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  • Greek Orthodox Patriarch labelled as Judas for having sold...

    AsiaNews.it, Italy
    April 25 2005


    Greek Orthodox Patriarch labelled as `Judas' for having sold Church
    properties in Jerusalem

    The Orthodox community is asking for his resignation and removal.



    Jerusalem (AsiaNews) When Greek Orthodox Patriarch Ireneos was
    leaving the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at the end of his Church's
    Palm Sunday ceremonies, on Sunday, 24 April, he was met by lay
    members of his own community, and others, demonstrating against him
    and calling for his resignation or removal. Some of the demonstrators
    called him "Judas Iscariot", in reference to his selling out
    important properties of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
    This brought even greater intensity to the wave of demonstrations and
    protests against Ireneos that has been going on for weeks, ever since
    the press discovered - and published - that he had sold prominent
    buildings owned by the Patriarchate just inside the "Jaffa Gate" of
    the Old City of Jerusalem. Official investigations have also been
    launched by three governments: The Republic of Greece, the
    Palestinian Authority and the Kingdom of Jordan. This scandal has
    been intensified that a key person in promoting Ireneos's election,
    and introduced by him several years ago as a most trusted friend, is
    a notorious criminal, wanted by the police of several countries (he
    was finally captured by Italian police, in Bologna, last weekend),
    and that another key aide to Ireneos has also fled, under suspicion
    of corruption and embezzlement.

    For his part, Ireneos refused to answer questions from Greek
    Government investigators, and has insisted publicly that he had never
    "sold" the properties. This is only technically correct. Technically,
    like all the many other land sales by a series of Greek Patriarchs of
    Jerusalem over many decades, the transactions are officially leases,
    but leases for decades and even centuries (in some cases, for 999
    years, in others, for 99 years) so that, for all practical purposes,
    they are indeed the same as sales. In all these cases, the properties
    are effectively gone, while there is no public accounting of what is
    done with the payments received from them. Attempts to challenge the
    Patriarchate's practices in the Israeli courts have always failed,
    with the courts ruling that the Patriarch's right to dispose of the
    property and money of the Church is absolute, and not subject to
    control.

    Now pressure for Ireneos's resignation and removal is growing even
    among his Greek clergy, but it is probable that the Governments
    concerned - and not only Israel - will not allow his removal. A
    weak, divided, scandal-plagued church is, after all, much easier for
    all governments to control than a strong, united church with moral
    authority, says an expert observer in Jerusalem who wishes for
    anonymity.

    The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, as a concrete
    historical organisation, dates back to the first half of the
    sixteenth century. Then the Ottoman Empire, which had just occupied
    the Holy Land (1516), extinguished, in effect, the indigenous
    Eastern-rite Patriarchate, and imported Greek monks to take over its
    structures and property. These monks are organised as a religious
    brotherhood, the Hagiotaphitic Fraternity, or Brotherhood of the Holy
    Sepulchre, which takes care to accept only ethnic Greeks, from
    Greece, and to exclude the local Christians, all of them Arabs, from
    any positions of power or influence. The same situation had existed
    in Syira, in the Patriarchate of Antioch, until 1899, when the local
    faithful and clergy rose up and drove the foreigners out. Since then
    the Patriarchate of Antioch has had an indigenous leadership.
    Recently this indigenous Patriarchate has tried to establish a branch
    also deep inside the Jerusalem Patriarchate's territory, in Jordan.

    In addition to questionable personnel and business decisions, Ireneos
    has also distinguished himself by hostility and aggression towards
    other Christians, continually provoking disputes with the Armenian
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem, and violating the rules governing
    relations with the Catholic Church at the Holy Sepulchre. In the most
    notorious incident, on 27 September last year, he ordered his monks
    to launch a physical assault on the Jerusalem police who were
    protecting a handful of Franciscans inside the Holy Sepulchre. The
    violent frenzy lasted a full half hour before the police managed to
    subdue the Greek monks. The whole event was captured on film by an
    amateur videophotographer and this evidence has been widely viewed by
    authorities and journalists.

    This week Jerusalem police are nervously awaiting Orthodox Holy
    Saturday when Greeks and Armenians may be in violent conflict at the
    Holy Sepulchre. Ireneos has announced that he will not let the
    Armenian Patriarch into the Edicule to light the "holy fire" together
    with him, and all efforts by the Israeli government to convince him
    otherwise have - until now - failed. The Armenians have asked the
    Israeli Supreme Court to intervene, and to order that the Armenian
    Patriarch be allowed into the Edicule, in accordance with the special
    international legal régime at the Holy Sepulchre, but the Court has
    refused to intervene. Israel has an international treaty with the
    Holy See - the 1993 Fundamental Agreement - that obliges the State to
    enforce the legal régime governing the Holy Sepulchre, but the
    Armenian Patriarchate is obviously not a party to this treaty, and is
    therefore powerless to invoke it directly (although the Armenians
    benefit from it indirectly, whenever both they and the Catholics are
    victims of Ireneos's aggression). As regards the Catholic Church,
    however, Catholic Church sources tell AsiaNews, Israel has recently
    been showing a new willingness to control Ireneos, and to prevent him
    from violating the rules or attacking the personnel of the Catholic
    Church at the Holy Sepulchre - although the situation needs continued
    careful monitoring, especially with a view to Orthodox Easter next
    Sunday. Israel's increased attention to protecting Catholic rights
    and Catholic personnel, say the same sources, is attributable to the
    Catholic Church's ability to invoke Israel's treaty obligations in
    this regard.

    Catholic leaders are deeply worried by the scandals surrounding
    Ireneos, since the general public does not always distinguish among
    the different organisations designated as "Christian" or as
    "Churches", with the result that the Christian religion itself risks
    being brought into disrepute. (AC)

    http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=3135
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