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Jerusalem's rabbis asked to preach religious tolerance after bishops

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  • Jerusalem's rabbis asked to preach religious tolerance after bishops

    Jerusalem's rabbis asked to preach religious tolerance after bishop spit on
    By LAURIE COPANS

    Yahoo News

    Tue Oct 26, 4:10 PM ET

    JERUSALEM (AP) - An Israeli chief rabbi held an unprecedented
    meeting Tuesday with Christian clergy in Jerusalem in an effort to
    ease tensions after an Orthodox Jew spat at an Armenian bishop near
    a holy site in the Old City.

    Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger, who sat at the head of a table surrounded
    by clerics with gold crosses, black robes and silver staffs, denounced
    any attacks on religious clergy in Israel.

    "As sons of Abraham, we are brothers," Metzger said. "We denounce
    any act that is meant to degrade religious people."

    The meeting was called after the Oct. 10 incident in which a Jewish
    seminary student spit on an Armenian archbishop carrying a cross in
    Jerusalem, sparking a fist fight that damaged the cleric's medallion.

    Many of the 14 church representatives at the meeting Tuesday complained
    that the incident was just one of dozens of similar attacks every year.

    "Unfortunately this incident was not an isolated incident," Armenian
    Bishop Aris Shirvanian said. "Quite frequently we suffer some kind
    of indignity ... at least once a week."

    Shirvanian said Israeli rabbis needed to do a better job of educating
    their followers not to participate in such attacks.

    Metzger promised to ask rabbis in the Old City to give sermons on
    religious tolerance. An Interior Ministry official said Jerusalem
    police understood the importance of cracking down on anti-Christian
    behaviour among Orthodox Jews.

    Although officially relations between Jewish and Christian clergy
    are good in Jerusalem, tensions sometimes escalate over what church
    leaders contend is a disregard by Israel for their interests.

    In a sign of the seriousness of the spitting incident, Tuesday's
    meeting was the first time in years a chief rabbi had met with so
    many Christian clergy, said Efrat Orbach, a spokeswoman for Metzger.

    In a sign of their excitement over the meeting, many church
    representatives took pictures throughout. The gathering was initiated
    by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, which was
    founded by Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, who moved to Israel from Chicago
    in 2001.
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