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  • "Peace" Through Anti-Semitism

    FrontPageMagazine.com, CA
    Feb 9 2005

    "Peace" Through Anti-Semitism
    By Joseph D'Hippolito
    FrontPageMagazine.com | February 9, 2005

    If Israelis and Palestinians ever achieve peace, it likely will not
    result from the efforts of the Holy Land's most prestigious Christian
    prelates.

    In "Patriarch of Terror," Front Page Magazine exposed the
    anti-Semitism of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Michel Sabbah, and
    his collaborationist relationship with Yasser Arafat. Sabbah,
    however, is not alone.

    The Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, Irineos I, and his former
    spokesman, Father Atallah Hanna, have used even more virulent
    rhetoric in their own collaborationist campaign. That rhetoric
    includes supporting suicide bombing, charging the Jews with deicide
    and advocating their expulsion from the Holy Land.



    Irineos originally was appointed as the Greek Orthodox patriarch in
    September 2001 but did not officially take office until this January.
    According to Greek Orthodox procedures, local governments must
    approve the appointment. Jordan and the Palestinian Authority -- two
    of the three areas encompassing the patriarchate -- approved Irineos.
    Israel withheld approval because of his suspected support for Arafat.



    Israeli suspicions were confirmed by a July 2001 letter that Irineos
    sent to Arafat and the Palestinian Authority's diplomatic
    representative to Greece, Abdullah Abdullah. Irineos, the
    patriarchate's diplomatic representative to Athens at the time, was
    one of five candidates rejected by Israel's justice minister, Meir
    Sheetrit. So Irineos asked Arafat to use his influence among Arabs
    world to pressure Israel to reconsider.



    Although Irineos' English is awkward, his message is clear:



    "You are aware of my opinions regarding the Holy City of Jerusalem,
    as well as the support that consecutively I offered in the past in
    the fight of your people and your nation.



    "You are aware of my multiple interventions towards the late
    Patriarch Diodoros and the Greek Government and the international
    forums for the rights of the Palestinian (sic) to have their
    independent state with its capital Jerusalem."



    But this is the letter's most damning evidence:



    "You are finally aware of the sentiments of disgust and disrespect
    that all the Holy Sepulcher Fathers are feeling for the descendants
    of the crucifiers of our Lord Jesus Christ, actual crucifiers of your
    people, Sionists (sic) Jewish conquerors of the Holy Land of
    Palestine. (emphasis added)."



    Should Arafat's influence prove successful, Irineos continued, "Rest
    assured, Mr. President, that the rights of the most beloved
    Palestinian people on the Holy City of Jerusalem will find their most
    'hot' supporter. Our beloved Mr. Chouri (Arafat's personal secretary)
    will inform you accordingly regarding what we have discussed of the
    real estate of our Patriarchate within the boundaries of the Old
    City."



    Irineos suggests more than a quid pro quo. He suggests a combined
    effort to remove any Jewish presence from Jerusalem -- and,
    eventually, from all of Israel.



    A 1998 security report presented to the Israeli cabinet stated that
    the Palestinian Authority seeks to control church-owned property,
    particularly in Jerusalem. The Palestinians' big target is the Greek
    Orthodox patriarchate, the largest and wealthiest church in the Holy
    Land. The patriarchate derives its wealth from extensive land
    holdings throughout Israel that it accumulated through the centuries
    -- including the land on which the Knesset, the Israeli parliament,
    and the president's and prime minister's official residences sit.



    The report also stated that "Chouri," Irineos' misspelling of Ramzi
    Khouri, was working with Fatah's Marwan Barghouti to create a union
    of Orthodox Palestinian Christians that would act as a pressure group
    for the Palestinian Authority.



    "The PA realizes that control over the Christian holy places in
    Jerusalem can be used as a powerful lever to gain international
    political influence in the Christian world," the report stated. "The
    PA has used its indirect control over the Church of the Nativity in
    Bethlehem as a means of influencing the Greek Orthodox and Armenian
    Patriarchates, through which it impacts the political positions of
    the Greek government and the European Union."



    The ultimate goal is conquest though land purchase and lease
    revocation, if violence fails.



    "The fear in the (Israeli) government is that in a few years Israel
    will find itself with a patriarchate of Arabs that will in theory
    hold 50 percent of the land downtown," stated an investment report
    from Capital Property Consultants, a Jerusalem real estate firm.
    "Israel was always wary of the Greek Church, the oldest and most
    powerful church in Jerusalem, coming under the rule of a
    pro-Palestinian patriarch, fearing it could result in land disputes
    when long-term leases began expiring."



