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Religious leaders: Ban Jerusalem Gay Parade

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  • Religious leaders: Ban Jerusalem Gay Parade

    Jerusalem Post
    March 30 2005

    Religious leaders: Ban J'lem Gay Parade
    By ETGAR LEFKOVITS


    >From left: Muslim cleric Abdel Salem Menasra, Archbishop Aristarchos,
    of the Greek Orthodox Holy Land Patriarchate, Latin Patriarch Michel
    Sabbah, Israeli chief Sephardic rabbi Shlomo Amar and Chief Ashkenaki
    rabbiYehuda Metzger in Jerusalem Wednesday
    Photo: AP

    In a rare alliance, senior religious leaders of Judaism,
    Christianity, and Islam in the Holy Land joined forces Wednesday to
    thwart a major international gay parade scheduled to take place in
    Jerusalem this summer, urging the government to ban the event which
    they said could provoke a violent reaction from the faithful.

    "We are shocked to have received notice that a worldwide assembly of
    ten days including an immodest parade devoid of minimal propriety is
    scheduled to be held in Jerusalem this summer, which will offend the
    very foundations of our religious values and the character of the
    Holy City. Such an event would constitute a severe affront to the
    hearts and souls of adherents of all religions - Jews Christians and
    Moslems alike," a declaration signed by a dozen top religious leaders
    including Israel's Chief Rabbis, the Latin Patriarch, the Vatican
    Ambassador to the Holy Land, representatives from the Armenian and
    Greek Orthodox Patriarchies and three Muslim Sheiks.

    "We call upon and demand... the Israeli Government and all
    responsible officials and Israeli police to realize the full
    implications of their plans and to prohibit any march of this kind,
    and especially in the Holy City of Jerusalem," it read.

    United and uncompromising in their beliefs, speaker after speaker in
    the multi-faith tri-lingual press conference organized by the Israeli
    Chief Rabbinate denounced the planned event as an affront and
    provocation to the sensitivities of Jerusalem's Jewish Arab and
    Christian residents, as well as to millions of believers around the
    world.

    "We have enough tension in our city regarding the disengagement plan
    and we do not need to add fire to the oil," said Chief Rabbi Shlomo
    Amar.

    "The particular holiness of Jerusalem has requirements both for those
    who are believers and those who are not," concurred the Latin
    Patriarch Michel Sabbah.

    "We respect the ideas of everybody, but everybody must respect the
    sentiments of the inhabitants of Jerusalem," said the Representative
    of the Holy See Archbishop Sambi.

    "Such a parade is not only an offense but a provocation to Jews
    Christians and Muslim all over the world," he said, adding "no one
    can be sure such a move will not provoke a reaction from the
    faithful."

    New York Rabbi Yehuda Levin, representing 1,000 Orthodox Rabbis from
    the 'Rabbinical Alliance of America,' who has been actively working
    with Evangelical Christian leaders in the US against the event
    lambasted the "parade of abomination" which he said represented
    nothing less than "a spiritual rape" of the Holy Land.

    "Why is it that the Government of Israel does not allow 10,000 Jews
    to march on the Temple Mount because it is said to be a provocation,
    but does not stop a ten day immoral celebration of sodomy and
    pornography which is a provocation to the overwhelming majority of
    the people of this city, and this land?" he asked.

    Levin also expressed dissatisfaction with the Jerusalem Mayor Uri
    Lupolianski's 'behind the scenes' attitude vis a ve the event.

    "We are embarrassed, ashamed and dissatisfied that you have not been
    out there up front speaking out for the holiness of the city and
    against this abomination" he said.

    The highly unusual cooperation between Judaism's, Christianity's and
    Islam's top religious leaders in Jerusalem comes on the heels of a
    joint Christian-Jewish campaign launched in the city earlier this
    month to prevent the August parade from taking place in the Holy
    Land.

    The press conference of top religious leaders - where black hatted
    Rabbis intermingled with Black-hooded Priests, Hebrew-speaking
    priests pressed hands with Hebrew-speaking Sheikhs, and Muslim
    clerics warned of destructions along the lines Sodom and Gomorra -
    was condemned by Israel's Masorti (Conservative) Movement, which has
    come out strongly in favor of the international gay pride event.

    "Such an unholy coalition of people who otherwise hate each other
    only represents their own fear and hatred of the gay and lesbian
    community," said movement Rabbi David Lazar.

    As the debate over the international gay pride parade rages, while
    more conservative religious leaders opposed to the event look for
    both public and divine intervention, police said they were
    "considering" asking organizers to postpone the event since their
    forces will be overburdened with the concomitant withdrawal from the
    Gaza Strip.

    The prerogative for issuing permits for marches and other public
    events in the country rests with the police.

    For their part, local organizers of the event have said that they had
    not received any request from police to postpone the 10 day event to
    date, adding that only the parade itself required security.

    "Every year there is another excuse why this is not the right time,"
    said Hagai El-Ad the executive director of Jerusalem's Gay and
    Lesbian Center whose organization is planning to host the
    international event.

    Even before the conflict with the Gaza pullout emerged, the idea of
    holding such an international parade in Jerusalem was a source of
    bitter controversy.

    In a largely conservative city, with a strong religious and
    traditional makeup, the idea of holding such an international parade
    in Jerusalem is seen by many - even outside of religious circles - as
    out of touch with both the spiritual character of the city as well as
    the sensitivities of its observant residents.

    A poll released at the Jerusalem press conference indicated that
    three-quarters of Jerusalem's Jewish residents were opposed to
    holding the event, and only a quarter supported it.

    The Dahaf institute poll taken this month among 400 people found that
    among Jerusalem Arabs a whopping 96 percent opposed the event.

    In reaction to the poll, organizers of the parade such that "freedom
    of speech should not be held hostage to one poll or another."

    Jerusalem held its first annual local gay parade only three years
    ago. The event, which draws several thousand participants, has been
    the source of repeated debate each year, with many religious city
    councilors and a not insignificant number of city residents
    considering such an event inappropriate for a "holy" city.

    The last international gay parade, which took place in Rome in 2000
    despite the wrath of the Vatican, attracted about half a million
    participants, while local organizers had been expecting tens of
    thousands of revelers for the Jerusalem event this summer.
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