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ENI: Israeli chief rabbi visit to Patriarchate bid to improve relns

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  • ENI: Israeli chief rabbi visit to Patriarchate bid to improve relns

    Ecumenical News International
    Daily News Service / 26 January 2005

    Israeli chief rabbi's visit to Patriarchate seen as bid to improve relations

    By Michele Green

    Jerusalem, 26 January (ENI)--Israel's Ashkenazi chief rabbi has
    paid an unprecedented official visit to the headquarters of the
    Armenian Patriarch in Jerusalem in what is seen as a drive by
    Israeli officials to improve Jewish-Christian relations in the
    Holy Land.

    Rabbi Yona Metzger, one of two chief rabbis, made the visit as
    part of a series of meetings with Christian leaders to mend
    relations after a Jewish seminary student attacked an Armenian
    archbishop last year.

    "The rabbi condemned attacks against religious clerics and called
    for mutual respect between all faiths to be upheld in Israel and
    across the world," Metzger's office said.

    The visit on Monday by Chief Rabbi Metzger, the head of the
    Ashkenazi or non-Mediterranean European Jewish community in
    Israel, was seen as part of an effort to educate Israeli
    officials about Christianity and the diverse Christian
    communities who live in the Holy Land. It was the first time an
    Israeli chief rabbi had visited the Armenian Patriarchate.

    A Jewish seminary student last year pushed and spat on an
    Armenian archbishop as he led a religious procession to the
    Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a site in Jerusalem commemorating
    Jesus' crucifixion and burial.

    The student, who later apologized to the cleric, said he attacked
    the archbishop because he was offended by his holding of a
    crucifix, which for some Jews has come to symbolize centuries of
    Christian persecution.

    The incident raised an outcry in Israel and officials and
    religious leaders warned of the need to instil greater tolerance
    and understanding in the country's youth.

    Christian clerics said they were frequently accosted by Jewish
    seminary students in the Old City.

    Israeli parliamentarians and Jewish officials have attended
    seminars teaching them rudimentary knowledge of Christianity and
    the various denominations in the Holy Land before a series of
    meetings with the Latin and Armenian patriarchs, as well as
    representatives from the Greek Orthodox community.

    "It is incumbent upon us not just to look at the Christian world
    with preconceived notions based on past relations," said
    parliamentarian Yuri Stern.

    Many Israeli officials have been largely uninformed about the
    religious and cultural differences between the Christian
    communities living in the Holy Land.

    But last year's attack against the Armenian archbishop
    highlighted the need to promote better understanding and
    relations between Israeli Jews and their Christian neighbours.

    * * *
    All articles (c) Ecumenical News International
    Reproduction permitted only by media subscribers and
    provided ENI is acknowledged as the source.

    Ecumenical News International
    PO Box 2100
    CH - 1211 Geneva 2
    Switzerland

    Tel: (41-22) 791 6088/6111
    Fax: (41-22) 788 7244
    Email: [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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