In case you missed it – this article was online at Jpost.com for only a few hours. US: Israel favorites orthodox sects Oct. 29, 2009 The State of Israel discriminates against non-Orthodox streams of Judaism and against Jewish-born believers in Christianity, while the Palestinian Authority has not been doing enough to combat Muslim violence against Christians, according to the US State Department’s annual International Religious Freedom Report on Israel released this week. “Israeli government policy continued to support the generally free practice of religion, although government discrimination against non-Jews and non-Orthodox streams of Judaism continued,” stated the 12,000-word report. The Orthodox monopoly over marriage, burial and conversion was criticized by US State Department officials. “Approximately 310,000 citizens who immigrated under the Law of Return but are not considered Jewish by the Orthodox Rabbinate cannot be married, divorced, or buried in Jewish cemeteries within the country,” said the report. “As in previous periods,” the report continued, “the Religious Affairs Ministry failed to implement the 1996 Alternative Burial Law that established the right of any individual to be buried in a civil ceremony and did not utilize any of the money allocated in the 2008 budget for the development of civil/secular burial plots.” The report even went into surprising detail about the mandatory marriage counseling demanded by the Chief Rabbinate of all Jews – Reform, Conservative or Orthodox – before being married. For instance the report quoted from a brochure used by a marriage counselor which State Department officials described as reflecting “traditional Orthodox family roles.” The brochure “compared a woman to clay and urged the husband to ‘shape and mold her as he pleases.'” In the second half of the report which focused on the Palestinian Authority’s attitude toward religious freedom, the report refrained from entering into the same level of detail in, say, the content of inciting speeches given by imams in mosques. The report also criticized Israel’s treatment of messianic Jews, who believe that Jesus is the Messiah but adopt some Jewish rites. Basing themselves on the Jerusalem Institute of Justice, an NGO that defends the legal rights of Jews who practice Christianity, State Department officials noted that Interior Ministry officials denied services to citizens based on their religious beliefs. “The JIJ’s legal defense caseload included numerous cases dealing with attempts by the Interior Ministry to revoke the citizenship of persons discovered holding messianic or Christian beliefs, or to deny some of the national services such as welfare benefits or passports to such persons. “In other cases the ministry attempted to block immigration of messianic Jews by refusing to process their immigration applications.” The report also scrutinized the impact on religious freedom of the ongoing conflict in Judea and Samaria between Israelis and Palestinians. “The Israeli government generally respected the right to freedom of religion in the Occupied Territories during the reporting period. “However,” the report noted, “Israel’s strict closure policies and the separation barrier constructed by the government of Israel had the effect of severely restricting the ability of Palestinian Muslims and Christians to reach places of worship and to practice their religious rites. “The security barrier made it particularly difficult for Bethlehem area Christians to reach the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem and made visits to Christian site in Bethany and Bethlehem difficult for Palestinian Christians living in Jerusalem side of the barrier.” The report also noted how the ongoing tension restricted Jewish access to holy sites. “Israeli law also restricted the ability of Israeli Jews to reach places of worship in areas under Palestinian control.” State Department officials noted that the restrictions on movement were due to “security concerns” but did not go into details regarding these concerns. While the first half of the report was devoted to Israel, the second half focused on the Palestinian Authority. The report stated that “PA government policy contributed to the generally free practice of religion, although problems persisted during the reporting period.” State department officials noted Muslim violence against Christians in Bethlehem and Ramallah and land confiscation. “The PA did not take sufficient action during the reporting period to investigate and bring to justice persons who harassed, intimidated and perpetrated attacks against some Christian residents of Bethlehem and Ramallah. “The PA judiciary also failed to adjudicate numerous cases of seizures of Christian-owned land in the Bethlehem area by criminal groups.” The report also noted Hamas’s infringement of of the religious rights of Christians in Gaza. “Due to the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip, the PA was unable to pursue cases of religious discrimination there. Some Gazan Christians stated that they believed their Muslim neighbors were discriminating against them for their faith; they also raised concerns that no authority was willing or able to reign in extremist groups. Hamas did not adequately address the cases of discrimination against or intimidation of Christians that occurred during the previous reporting period.” reprinted from the Jerusalem Post. |
Tag Archives: palestinian
Hamas: War will settle Jerusalem dispute, not talks
On Day1 of this week here in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, I heard helicopters and shots being fired (perhaps warning shots). I stayed in the house, praying, knowing that some disturbance was happening here in the Old City. Arab youths recently have been throwing rocks at Israeli police – probably instigated by their Muslim leaders.
Turns out, this one was near the Temple Mount – and even the neighboring nation of Jordan is sticking their noses into this one.
“Pray for the peace of Jerusalem; they shall prosper that love thee” Psalm 122:6
“And in that day will I make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all people: all that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it.” Zech 12:3
“Even unto this present hour we both hunger, and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain dwellingplace…” 1 Cor 4:11
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Hamas: War will settle Jerusalem dispute, not talks
haaretz.com ^ | Oct. 25, 2009 | Jack Khoury
Posted on 26 October 2009 03:19:14 AM by Free ThinkerNY
Following a conflagration of violence at Temple Mount in Jerusalem on Sunday, Hamas political leader Khaled Meshal declared that “Jerusalem’s fate will be decided with jihad (holy war) and resistance, and not negotiations.”
Clashes between Israeli police and youths armed with rocks broke out Sunday at the Noble Sanctuary/Temple Mount compound, home of the Muslim holy site, the al Aqsa mosque. The confrontation was apparently sparked by radical Jewish clerics’ call to their followers to go up to the compound, and by calls by radical Muslim clerics for their followers to defend the site.
Meshal, in Damascus, voiced hope that Israel’s Arabs and the residents of the West Bank would join the residents of the Gaza Strip, which is ruled by Hamas, in staging demonstrations in protest of the Jerusalem events, Israel Radio reported.
Meanwhile, Jordan warned the Israel Police and religious Jewish radicals on Sunday that further provocation at the compound would “fuel violence in the region and jeopardize peace efforts”.
“Any new provocative attempts by Israeli troops and Jewish extremists such as what happened today in the shrine’s compound represents a flagrant violation of international law and conventions and sets the stage for more tension and acts of violence,” Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communication Nabil Sharif said in a statement.
“Jordan, out of its historical responsibilities in being the custodian of the holy places in Jerusalem, is extremely worried about what is taking place and warns against going ahead with this provocative behavior on the part of Israeli troops,” he added.
(Excerpt) Read more at haaretz.com …