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Monks arrested in J'lem church brawl

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  • Monks arrested in J'lem church brawl

    Monks arrested in J'lem church brawl

    Nov 9, 2008 13:27 | Updated Nov 9, 2008 19:00

    Jerusalem Post

    Monks arrested in J'lem church brawl Police rushed into
    one of Christianity's holiest churches Sunday and arrested two
    clergyman after an argument between monks erupted into a brawl next to
    the site of Jesus' tomb. The clash broke out between Armenian and
    Greek Orthodox monks in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, revered as
    the site of Jesus' crucifixion, burial and resurrection. It began as
    Armenian clergymen marched in an annual procession commemorating the
    4th-century discovery of the cross believed to have been used to
    crucify Jesus. It ended with the arrival of dozens of riot policemen
    who separated the sides, seizing a bearded Armenian monk in a
    red-and-pink robe and a black-clad Greek Orthodox monk with a bloody
    gash on his forehead. Both men were taken away in handcuffs. Six
    Christian sects divide control of the ancient church. They regularly
    fight over turf and influence, and Israeli police are occasionally
    forced to intervene.

    The feud revolves around a demand by the Greek Orthodox to post a
    monk inside the Edicule - the ancient structure built on what is
    believed to be the tomb of Jesus - during the Armenian procession. The
    Armenians refused, and when they tried to march the Greek Orthodox
    monks blocked their way. We were keeping resistance so that the
    procession could not pass through ... and establish a right that they
    don't have," said a young Greek Orthodox monk with a cut next to his
    left eye. The monk, who gave his name as Serafim, said he sustained
    the wound when an Armenian punched him from behind and broke his
    glasses.

    Father Pakrat of the Armenian Patriarchate said the Greek demand was
    "against the status quo arrangement and against the internal
    arrangement of the Holy Sepulcher." He said the Greeks attacked
    first. Archbishop Aristarchos, the chief secretary of the Greek
    Orthodox patriarchate, said his monks had not initiated the
    violence. "I'm sorry that these events happened in front of the Holy
    Sepulcher, which is the most holy religious monument of Christianity,"
    he said.

    After the brawl, the church was crowded with police holding assault
    rifles and equipped with riot gear, standing beside Golgotha, where
    Jesus is believed to have been crucified, and the long smooth stone
    marking the place where tradition holds his body was laid out. Police
    spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police were forced to intervene after
    fighting was reported. They arrested two monks, one from each side, he
    said.

    The feud is only one of a bewildering array of rivalries among
    churchmen in the Holy Sepulcher. The government has long wanted to
    build a fire exit in the church, which regularly fills with thousands
    of pilgrims and has only one main door, but the plan is on hold
    because the sects cannot agree where the exit will be built. In
    another example, a ladder placed on a ledge over the entrance sometime
    in the 19th century has remained there ever since because of a dispute
    over who has the authority to take it down.

    More recently, a spat between Ethiopian and Coptic Christians is
    delaying badly needed renovations to a rooftop monastery that
    engineers say could collapse.
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