Christian Israelis Chart A Different Way
Two Leaders With
Local Connections Coming To Talk About Peace Efforts
The Capital Times :: CAP
TIMES :: 41
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Phil Haslanger
Often lost in the stories of rockets
and shootings and tears and funerals in Israel and Palestine are some of the
long-term and very local efforts to create a different kind of future in the
hotly contested land that is holy ground for three major faith traditions.
One of those efforts is occurring in
northern Israel not far from the tense border with Lebanon. Another is
happening in the city of Bethlehem, just outside Jerusalem, just across the
forbidding separation barrier that divides Israel from the Palestinian West
Bank. They both grow out of Christian communities, which are a distinct
minority in a land where synagogues and mosques help define the territory.
The architects and inspirations of
both of those efforts will be in Madison in the next two weeks, reflecting
their close association with people here and offering area residents a
unique window into the potential for a different way of living in the midst
of conflict.
The Rev. Mitri Raheb, a native of
Bethlehem, has been pastor of Christmas Lutheran Church there since 1988. He
will be speaking Friday morning at the annual assembly of the South-Central
Synod of Wisconsin of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
Archbishop Elias Chacour established
a network of educational institutions in northern Israel that have crossed
boundaries of religion and ethnicity. In 2006, he became the archbishop of
the Melkite Catholic Church in northern Israel. He will give a public talk
at First United Methodist Church, 203 Wisconsin Ave., at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
May 14.
While Israel is celebrating its 60th
birthday this month, these two know in very personal terms the other side of
the story - the Arabs who were displaced by the creation of Israel, the
suffering their families and friends have undergone in the years since, the
conflicts between Arabs and Jews in Israel proper, and the crushing weight
of Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories.
Yet neither Chacour nor Raheb has
given in to the bitterness or despair that marks so much of the landscape.
Instead, drawing on their own religious beliefs, prodigious energy and skill
at organizing and negotiating, they have created amazing alternative
institutions.
In Bethlehem, Raheb built on the
Lutheran tradition of providing social services to those in need and began
building a place where Palestinians could prepare for a different and better
future than what they know now. In 1995, he founded the International Center
of Bethlehem as a place where Palestinians could immerse themselves in arts
and culture and social activities. He brought people from around the world
to Bethlehem and in turn added a media center to help the people of
Palestine tell their own story.
Over time, he added an elementary
school, a health center and, most recently, a college-level academy. The
International Center of Bethlehem is now the third largest private employer
in Bethlehem. "We need to build Palestine from scratch, stone by stone and
brick by brick," he explained at a conference in Bethlehem in November of
2005.
That's what Chacour has been doing
in the northern town of Ibillin as well.
Starting with a kindergarten in
1970, the Mar Elias Educational Institutions are now a consortium of six
schools from kindergarten through college, including a teacher training
center and a school for gifted children. The students and faculty at this
institution cross the divides of the land, coming from the Christian,
Jewish, Muslim and Druze traditions. There are now more than 3,000 students
in the six schools.
"This is the best tool - to build
peace and justice around the school desk," Chacour said as we sat around his
table late one night in November of 2005.
His schools teach more than academic
subjects. At the heart of the curriculum is teaching "of the young in the
ways of peace, reconciliation, respect, and justice," as his Web site says.
The American group that has worked
to support Chacour's work is called the Pilgrims of Ibillin. Its development
director, the Rev. Joan Deming, lives in Madison, providing a close link to
this city. Others from Madison have been to Ibillin to visit and to work.
Raheb also has close ties to
Madison. Lutheran Bishop Bruce Burnside brought back from the Bethlehem
church's art center a beautiful Christmas tapestry that now hangs at St.
Stephen's Lutheran Church in Monona. Memorial United Church of Christ in
Fitchburg (where I serve as associate pastor) is a partner church with the
Bethlehem congregation as is the broader association of UCC churches in
southwestern Wisconsin.
Both of these religious leaders can
offer a detailed political analysis of what has been happening in their
land, but neither is content to simply explain or complain. They are seeking
ways to step past all the frustrations of the present moment to offer a
glimpse of what can be. In the next few weeks, Madison area residents will
get a chance to share in their vision.
Reports on speeches by Mitri Raheb
and Elias Chacour will be on Phil's blog, Faith & Values, at www.madison.com/tct/blogs/faith\
MORE ON THE WEB
Christmas Lutheran Church
www.bethlehemchristmaslutheran.org/
Mitri Raheb www.mitriraheb.org
International Center of Bethlehem
www.annadwa.org/en/
Mar Elias Educational Institutes
www.meei.org/
Pilgrims of Ibillin
www.pilgrimsofibillin.org
2005 report on Phil Haslanger's
visit to Bethlehem: finding a future ... Between walls
andtreeswww.madison.com/archives/read.php?ref/tct/2005/11/28/0511280808.php
Phil Haslanger is a pastor in the
United Church of Christ and a former managing editor of the Cap Times.
phaslanger@gmail.com |