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A Palestinian woman lights a candle in the Church of the Nativity a
few days before Christmas in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, 21
December 2006. (MaanImages/Fadi
Tanas)
There is an absurd scene in Palestinian writer Suad Amiry's recent
book "Sharon and My Mother-in-Law" t! hat is revealing about Israeli
Jews' attitude to the two other monotheistic religions. In 1992,
long before Israel turned Amiry's home city of Ramallah into a
permanent ghetto behind checkpoints and walls, it was still possible
for West Bank Palestinians to drive to Jerusalem and even into
Israel -- at least if they had the right permit.
On one occasion Amiry ventures out in her car to East Jerusalem, the
half of the city that was Palestinian before the 1967 war and has
since been engulfed by relentless illegal and state-organised Jewish
settlement.
There she sees an elderly Jew collapsing out his car and on to the
side of the road. She pulls over, realises he is having a heart
attack and bundles him into the back of her own car. Not able to
speak Hebrew, she reassures him in English that she is taking him to
the nearest hospital.
But as it starts to dawn on him that she is Palestinian, Amiry
realizes the terrible problem her charitable act has created: his
fear may prompt him to have another heart attack. "What if he had a
fatal heart attack in the back seat of my car? Would the Israeli
police ever believe I was just trying to help?" she wonders.
The Jewish man seeks to calm himself by asking Amiry if she is from
Bethlehem, a Palestinian city known for being Christian. Unable to
lie, she tells him she is from Ramallah. "You're Christian?" he asks
more directly. "Muslim," she admits, to his utter horror. Only when
they finally make it to the hospital does he relax enough to mumble
in thanks: "There are good Palestinians after all."
I was reminded of that story as I made the journey to Bethlehem on
Christmas Day. The small city that Amiry's Jewish heart attack
victim so hoped she would hail from is today as much of an isolated
enclave in the West Bank as other Palestinian cities -- or at least
it is for its Palestinian inhabitants.
For tourists and pilgrims, getting in or out of Bethlehem has been
made reasonably straightforward, presumably to conceal from
international visitors the realities of Palestinian life. I was even
offered a festive chocolate Santa Claus by the Israeli soldiers who
control access to the city where Jesus was supposedly born.
Seemingly oblivious to the distressing historical parallels,
however, Israel forces foreigners to pass through a "border
crossing" -- a gap in the menacing grey concrete wall -- that
recalls the stark black and white images of the entrance to
Auschwitz.
The gates of Auschwitz offered a duplicitous motto, "Arbeit macht
frei" (Work makes you free), and so does Israel's gateway to
Bethlehem. "Peace be with you" is written in English, Hebrew and
Arabic on a colourful large notice covering part of the grey
concrete. The people of Bethlehem have scrawled their own, more
realistic assessments of the wall across much of its length.
Foreign visitors can leave, while Bethlehem's Palestinians are now
sealed into their ghetto. As long as these Palestinian cities are
not turned into death camps, the West appears ready to turn a blind
eye. Mere concentration camps, it seems, are acceptable.
The West briefly indulged in a bout of soul-searching about the wall
following the publication in July 2004 of the International Court of
Justice's advisory opinion condemning its construction. Today the
only mild rebukes come from Christian leaders around Christmas time.
Britain's Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, was foremost
among them this year.

Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, with the Archbishop of
Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, and the Moderator of
the Free Churches, Revd David Coffey, and the Primate of! the
Armenian Church, Bishop Nathan Hovhannisian pray in the Grotto in
the Church of the Nativity to show solidarity with Palestinian
Christians at Christmas in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, 21
December 2006. (MaanImages/Fadi
Tanas)
Even those concerns, however, relate mainly to fears that the Holy
Land's native Christians, once a significant proportion of the
Palestinian population, are rapidly dwindling. There are no precise
figures, but the Israeli media suggests that Christians, who once
constituted as much as 15 per cent of the occupied territories'
Palestinians, are now just 2 or 3 per cent. Most are to be found in
the West Bank close to Jerusalem, in Bethlehem, Ramallah and
neighboring villages.
A similar pattern can be discerned inside Israel too, where
Christians have come to comprise an ever smaller proportion of
Palestinians! with Israeli citizenship. In 1948 they were nearly a
quarter of that minority (itself 20 per cent of the total Israeli
population), and today they are a mere 10 per cent. Most are located
in Nazareth and nearby villages in the Galilee.
Certainly, the continuing fall in the number of Christians in the
Holy Land concerns Israel's leadership almost as keenly as the
patriarchs and bishops who visit Bethlehem at Christmas -- but for
quite the opposite reason. Israel is happy to see Christians leave,
at least of the indigenous Palestinian variety.
(More welcome are the crazed fundamentalist Christian Zionists from
the United States who have been arriving to help engineer the
departure of Palestinians, Muslims and Christians alike, in the
belief that, once the Jews have dominion over the whole of the Holy
Land, Armageddon and the "End Times" will draw closer.)
