Church Building in Israel Set Ablaze
("Compass  Direct News," November 4, 2010) 
Istanbul, Turkey - An unidentified arsonist in Israel set fire to a 
Jerusalem  church building that has long been a focal point for anti-Christian 
sentiment in  a Jewish ultra-Orthodox-leaning neighborhood, church officials 
said. 
On Friday (Oct. 29) shortly before 1 a.m., someone broke the basement 
windows  of the Jerusalem Alliance Church Ministry Center and set fire to its 
bottom  floors. An area resident noticed the fire and called the fire 
department, which  arrived 20 minutes later and found the church basement 
engulfed in 
flames. 
Firefighters extinguished the blaze, ventilated the smoke and left after  
inspecting the rest of the building, said Jack Sara, senior pastor of the  
church. 
Smoke and the noise of the blaze had awakened 10 volunteer workers who were 
 sleeping at the church’s overnight facilities. The volunteers, who were 
visiting  Israel from the United States and Denmark, went to a nearby hospital 
and were  treated for smoke inhalation; they were released several hours 
later, church  leaders said. 
The church building sustained approximately $85,000 of smoke and fire 
damage.  The fire largely gutted the basement and destroyed recent renovations. 
Sara said he had difficulty understanding how the arsonist could have 
carried  so much hate; whoever set the fire had to know people were inside the 
church, he  said. 
“He not only intended to burn a room but to kill people,” Sara said. “
Whoever  did it intended to kill people.” 
According to Sara, fire investigators initially said the fire was 
accidental.  Then they shifted and said the fire was arson, only to change back 
again 
to  their original claim that it was accidental. 
Although the Israeli press reported that investigators had not formally  
announced their findings, Sara said investigators told him the fire was “very  
suspicious.” Contrary to some reports, he insisted that there were no 
candles  lit in the basement when the fire broke out. 
Sara said his church, which hosts several congregational groups including  
expatriates and both Arab Christians and Messianic Jews, routinely receives  
threats. Referring to Orthodox Jews, militant Palestinians and even some  
Orthodox Christian communities, Sara said he receives hatred “from all  sides.
” 
It is not unheard of for ultra-Orthodox extremists to burn churches or 
Bibles  in Israel. Not far from the ministry center is the Narkiss Street 
Baptist  Church. In 2007, the church was damaged in a fire believed to be set 
by  
ultra-Orthodox Jews. The church building had been rebuilt on the site of a  
church facility destroyed 25 years prior by anti-Christian groups. 
Other recent anti-Christian attacks in Israel have included the bombing of 
a  Messianic Jewish pastor’s home that left his teenage son clinging to 
life, the  disruption of religious services by mobs of protestors and assaults 
on members  of groups deemed “missionaries” by far-right, Orthodox Jews. 
The Alliance Church building was constructed roughly 100 years ago. 
Palestine  Bible College was founded at the building. 
In 1948, after Zionist leaders declared the establishment of the State of  
Israel, the church opened other buildings in the Old City of Jerusalem to 
serve  Arab Christians hampered from attending religious services by newly 
established  political realities. Since 1967, Sara said, the building has been 
used for many  purposes. 
Sara said his church will host a prayer meeting on Saturday (Nov. 6) to ask 
 for protection of the congregation and for a blessing on its enemies. 
In a statement provided to the press, Sara said he wanted the church 
building  to be “a beacon of light reflecting God’s love to all people.” 
“We will continue to serve the Holy Land residents from this place,  
proclaiming peace and justice for all human beings, declaring God’s love for 
all  
of our neighbors, friends and enemies,” he said.

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