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  • Jerusalem: Armenians want Israeli help in church feud

    ARMENIANS WANT ISRAELI HELP IN CHURCH FEUD
    by Matti Friedman

    The Jerusalem Report
    May 16, 2005

    Representatives of the Armenian Orthodox Church in Jerusalem are
    decrying a failure on the part of Israeli authorities to intervene to
    protect their rights in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, in the face
    of what they say is a concerted attempt by the Greek Orthodox patriarch
    to show that Armenian Christians are subservient to his authority.

    "The Israeli government is the legal sovereign at the Holy Sepulcher,
    and it is bound by its own laws to make sure that the rights of
    all sects there are not violated," says Eytan Epstein, the attorney
    representing the Armenian Patriarchate. "When the Turks were in charge,
    or the Jordanians, they didn't hesitate to intervene in conflicts
    between the groups. But unfortunately, the Israeli authorities take
    the approach that it isn't nice for Jews to get involved in a conflict
    between Christians, and they keep their distance."

    The result, Epstein says, is that the Armenians' rights in the church
    are being eroded by the Greeks, led by their patriarch, Irenaeus,
    elected to the position in 2001. (Irenaeus is also under fire within
    his own church, for alleged involvement in the sale of Greek-owned
    real estate in the Old City to Jewish groups, and because of charges
    of impropriety in his election.)

    The focal point of the conflict between the two groups is a ritual
    called the Ceremony of the Holy Fire, held every year on the Saturday
    before Easter Sunday. (Orthodox Christians mark Easter this year on
    May 1.) On that day - according to a belief thought to date at least
    to the ninth century - divine fire miraculously lights a torch in
    the inner chamber of the Edicule, the small chapel built on the site
    of Jesus's tomb in the center of the rotunda of the Holy Sepulcher.
    Traditionally, both the Greek Orthodox Patriarch and a representative
    of the Armenian church light candles from the divine flame and
    pass it to their followers outside. Since 2001, however, Irenaeus
    has insisted that the Armenians light their candle from his flame,
    rather than directly from the divine fire inside the tomb.

    "There's more than the ceremony involved," Epstein says. "Irenaeus
    is trying to make the point that the Armenians answer to him. The
    Armenians feel that the police have been leaning toward the Greeks
    on this issue and are doing nothing to stop Irenaeus from eroding the
    status quo." Historically, the Armenian church is entirely independent
    of the Greek Orthodox Church.

    The conflict over the Holy Fire - only one of countless tensions
    and intrigues among the Greeks, Armenians, Syrians, Catholics, Copts
    and Ethiopians who jealously guard their turf in the ancient church -
    threatens to erupt into violence every Easter. In 2002, in a brawl that
    broke out during the ceremony, the fire carried by Armenian Patriarch
    Turkum Manoogian was extinguished, and the police had to restore order.

    But Epstein demands that the police go farther than merely jumping in
    after violence erupts, and wants the Israeli authorities to actively
    make sure that the rights of all sects are respected all year round.
    The Armenians filed a petition to the Supreme Court in February
    demanding that Israel actively uphold the Status Quo, the 19th-century
    accord between European powers on relations in Christian holy places
    in the Holy Land. The court gave the state until the summer to respond
    because of the complex diplomatic issues involved - thereby putting
    off resolution until after this year's ceremony.

    No comment was available from the Greek Patriarchate. Shmuel Ben-Ruby,
    a spokesman for the Jerusalem police, rejected out of hand any
    allegation of bias on the part of police. "The Israel Police takes
    no side in internal conflicts in the church," he said in a statement,
    "and does its best to enforce the law and keep public order."
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