Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Christians Feud Over Church Of Holy Sepulcher

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Christians Feud Over Church Of Holy Sepulcher

    CHRISTIANS FEUD OVER CHURCH OF HOLY SEPULCHER
    By Matti Friedman

    Associated Press
    Monday, 27 Oct 2008, 12:27 PM CDT

    JERUSALEM -- Two rival monks are posted at all times in a rooftop
    courtyard at the site of Jesus' crucifixion: a bearded Copt in a black
    robe and an Ethiopian sunning himself on a wooden chair, studiously
    ignoring each other as they fight over the same sliver of sacred space.

    For decades, Coptic and Ethiopian Christians have been fighting
    over the Deir el-Sultan monastery, which sits atop a chapel at the
    ancient Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The monastery is little more
    than a cluster of dilapidated rooms and a passageway divided into
    two incense-filled chapels, an architectural afterthought alongside
    the Holy Sepulcher's better-known features.

    And yet Deir el-Sultan has become the subject of a feud that has
    gone far beyond the walls of Jerusalem's Old City. The Ethiopians
    control the site, but the Egypt-based Copts say they own it and see
    the Ethiopians as illegal squatters.

    The quarrel has erupted into brawls -- in 2002, when the Coptic monk
    moved his chair into the shade and too close to the Ethiopians, a dozen
    people were hurt in the ensuing melee. And today, the Ethiopians claim
    the fight could result in the monastery's collapse and even in damage
    to other parts of the church, one of the holiest sites in Christendom.

    Since the 1970s, the Israeli government has refused to allow
    renovations or significant repairs at the disputed monastery until
    the Ethiopians and the Copts come to terms. That hasn't happened,
    and the Ethiopian Church says the years of neglect have put the
    structure in danger. The Copts suggest the Ethiopians are merely
    trying to further cement their hold.

    The Ethiopian Church commissioned a report from an Israeli engineer
    backing up its claim, and in early October the Ethiopian patriarch,
    Archbishop Matthias, asked the Israeli government to carry out urgent
    repairs. The archbishop attached the engineer's assessment that the
    humble monastery structure could collapse -- and possibly damage the
    chapel below -- if steps are not taken to repair it.

    The report, compiled by Yigal Berman of the Milav engineering firm,
    cited "safety hazards" that "endanger the lives of the monks
    and the visitors," according to a report in the daily Haaretz
    newspaper. Yifredew Getnet, a spokesman for the Ethiopian Embassy
    to Israel, confirmed the report. A committee made up of embassy
    representatives, churchmen and lay leaders has been appointed to
    oversee the monastery, he said.

    Outside the monastery, Coptic monk Antonious El-Orshlemy said his
    church owns Deir el-Sultan, and that the Ethiopian claim that the
    monastery is about to collapse is false.

    "The building is very fine, and not dangerous to someone," he said.

    The most recent round of the feud began in 1970, when Ethiopian
    monks changed the locks while the Copts were at services on the eve
    of Easter and moved in.

    The Ethiopian Church has six monasteries and 70 monks in the Holy Land,
    according to the office of the patriarch. A handful are stationed
    at Deir el-Sultan. The main parts of the Holy Sepulcher are divided
    between the Catholics, Armenians, and Greek Orthodox.

    Three years before the Easter takeover, Israel captured the Old City
    from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast War and found itself in charge of
    the Holy Sepulcher.

    The Copts appealed to an Israeli court, which ruled that the
    Ethiopians should not have altered the fragile status quo at the
    church but said it was the government's job to decide what to do. The
    government decided not to take action, according to Daniel Rossing,
    director of the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations and
    an expert on the city's fractious religious mosaic.

    International politics likely played a role in the decision:
    At the time, Israel had warm ties with Ethiopia and was at war
    with Egypt. Later that was reversed: Communists came to power in
    Ethiopia and cut ties with Israel, and Egypt and Israel signed a
    peace agreement. But Israel still did not act, possibly because of
    concerns that angering Ethiopia could hamper the emigration of the
    country's Jewish community.

    Feuds like the one over Deir el-Sultan "don't have a solution, period,"
    Rossing said. "The trick, then, is to do the very best job to make
    things as livable as possible, within the limitations of never being
    able to solve these issues."

    Israel's interior minister, Meir Sheetrit, now plans to mediate
    the dispute, and the government will help renovate the site as soon
    as the sides can agree on a course of action, said spokesman Ilan
    Marciano. But with each side entirely rejecting the other's claim to
    the monastery, it is unclear if an agreement is possible.

    The feud is only one of a bewildering array of rivalries among
    churchmen in the Holy Sepulcher, where each group remains on guard
    against any encroachment onto their turf. Fights have flared over
    issues such as who is allowed to sweep which steps, and Israeli police
    occasionally intervene.

    The Israeli 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.
Working...
X