    Irineos also expressed his anti-Israeli stance in a letter on
    patriarchate letterhead to Arafat and Abdullah during the 2002 siege
    of Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, which began when Palestinian
    gunmen attacked the church and barricaded themselves inside. Irineos'
    awkward English does not disguise his attitude, as these excerpts
    demonstrate:



    "With extreme anger we see the aggression against your headquarters
    in Ramallah, (a) fact that proves the humiliation in which the
    Israeli government suppresses the legal leadership of the Palestinian
    people but also proves their indifference for the peace process and
    the international community. The siege of the Holiest among the
    shrines the Nativity Church in Bethlehem makes even clearer their
    intentions.



    "We wish to assure you, Dear Mr. President, that the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem and myself stand side by side with your
    people in this fight for freedom and justice.



    "We pray to the Almighty God of Love to give you success and victory
    in this holy struggle, and also help to establish His peace in the
    Holy Land."



    Both letters were made public by the Israeli daily Ma'ariv as part of
    a series of articles between December 2002 and January 2004 on
    Irineos' pro-Palestinian attitude. Irineos responded with a libel
    suit but withdrew it in December. He even paid 10,000 Israeli shekels
    plus value-added tax -- a total of roughly more than $2,000 -- to
    cover Ma'ariv's legal expenses.



    Despite Irineos' letters and the public opposition of such cabinet
    ministers as Natan Sharansky and Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister
    Ariel Sharon successfully argued for Irineos' confirmation. The
    reasons involve internal party politics, pressure from real estate
    interests and -- as Sharon aide Dov Weisglass told Israel's Arutz
    Sheva news service in 2002 -- pressure from the United States.



    Hanna, an Arab born in Haifa, was serving as the patriarchate's
    spokesman when he subtly advocated suicide bombing as part of the
    Palestinian intifada in June 2002 during an address in Abu Dhabi to a
    think tank run by the Arab League.



    "Some freedom fighters adopt martyrdom or suicide bombings, while
    others opt for other measures," the Gulf News quoted Hanna as saying.
    "Don't expect us to keep distance and watch. We are in the struggle
    whether it is martyrdom or any other means. The Muslims and the
    Christians are one and cannot be separated from the struggle for the
    liberation of Palestine."



    Irineos, who had yet to be confirmed and did not need adverse
    publicity, fired Hanna that July. One month later, Israeli police
    arrested and questioned Hanna on suspicion of inciting violence,
    having relations with terrorist groups and illegally visiting Syria
    and Lebanon, which remain in a state of war with Israel. Hanna left
    the country to meet with Hezbollah's leader, Sheikh Hassan Narallah,
    so police placed Hanna under house arrest and confiscated his
    passports.



    Nevertheless, Hanna has since used even more vituperative rhetoric
    without any apparent public protest from Irineos. At a reception in
    Haifa on January 11, 2003, Hanna expressed emphatic support for
    suicide bombers:



    "The fidaiyin are the heroes of this nation. We are proud of them and
    resolutely refuse any attempt to defame their deeds. They are not
    committing suicide, as some claim, and they are not terrorists, as
    others claim -- they are resisting the occupation. We unreservedly
    support the martyrdom operations."



    Six days later, in a rally at Jerusalem's Church of the Holy
    Sepulcher, Hanna was even more enthusiastic:



    "Martyrdom operations are an excellent and good way to resist the
    Zionist invasion of the Palestinian land. In front of the Church of
    the Holy Sepulcher, we bless the souls of the heroic shahids
    (martyrs) and the families of the shahids.



    "The names of the fidaiyi shahids will be inscribed in the history of
    our Palestinian and Arab people in holy white letters. The voices of
    those who defame these acts of heroism and honor are nothing more
    than anomalous voices that do not represent Arab and Palestinian
    public opinion."



    But Hanna saved his most extreme rhetoric for his sermon of January
    19, 2003 -- the Orthodox Epiphany:



    "Palestine is from the (Mediterranean) sea to the (Jordan) river. We
    emphatically refuse any concession on (even) a grain of the land of
    our precious homeland. Just as Ramallah, Gaza, Nablus, and Jenin are
    Palestinian cities, so are Haifa, Nazareth, Jaffa, Ramle, Lod,
    Beersheba, Safed, and others Palestinian cities.



    "We do not believe in so-called 'peace with Israel' because peace
    cannot be made with Satan. Israel is the greatest Satan. No
    concession and no truce must be made. The Palestinians' rights will
    be restored only by resistance. What was taken by force will be
    restored only by force.



    "The Zionist Jews are foreigners in this land. They have no right to
    live or settle in it. They should go somewhere else in the world to
    establish their state and their false entity. Jerusalem is an Arab
    city and the Jews must not settle in it, be masters over it, or carry
    out any type of religious ritual or ceremony in it. They must leave
    their homes. They have no right to live on land, cities or villages
    that are not theirs."



    Sixty years after the liberation of Auschwitz's prisoners, it is an
    ironic obscenity for alleged men of God to promote the most
    pernicious forms of anti-Semitism.

    http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=16864
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