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A sectarian squabble over the Christian world's holiest of holies

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  • A sectarian squabble over the Christian world's holiest of holies

    Sunday Times (London)
    February 20, 2005, Sunday

    A sectarian squabble over the Christian world's holiest of holies

    by Anthony Sattin


    HOLY FIRE:The Battle for Christ's Tomb by Victoria Clark Macmillan
    £20 pp294

    Nobody knows exactly where Jesus was placed after the crucifixion,
    but -in a rare instance of harmony -most archeologists and biblical
    historians agree that it was somewhere on the land now occupied by
    Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Christian world's most
    sacred shrine.

    Religions seem to breed contentions, and Christianity is no
    exception. For while there is broad consensus over the location of
    Jesus's burial place, there is none over which Christian sect should
    have control of the site. This disagreement bubbles beneath the
    surface of inter-Christian relations throughout the year, but tends
    to erupt each Easter Saturday at a ceremony when a supposedly
    miraculous fire is seen to emerge from the tomb. Candles are lit from
    this "holy fire" and taken across the city and now, thanks to
    aviation, around the world, as a sign of Jesus's resurrection.

    Three years ago, the Greek patriarch and an Armenian priest began to
    fight over who should light the first candle: the patriarch won, but
    left the tomb with only one shoe. Over the centuries, the ceremony
    has led to riots and deaths. It is one of many cases of what Edward
    Lear so aptly called Jeru- salem's "squabblepoison".

    Victoria Clark's third book opens with a description of the Holy Fire
    ceremony of 2002 and then introduces us to the main Christian sects
    in the city. From the Latins and the Greek, Armenian and Syrian
    Orthodox, to the "breakaway" Egyptian and Ethiopian Christians, each
    sect believes it has a divine right to the tomb.

    But not all Christians are equal -the Egyptians and Ethiopians, for
    instance, who live among the ruins of a Crusader refectory, have less
    money, and therefore less access than the Europeans. The story of how
    things became so complicated is a fascinating one that Clark tells
    extremely well. From the pilgrimage of the Byzantine Empress Helena
    in 326AD to the less devout visitations of the Crusaders, we are
    treated to the long story of Christian devotion and powerplay in the
    Holy Land.

    Around this history, Clark wraps stories from her own time in
    Jerusalem, and makes good use of the opportunities they present.
    Through the concerns of Rahme, a Pales- tinian Christian who lives
    with her in a former Orthodox Old City monastery, she introduces
    landgrabs, roadblocks, suicide bombers, the siege in Beth- lehem's
    Church of the Nativity and other realities of the on- going
    Israeli-Palestinian conflict. American-born settlers provide a
    different view; one of the leaders of the Armenian community yet
    another. All this is well observed and freshly written -so much so
    that it begins to look as though what Clark really wanted to write a
    book about was not the tomb and its holy fire, but her experiences in
    the city. Then, halfway through, she shifts again and introduces us
    to Christian Zionism, a theme of such weight that it could have made
    - perhaps should have made -another book.

    The story of Christian Zionism, of the Christian groups who are
    actively encouraging Jews to settle in the Holy Land/Israel, is both
    intriguing and frightening. It is intriguing because people who take
    the Bible literally in the 21st century need to be understood: like
    fundamentalist Islamist groups, they are a force to be reckoned with
    and we feel their influence even if we don't see their hands at work.
    And they are frightening because of their professed reason for
    wanting to strengthen the Jewish state (and, by the same token,
    ensuring there is never a Palestinian state): quoting biblical
    revelations, they believe that only when Jews hold all the land
    promised to their patriarchs will the so-called "end of days" come to
    pass and the messiah reappear. Their efforts at hastening the
    apocalypse seem to be paying off. As the vice president of Thy
    Kingdom Come Inc, in America, puts it: "Since the creation of Israel
    we have seen a truly remarkable speeding up of events that have been
    prophesised. There's no doubt in my mind that we are getting close to
    the end."

    By her end, Clark has abandoned the subtitle -The Battle for Christ's
    Tomb -and describes the work as a "survey of the Christian world's
    involvement" in the Holy Land. Herein lies the problem: she wants us
    to believe that the struggle over the tomb is a microcosm of the
    wider Christian struggle, but she fails to convince. The history of
    Christians in the Holy Land may be the key to understanding why the
    various sects are fighting over the tomb, but the reverse is not the
    case -the tomb is little more than a sideshow to Christians'
    involvement in the region. At times this makes for a confusing read
    and leaves one wishing Clark had turned away from the holy fire and
    concentrated on writing a definitive history of Christian involvement
    in the Holy Land. She has the breadth of knowledge and the ability to
    see through the squabblepoison. And she recognises the motivation: at
    a time when western Christian governments are so active politically,
    economically and militarily in the region, it would have been a
    timely reminder of the difficulty western armies have had in keeping
    the peace in the Middle East. q Available at the Books First price of
    £16 plus £2.25 p&p on 0870 165 8585
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