The
Arabic press is reporting
violent assaults Saturday evening by Israeli police against Palestinian
Christian worshippers in Jerusalem attempting to make their way to the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher for the "Saturday of Light" commemoration.
The police attacks took place at the entrance to the Church of the Holy
Sepulcher in response to Christians objecting to the barriers the police
had erected to keep crowds away.
On this day Eastern Orthodox priests descend to the basement where they
say their candles are lit from an illumination emanating from the tomb
that once held Christ before his resurrection. The lighted candles they
bring back up are used to light other candles, and the light is taken by
airplane to Eastern Orthodox countries like Greece, Bulgaria, and
Ukraine and distributed to churches.
So not only are the Israelis refusing to help Ukraine defend itself
against Russian occupation, they are limiting Ukrainian pilgrims from
attending the Saturday of Light festivities.
Ordinarily, 10,000 worshippers would flock to the church for this
festival, but the Israeli police under the new extremist, Jewish
supremacist Netanyahu government have refused to allow more than a
fraction of them to gather there this year. Some 1,800 were allowed
inside the church and another 1,200 were permitted to gather in the
square just outside it.
The Israeli police statement claimed that some of the Christian
worshippers attempted to enter the church by force. The police arrested
one man, who is charged with attacking them.
The foreign ministry of the government of Palestine issued
a statement
saying that it "condemns in the strongest terms the occupation forces'
attack on Christians celebrating the Holy Saturday in the Old City
(Jerusalem), and preventing dozens from entering the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre," adding that it considered these actions "strong evidence of
the oppression practiced by the occupation forces toward Palestinian
citizens, and toward the believers who came to worship in Jerusalem,
regardless of their nationality."
The assaults on these worshippers, the ministry said, are "a flagrant
attack on the political, historical, and legal status quo, and a brazen
violation of the obligations of Israel, the occupying power, in
Jerusalem."
The "status quo" is a technical term. According to agreements that go
back to the Ottoman period and which were accepted by Israel in 1967
when it militarily seized Palestinian East Jerusalem, each religious
community has control over its own religious edifices.
The Eastern Orthodox Church
explains:
"The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem has absolute sovereignty,
both in the Church of the Resurrection and the Holy Sepulchre, as well
as in the rest of the Holy Sites within Palestine. The Church of the
Resurrection, the Golgotha, the Holy Sepulchre and Adam's Chapels, the
Crown of Thorns, Centurion Longinus' the Monastery of the Klapon, and
the Prison of Christ fall within the spiritual, administrative, and
pastoral jurisdiction of the Patriarchate, as well as part of the
Praetorium, the Tomb of Panaghia in Gethsemane, the Church of 'Little
Galilee' on the Mount of Olives, the site where Protomaryr Stephen was
stoned to death, and the house of Theotokos."
It is open season on Christians in Jerusalem since PM Benjamin
Netanyahu brought extremists such as Jewish Power leader Itamar Ben-Gvir
and Religious Zionism head Bezalel Smotrich into the Cabinet and even
gave them power over the Palestinians.
The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, who is appointed by the Vatican,
told AP this week
that the far, far-right government has emboldened Jewish extremists to
attack clergymen and commit vandalism against churches at an
unprecedented rate. He said that the extremists now feel that they have
government protection, adding, "The frequency of these attacks, the
aggressions, has become something new."