http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=216539

April 5, 2010 

Christians angry at al Qods lockdown as Easter clashes with Passover
by Omar Karimi




RAMALLAH (The National) -- Sunday, by a quirk of the calendar, eastern and 
western Christians celebrate Easter together, an irregular occurrence. With the 
Jewish holiday of Passover at the same time, however, a tightly locked-down al 
Qods (Jerusalem) has been the focus of festivities, and tension, for days now. 


For most Palestinian Christians, even those from Jerusalem, the celebrations 
that would take place Sunday were off-limits as was the Ceremony of the Holy 
Light, Saturday. Israel "closes" the West Bank for Jewish holidays, and with 
Passover running until April 6, all of Easter is included. 

Normally, Palestinian Christians have a slightly easier time of obtaining 
permits to enter Jerusalem during Christian holidays than Muslims do during 
Muslim holidays. But with al Qods (Jerusalem) tense in recent weeks, because of 
demonstrations against Israeli settlement building in East Jerusalem, 
Christians were told last week that their permits would not apply this year. 

That order was supposed to have been relaxed a little after pressure was 
brought to bear on Israel from abroad. On Wednesday, Michael Oren, the Israeli 
ambassador to the United States, said the travel ban had been lifted in 
response to concerns conveyed to the Israeli Embassy by Reverend Michael 
Kinnamon, the general secretary of the National Council of Churches in the U.S. 

"I hope the Israeli government realizes that it is unacceptable to us that 
Christians be denied the right to worship in Jerusalem, especially Christians 
whose roots in the region go back to the time of Christ," Rev Kinnamon had told 
the Christian Post on Tuesday. 

As of Saturday, Palestinian Christians were still complaining that they had no 
access to Jerusalem, even if they carried permits, and no access to the Old 
City of Jerusalem, even if they had Jerusalem IDs. 

"This year is worse than any other year," said Peter Nasser, an al Qods 
resident. 

Mr Nasser, who runs a restaurant in Ramallah, explained that every year for the 
past few years, Christians have had to obtain permits from their churches to 
get into Jerusalem, if they have West Bank IDs, or the Old City and the main 
Christian sites there, including the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, if they hold 
Jerusalem IDs. 

But with the confluence of eastern and western Easter as well as Passover, this 
year, said Mr Nasser, Christians from Jerusalem were not being allowed into the 
Old City at all, while West Bank ID holders could not enter the city. "They let 
tourists in. They have to give some priority to Christians. Most of those who 
come to this country come to see the Christian sites. Israel can't really 
marginalize Christians completely. Unless you're a local: this year, we are 
completely marginalized." 

The army says it has relaxed the closure for Easter, but both in the local 
press and on the electronic grapevine, the unofficial means by which news of 
closures spread via SMS, e-mail, Facebook and other technology, Christians were 
warning each other Saturday not to try to get to Jerusalem. Instead, Ramallah 
was teeming with people for the Ceremony of the Holy Light, which is marked 
with scout marching bands, who come from the nearby villages. 

Some of those attending, such as Abu George, who had come from the nearby 
village of Taybeh with his wife and two children, said he would normally have 
gone to al Qods. 

"But this morning I received a message from a cousin that Israel is not 
allowing anyone into the Old City and that they are stopping people at 
checkpoints into the city. So I thought I'd come to Ramallah instead. At least 
we can be a part of something." 

The closure only adds to the pressures on a community that is already 
dwindling. Before 1948, the Christian community in what is now the occupied 
Palestinian territories constituted about 15 per cent of the population, mostly 
concentrated in Jerusalem and Bethlehem and the nearby towns and villages, 
including Ramallah. Today, it is about two per cent. 

In what is now Israel, Christians made up five per cent of the population, 
mostly centered around Nazareth. There, too, Christians now also make up only 
around two per cent. 

Higher Muslim birthrates and the mass influx of Jews in the late 1940s also 
altered the demographics. But there is little doubt that Christians continue to 
leave, an emigration that took on new impetus with the Al Aqsa intifada in 
2000. Those who could took advantage of traditionally stronger links to the 
outside world, especially to North and South America, where Palestinian 
emigration started at the turn of the 19th century, to escape a political and 
economic pinch that shows little sign of abating. 

It is the slow decline of a historic population; the only Christian population 
with roots in the land of Jesus. There is angry irony in this for some. 

"If the Palestinian population before 1948 had been mostly Christian, England 
and other European countries would never have allowed anyone to colonize this 
country," said Mr Nasser. 

Photo: Christians able to get into Jerusalem attend the Ceremony of the Holy 
Light at the site where they believe Jesus was resurrected. (Photo: Oliver 
Weiken / EPA 

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