Why Israel Would Try To Poison A Palestinian Christian Cleric – OpEd

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“They will run and not grow weary,” is a quote from the Bible (Isaiah, 40:31) that adorns the homepage of Kairos Palestine, a Christian organization that opposes the Israeli occupation.

This important document, which parallels a similar initiative emanating from South Africa during the anti-apartheid struggle years, has come to represent the unified voice of the Palestinian Christian community everywhere.

And one of the main advocates of Kairos Palestine is Archbishop Atallah Hanna.

He has served as head of the Sebastia Diocese of the Greek Orthodox Church in Jerusalem since 2005. Since then, he has used his leadership position to advocate for Palestinian unity in all of its manifestations.

Expectedly, Hanna has been on Israel’s radar for many years, as his kind of leadership is problematic from the viewpoint of a hegemonic political and military power that requires utter and absolute submission.

So, when the archbishop was hospitalized on Dec. 18, reportedly as a result of Israeli “poisoning,” Palestinians were very concerned.

A few days later, he was receiving urgent medical treatment at a Jordanian hospital for what Hanna himself described as “poisoning by chemical substance.” Whatever that substance may have been, it was said to have been discharged from an Israeli army gas canister, lobbed at Hanna’s church in Jerusalem.

“The Christians of Palestine are one family of Jordanians and Palestinians,” he told journalists from his hospital bed.

Those familiar with Hanna’s discourse would know precisely what the rebellious Christian leader was aiming at when he spoke about the oneness of Palestinian Christians in Jordan and Palestine: Unity which, sadly, has eluded Palestinians for a long time.

Indeed, wherever the man may be, standing tall at a rally in Jerusalem in defense of Palestinian rights or speaking from a hospital bed, he advocates unity among Palestinians for the sake of Palestine.

The Kairos document is itself an act of unity among Palestinian Christian churches and organizations. “This means for us, here and now, in this land in particular, that God created us not so that we might engage in strife and conflict but rather that we might come and know and love one another, and together build up the land in love and mutual respect,” the document, championed by Hanna and many others, states.

Even before claiming his current leadership position, Hanna was a target of Israel. During the Second Intifada, the uprising of 2005, Hanna emerged on the scene as an advocate, not of Palestinian Christian rights but the rights of all Palestinians. He actively pursued the World Council of Churches to use its credibility and outreach to speak out against the Israeli occupation of Palestine and for an independent Palestinian state.

In August 2002, Hanna was detained by the Israeli police in front of his home in Jerusalem’s Old City. On the orders of the Israeli attorney general, he was charged with “suspicion of relations with terrorist organizations,” a concocted accusation that allowed the Israeli government to confiscate the Palestinian leader’s Israeli and Vatican passports.

Despite the fact that Palestinian Christians undergo the same experience of military occupation, oppression, and ethnic cleansing as their Muslim brethren, Israel has labored to propagate an erroneous narrative that presents the “conflict” as one between Israel and Muslim fundamentalists.

Hanna is particularly troubling for Israel because his political language demolishes Israeli hasbara at its very foundations.

“We intend to conduct special prayers inside the Church of the Nativity for the sake of our martyrs,” he said on Oct. 10, 2001, when he joined Christian and Muslim leaders in their march from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, to challenge Israel’s targeting of Palestinian religious sites.

In an interview with Russia Today on Jan. 30, 2015, Hanna refused to even concede the language battle to those who ignorantly, or purposely, ascribed Muslim terminology to terrorism. “Allahu Akbar” was as much a Christian phrase as it was a Muslim one, he argued. “We Christians also say Allahu Akbar. This is an expression of our understanding that the Creator is great. We don’t want this phrase to be related to terrorism and crimes,” he said.

“We speak against using this phrase in this context. Those who do, they insult our religion and our religious values,” he added, linking all religious values through faith, not politics.

“The city of Jerusalem is the city of the three Abrahamic religions,” Hanna recently said at Istanbul’s First Global Conference on Israeli Apartheid. Tirelessly and consistently, the archbishop announced that, “Christian and Muslim Palestinians living in Jerusalem suffer from the occupation, suffer from repression, tyranny, and oppression.”

Although born in Ramah in Palestine’s upper Galilee region, Hanna’s true love was, and remains, Jerusalem. It was there that his spirituality deepened, and his political ideas formulated. His advocacy for the Palestinian Arab Muslim and Christian identity of the city stands at the core of all of his activities.

“Everything Palestinian in Jerusalem is targeted by Israeli occupation,” Hanna said last January during a meeting with a Doctors Without Borders delegation. “The Islamic and Christian holy sites and endowments are targeted in order to change our city, hide its identity and marginalize our Arabic and Palestinian existence,” the archbishop added.

In fact, Israel has been doing exactly that, efforts that have accelerated since US President Donald Trump’s advent to the White House, and America’s subsequent recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

Hanna is one of the strongest and most articulate Palestinian Christian voices in Jerusalem. His relentless work and leadership have irked Israeli authorities for many years. Now that Israel is finalizing its takeover of the illegally occupied city, Hanna, and like-minded Christian and Muslim leaders, are becoming more than mere irritants but real hurdles in the face of the Israeli military machine.

I met Abouna (Father) Hanna at a conference in California a few years ago. I heard him speak, and his thunderous voice was that of a proud Palestinian Arab. He urged unity, as he always does. I chatted with him later, in the hotel lobby, as he was ready to go out for a walk with his close friend, the mufti of Jerusalem. He was gentle and polite, and extremely funny.

As I watched them both walk outside, I felt hopeful that unity for the sake of Palestine was very much possible.

Ramzy Baroud

Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com

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