Of course, that is not Israel's official story. Its leaders have
been quick to blame the exodus of Christians on the wider
Palestinian society from which they are drawn, arguing that a
growing Islamic extremism, and the election of Hamas to lead the
Palestinian Authority, have put Christians under physical threat.
This explanation neatly avoids mentioning that the proportion of
Christians has been falling for decades.
According to Israel's argument, the decision by many Christians to
leave the land where generations of their ancestors have been rooted
is simply a reflection of the "clash of civilisations", in which a
fanatical Islam is facing down the Judeo-Christian West. Palestinian
Christians, like Jews, have found themselves caught on the wrong
side of the Middle East's confrontation lines.
Here is how the Jerusalem Post, for example, characterized the fate
of the Holy Land's non-Muslims in a Christmas editorial: "Muslim
intolerance toward Christians and Jews is cut from exactly the same
cloth. It is the same jihad." The Post concluded by arguing t! hat
only by confronting the jihadis would "the plight of persecuted
Christians -- and of the persecuted Jewish state -- be ameliorated."
Similar sentiments were recently aired in an article by Aaron Klein
of World Net Daily republished on Ynet, Israel's most popular
website, that preposterously characterized a procession of families
through Nazareth on Eid al-Adha, the most important Muslim festival,
as a show of strength by militant Islam designed to intimidate local
Christians.
Islam's green flags were "brandished", according to Klein, whose
reporting transformed a local troupe of Scouts and their marching
band into "Young Muslim men in battle gear" "beating drums".
Nazareth's youngsters, meanwhile, were apparently the next
generation of Qassam rocket engineers: "Muslim children launched
firecrackers into the sky, occasionally misfiring, with the small
explosives landing dangerously close to the crowds."
Such sensationalist misrepresentations of Palestinian life are now a
staple of the local and American media. Support for Hamas, for
example, is presented as proof of jihadism run amok in Palestinian
society rather than as evidence of despair at Fatah's corruption and
collaboration with Israel and ordinary Palestinians' determination
to find leaders prepared to counter Israel's terminal cynicism with
proper resistance.
The clash of civilisations thesis is usually ascribed to a clutch of
American intellectuals, most notably Samuel Huntingdon, the title of
whose book gave the idea popular currency, and the Orientalist
academic Bernard Lewis. But alongside them have been the guiding
lights of the neocon movement, a group of thinkers deeply embedded
in the centres of American power who were recently described by Ynet
as mainly comprising "Jews who share a love for Israel".
In fact, the idea of a clash of civilisations grew out of a
worldview that was shaped by Israel's own interpretation of its
experiences in the Middle East. An alliance between the neocons and
Israeli leaders was cemented in the mid-1990s with the publication
of a document called "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the
Realm". It offered a US foreign policy tailor-made to suit Israel's
interests, including plans for an invasion of Iraq, authored by
leading necons and approved by the Israeli prime minister of the
day, Binyamin Netanyahu.
When the neocons rose to power with George Bush's election to the
White House, the birth of the bastard offspring of the clash of
civilisations -- the war on terror -- was all but inevitable.
Paradoxically, this vision of our future, set out by American and
Israeli Jews, is steeped in fundamentalist Christian religious
symbolism, from the promotion of a civilised West's crusade against
the Muslim hordes to the implication that the final confrontation
between these civilisations (a nuclear attack on Iran?) may be the
End Times itself -- and thereby lead to the return of the Messiah.
If this clash is to be realised, it must be convincing at its most
necessary confrontation line: the Middle East and more specifically
the Holy Land. The clash of civilisations must be embodied in
Israel's experience as a civilised, democratic state fighting for
its very survival against its barbarian Muslim neighbours.
There is only one problem in selling this image to the West: the
minority of Christian Palestinians who have happily lived under
Muslim rule in the Holy Land for centuries. Today, in a way quite
infuriating to Israel, these Christians confuse the picture by
continuing to take a leading role in defining Palestinian
nationalism and resistance to Israel's occupation. They prefer to
side with the Muslim "fanatics" than with Israel, the Middle East's
only outpost of Judeo-Christian "civilisation".

A Palestinian dressed as Santa Claus near the controversial
separation wall in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, 23 December
2006. (MaanImages/Moamar
Awad)
The presence of Palestinian Christians reminds us that the supposed
"clash of civilisations" in the Holy Land is not really a war of
religions but a clash of nationalisms, between the natives and
European colonial settlers.
Inside Israel, for example, Christians have been the backbone of the
Communist party, the only non-Zionist party Israel allowed for
several decades. Many of the Palestinian artists and intellectuals
who are most critical of Israel are Christians, including the late
novelist Emile! Habibi; the writer Anton Shammas and film-makers
Elia Suleiman and Hany Abu Assad (all now living in exile); and the
journalist Antoine Shalhat (who, for reasons unknown, has been
placed under a loose house arrest, unable to leave Israel).
The most notorious Palestinian nationalist politician inside Israel
is Azmi Bishara, yet another Christian, who has been put on trial
and is regularly abused by his colleagues in the Knesset.
