantly Christian with a Muslim minority. “Today it is the opposite,” he lamented, noting that Christians should find in Israel a natural home. “Christianity came from Judaism,” Naddaf stated. “Without Judaism, Christianity doesn’t exist.”
But in the rest of the Middle East, the situation is much different.
“During the ‘Arab Spring’ we saw the collapse of governments lead to the Muslim slaughter of Christians. And they still call them ‘brothers,’” said Naddaf. “I can not dress like this in my priestly garments in Iran or Saudi Arabia.”
Father Naddaf went on to address his own son’s recent enlistment in the IDF, which he encouraged: “I sent my son to serve in the Israeli army. The IDF is the most moral army in the world. We don’t arbitrarily kill people.”
As spiritual leader of the Israeli Christian Recruitment Forum that actively encourages all young Arabic-speaking Christians to join the IDF, Father Naddaf explained that he “understands that it is essential to connect Christian Arabs to Israel and the Jews.”
But the Israeli Arab leadership, he said, “has fooled us into living a lie. They call Israel an apartheid state, but when anyone suggests an exchange of territories, [these leaders] protest because they know life is better in Israel.”
Mia Moreno told the youth about her return to Jewish faith and being raised in the Sinai when it was still under Israeli control. “The Jewish faith does not require everyone to be the same,” she noted. “I sit here beside Father Naddaf, he a Christian priest and me a religious Jewish woman, and we can and must live in peace with one another.”
Major Elias Karam told the youth gathering that as an Arabic-speaking Christian he is proud to wear the uniform of the IDF. “I volunteered for the army. I could have been a doctor or a lawyer, but I chose a different path,” said Maj. Karam. “In doing so, I stayed true to my dream.”
Congress organizer Jacob Haguel of the World Zionist Organization said the event, co-sponsored by the Zionist Council in Israel, sought to “bring together the leaders of the next generation. This congress represents the beautiful mosaic that is Israel including…Druze and Jews, religious and secular, periphery and center.”
PHOTO: From left-to-right - Maj. Elias Karam, Mia Moreno and Father Gabriel Naddaf.
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Sunday, January 4, 2015

Israel's Loyal Christians Gaining Attention Abroad

Israel's Loyal Christians Gaining Attention Abroad

Sunday, January 04, 2015 |  Israel Today Staff
As Israel’s former ambassador to the US, Michael Oren, stated on several occasions, Israel has proved to be the one place in the Middle East where Christians can not only live without persecution, but can actually thrive.
It is no secret to the readers of Israel Today that a growing number of Israeli Christians, in particular a large group from Nazareth, are responding by volunteering to serve in the IDF and fully integrating with Israeli society as loyal and productive citizens.
This trend is increasingly gaining the attention of the foreign media, though in most places it is still sadly overshadowed by claims that Israel oppresses all non-Jews in the region.
In an example of the more positive aforementioned coverage, The Wall Street Journal last week published a piece on “Israel’s Christian Awakening,” which concluded that the changing attitudes of local Christians constituted a “notable shift in the balance of power among religious groups in the Middle East.”
Among those cited in the article were Father Gabriel Naddaf, Israeli Christian Recruitment Forum spokesman Shadi Khalloul, and former IDF naval captain Bishara Shlayan.
Subscribers to our monthly Israel Today Magazine will recognize those names as regular interviewees and the subjects of numerous feature reports.
Unlike much of the mainstream international media, Israel Today is committed to covering this exciting realignment of Christians coming alongside their Jewish brothers in the Holy Land.
Make sure you don’t miss out on what is happening - SUBSCRIBE NOW
PHOTO: Father Gabriel Naddaf meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem (Flash90)
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Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Israeli Christians Call for Solidarity With Brothers in Iraq, Syria

Israeli Christians Call for Solidarity With Brothers in Iraq, Syria

Wednesday, July 23, 2014 |  Ryan Jones  ISRAEL TODAY
Israeli Christians groups are growing frustrated over the world’s disproportionate focus on the current Gaza war, while all but ignoring the brutal slaughter and forced conversion of fellow Christians in Iraq and Syria.
“We call on the local councils of all Christian communities to announce five days of mourning and to paint all doors with the (Arabic) letter ”nun“ in solidarity with our people in Mosul, Iraq, where Christians were expelled, slaughtered and churches were burned,” read a Facebook post by the Israeli Christian Lobby.
There are widespread reports that the Islamic State (formerly known as ISIS) has begun painting the letter “nun” on the doors of all Christians homes and businesses ahead of a deadline given to Christians in Iraq to either convert to Islam, or face the sword.
Nowhere has this unchecked persecution been worse than in Mosul, the ancient city of Nineveh, which is home to one of the world’s oldest Christian communities. In the face of the Islamist State’s threats, most chose to flee, but not before many paid for their faith with their lives.
“For the first time in the history of Iraq, Mosul is now empty of Christians,” Patriarch Louis Sako, Iraq’s most senior Christian leader, said earlier this week.
The Israeli Christian Lobby noted that while this was happening in Iraq and Syria, local Arab leaders who claim to represent both Muslims and Christians remained silent, but demonstrated their hypocrisy when they suddenly screamed with outrage over Israel responding to terrorist rocket fire from Gaza.
The Arab leadership, the lobby insisted, “has demonstrated that it does not truly represent the Israeli Christians or even the Druze, but rather the Islamic agenda of the Arab public. We call on all Christians to wake up!”
The Israeli Christian Lobby is organizing a rally to take place in Haifa next Sunday evening in solidarity with Christians under attack in Iraq, Syria and other parts of the Middle East.
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