*
FROM WND'S JERUSALEM BUREAU

* Muslims shout at Jesus' home:
'Islam will dominate the world'
March through town of Nazareth 'meant to intimidate Christians'
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Posted: January 1, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Aaron Klein
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

Islamic Movement leaders paraded down Nazareth's main thoroughfare 
brandishing their party's green flag. Young Muslim men in battle gear 
marched and beat drums as a man on loudspeaker repeatedly exclaimed in 
Arabic, "Allah is great."


NAZARETH – Islamic groups held a large militant march down the main 
streets of Nazareth this weekend, highlighting for some here the plight 
of Christians in this ancient city where Muslims have become a majority 
and members of the dwindling Christian population say they suffer 
regular intimidation.

Nazareth, considered one of the holiest cities for Christians, is 
described in the New Testament as the childhood home of Jesus. It 
contains multiple important shrines and churches, including the famous 
Church of the Basilica of the Annunciation, the site at which many 
Christians believe the Virgin Mary was visited by the Archangel Gabriel 
and told that she had been selected as the mother of Jesus.

The Islamic Movement, the main Muslim political party in Nazareth, said 
it organized yesterday's march to celebrate Eid ul-Adha, or the Feast of 
the Sacrifice, which commemorates the Muslim belief Abraham was willing 
to sacrifice his son Ishmael for Allah.

Christian and Jewish faith dictates it was Isaac, not Ishmael, whom 
Abraham almost sacrificed.

Hundreds of activists strutted screaming Islamist epithets, including 
"Islam is the only truth" and "Islam shall rule all."

Tens of thousands of Nazareth residents, seemingly mostly Muslim, 
congregated on the streets as the march passed by. Muslim children 
launched firecrackers into the sky, occasionally misfiring, with the 
small explosives landing dangerously close to the crowds.

Many of the town's Christian residents stayed away from the event, with 
the exception of Christian shopkeepers who worked in the area. WND 
observed as several Muslim youth marching in the parade started to 
charge at three local Christian shopkeepers but the youth stopped short.


While the march was billed as a celebration, it's militant virtues were 
clearly visible. The event seemed more a show of force than a street party.

"The march is meant to intimidate Christians," said Saleem, a Nazareth 
Christian resident who asked that his last name be withheld for fear of 
what he said was "Muslim retaliation" for speaking out.

"It's part of the methods used by the Muslims in very obvious ways to 
create an atmosphere where the Christians should know the Muslims are 
the main power and we are not welcome anymore," Saleem said.

Ahmed Zohbi, a member of Nazareth's municipal council and the leader of 
an umbrella group consisting of the city's Islamic parties, denied 
Saleem's accusations, claiming there is "no problem" between Christians 
and Muslims in Nazareth.

"We just want to celebrate. The Muslims have nothing against our 
Christian brothers. Our communities may have differences but we live a 
peaceful coexistence," Zohbi told WND.

But Christians interviewed here said otherwise. Like Bethlehem's 
Christians, those in Nazareth spoke of attacks against Christian-owned 
shops and told stories of Christian women being raped by Muslim men. 
They noted several instances of interreligious violence and Muslim riots 
they said began when Muslims attacked Christian worshippers. The Muslims 
claimed Christians started the violence.

Israeli security officials say the majority of anti-Christian violence 
in Nazareth goes unreported because local Christians are too afraid to 
report crimes.

One Christian resident said violence and intimidation tend to increase 
around the time of local elections. The Islamic parties, once in the 
minority, are now one seat away from dominating Nazareth's city council.

"During the last elections, Muslims on the streets were openly 
threatening the Christians. They tried to stop some of the Christian 
cars from voting," said Saleem.

In October 2000, the Arab Christian mayor of Nazareth, Ramiz Jaraisy, 
was reportedly beaten by members of the opposing Islamist party.

Nazareth's Christian population, at times the majority during the city's 
long history, is now at about 37 percent, according to the Israeli 
Bureau of Statistics, which notes a regular downward trend.

The situation mirrors similar trends in West Bank and Gaza cities 
controlled or dominated by Muslim Arabs.

Siham el-Fahum, a Muslim Nazareth municipality member and a local 
historian, admits Christians are fleeing her city because of 
Christian-Muslim tension.

"There is no doubt the situation for Christians in Nazareth is bad," 
el-Fahum told WND.

"Christians like to live where life can be good for them, whereas 
Muslims are more attached to the community and will stay through tough 
times. Muslims in the city want more dominance and the only way to 
achieve that, logically, is at the expense of Christians. It's a 
delicate balancing act that is having negative consequences for 
Christians."

Like many Muslims here, el-Fahum claimed Christians several times 
"instigated" Muslim riots. But she said in the struggle for power, "the 
Muslims are definitely on the rise."

She said the core of the conflict began in 1998, when Israel approved a 
local Muslim request to build a mosque in front of the Church of the 
Annunciation.

Muslims wanted to build the mosque at an adjacent, 6,500-square-foot 
site, which they say is the burial place of a nephew of Saladin, the 
Muslim commander who led the army that defeated the Crusaders in 1187. 
The site previously housed a public school.

Christians charge the site was not previously considered holy by Muslims 
and that the planned mosque is meant to overwhelm the church.

Dave Parsons, a spokesman for the International Christian Embassy, said 
the proposed mosque might contain multiple spires that would tower over 
the Annunciation Church's large, black-coned dome.

In 2002, Israel rescinded permission to construct the mosque following 
worldwide outcry and protests from the Vatican and White House.

Nazareth Muslims temporarily occupied the site and erected a tent 
mosque. Islamic Movement leaders demanded Nazareth officials deed the 
property over to local Muslim authorities.

Muslims hold regular prayer services at the site neighboring the 
Annunciation church throughout the week, usually drawing large numbers 
of worshippers on Fridays.

Yesterday's afternoon service, attended by WND, was preceded by a sermon 
delivered by a prominent local sheik, who shouted into a loudspeaker, 
"Islam will dominate the world."


The sermon could be heard by clergy inside the Annunciation church.

The Islamic Movement's Zohbi told WND he is "optimistic" the mosque will 
eventually be built.

"It's just a matter of time before we (the Islamic parties) dominate the 
city council and then the situation will be different," he said.

Zohbi claimed the Muslim stake to the Nazareth site predates 
Christianity's. He said the Church of the Annunciation "was built in the 
1950s."

While the church structure was indeed completely rebuilt in 1955, 
several previous churches there date back to the 5th century, about the 
same time the original Church of the Nativity was constructed in Bethlehem.

The original Annunciation church was destroyed during Muslim conquests. 
Reconstructed versions were burned during Crusader losses in the region. 
The church was rebuilt again in 1730, then later enlarged in 1877.

Archeologists say the first shrine at the church site was constructed in 
the middle of the 4th century, comprising an altar in the cave in which 
Mary is said to had lived.

Zohbi said he would only lead "peaceful" protests to built the mosque. 
Muslims in Nazareth have "no interest" in tensions or further violence 
with local Christians, he claimed.

But El-Fahum said it was only a matter of time before another round of 
anti-Christian riots were sparked.

"The tension is very palatable. The Christians know it. The situation is 
a powderkeg that can explode again at any time."

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/Aaron Klein <ailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is WorldNetDaily's Jerusalem 
bureau chief, whose past interview subjects have included Yasser Arafat, 
Ehud Barak, Mahmoud al-Zahar and leaders of the Taliban. /


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