Similarly, Christians have been at the core of the wider secular
Palestinian national movement, helping to define its struggle. They
range from exiled professors such as the late Edward Said to human
rights activists in the occupied territories such as Raja Shehadeh.
The founders of the most militant wings of the national movement,
the Democratic and Popular Fronts for the Liberation of Palestine,
were Nayif Hawatmeh and George Habash, both Christians.
This intimate involvement of Palestinian Christians in the
Palestinian national struggle is one of the reasons why Israel has
been so keen to find ways to encourage their departure -- and then
blame it on intimidation by, and violence from, Muslims.
In truth, however, the fall in the number of Christians can be
explained by two factors, neither of which is related to a clash of
civilisations. The first is a lower rate of growth among the
Christian population. According to the latest figures from Israel's
Bureau of Census Statistics, the average Christian household in
Israel contains 3.5 people compared to 5.2 in a Muslim household.
Looked at another way, in 2005 33 percent of Christians were under
the age of 19, compared to 55 percent of Muslims. In other words,
the proportion of Christians in the Holy Land has been eroded over
time by higher Muslim birth rates. But a second factor is equally,
if not more, important. Israel has established an oppressive rule
for Palestinians both inside Israel and in the occupied territories
that has been designed to encourage the most privileged
Palestinians, which has meant disproportionately Christians, to
leave.
This policy has been implemented with stealth for decades, but has
been greatly accelerated in recent years with the erection of the
wall and numerous checkpoints. The purpose has been to encourage the
Palestinian elite and middle class to seek a better life in the
West, turning their back on the Holy Land.
Palestinian Christians have had the means to escape for two reasons.
First, they have traditionally enjoyed a higher standard of living,
as city-based shopkeepers and business owners, rather than poor
subsistence farmers in the countryside. And second, their connection
to the global Churches has made it simpler for them to find
sanctuary abroad, often beginning as trips for their children to
study overseas.
Israel has turned Christian parents' financial ability and their
children's increased opportunities to its own advantage, by making
access to higher education difficult for Palestinians both inside
Israel and in the occupied territories.
Inside Israel, for example, Palestinian citizens still find it much
harder to attend university than Jewish citizens, and even more so
to win places on the most coveted courses, such as medicine and
engineering.
Instead, for many decades Israel's Christians and Muslims became
members of the Communist party in the hope of receiving scholarships
to attend universities in Eastern Europe. Christians were also able
to exploit their ties to the Churches to help them head off to the
West. Many of these overseas graduates, of course, never returned,
especially knowing that they would be faced with an Israeli economy
much of which is closed to non-Jews.
Something similar occurred in the occupied territories, where
Palestinian universities have struggled under the occupation to
offer a proper standard of education, particularly faced with severe
restrictions on the movement of staff and students. Still today, it
is not possible to study for a PhD in either the West Bank or Gaza,
and Israel has blocked Palestinian students from attending its own
universities. The only recourse for most who can afford it has been
to head abroad. Again, many have chosen never to return.
But in the case of the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank,
Israel found it even easier to close the door behind them. It
established rules, in violation of international law, that stripped
these Palestinians of their right to residency in the occupied
territories during their absence. When they tried to return to their
towns and villages, many found that they were allowed to stay only
on temporary visas, including tourist visas, that they had to renew
with the Israeli authorities every few months.
Nearly a year ago, Israel quietly took a decision to begin kicking
these Palestinians out by refusing to issue new visas. Many of them
are academics and business people who have been trying to rebuild
Palestinian society after decades of damage inflicted by the
occupying regime. A recent report by the most respected Palestinian
university, Bir Zeit, near Ramallah, revealed that one department
had lost 70 per cent of its staff because of Israel's refusal to
renew visas.
Although there are no figures available, it can probably be safely
assumed that a disproportionate number of Palestinians losing their
residency rights are Christian. Certainly the effect of further
damaging the education system in the occupied territories will be to
increase the exodus of Palestine's next generation of leaders,
including its Christians.
In addition, the economic strangulation of the Palestinians by the
wall, the restrictions on movement and the international economic
blockade of the Palestinian Authority are damaging the lives of all
Palestinians with increasing severity. Privileged Palestinians, and
that doubtless includes many Christians, are being encouraged to
seek a rapid exit from the territories.
>From Israel's point of view, the loss of Palestinian Christians is
all to the good. It will be happier still if all of them leave, and
Bethlehem and Nazareth pass into the effective custodianship of the
international Churches.
Without Palestinian Christians confusing the picture, it will be
much easier for Israel to persuade the West that the Jewish state is
facing a monolithic enemy, fanatical Islam, and that the Palestinian
national struggle is really both a cover for jihad and a distraction
from the clash of civilisations against which Israel is the ultimate
bulwark. Israel's hands will be freed.
Israelis like Amiry's heart attack victim may believe that
Palestinian Christians are not really a threat to their or their
state's existence, but be sure that Israel has every reason to
continue persecuting and excluding Palestinian Christians as much,
if not more, than it does Palestinian Muslims.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth,
Israel. His book,
Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State,
is published by Pluto Press.
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