Father Raymond J. De Souza
National Post Published: Tuesday,
JERUSALEM -Here with an item from last week's news that you might nothave heard about: Unidentified gunmen blew up the YMCA library in theGaza Strip on Friday morning. While no one was hurt, two guards weretemporarily kidnapped while the offices were looted, a vehicle stolenand all 8,000 books destroyed. No one has claimed responsibility for
the attack, although Fatah accused Hamas of being behind it. Hamas,
for its part, strongly denied any responsibility and condemned the
attack. Meanwhile, confidential sources in Gaza told the Jerusalem
Post that the attack was in response to the reprinting of the Muhammad
cartoons in Danish newspapers last week.
The supposed motivation for the attack, and the fact that it was not
big news, illustrates the dire situation faced by many Christians
living in the Palestinian territories.
There are only some 3,500 Christians, mostly Greek Orthodox, in Gaza.
Over the past two years, al-Qaeda-affiliated groups have claimed
responsibility for attacks against Christian figures and institutions
with the stated goal of driving Christians out of Gaza.
If indeed the attack on the YMCA was motivated by the latest wave of
violence in Denmark over the cartoon controversy, it shows how
precarious the Christian position is. The Young Men's Christian
Association in Gaza is open to Muslims and includes a school, sports
club and community hall. It is not a centre of Christian proselytism.
But if events in Denmark which have nothing to do with Christianity
can produce anti-Christian violence in Gaza, then it is clear that
there is nothing Christians can do to avoid such violence.
The problem is not their behaviour but, in the eyes of the violent
Islamist jihadists, their very presence. They must simply live in hope
that some faraway event does not inflame the anti-Christian wrath of
their neighbours. Is it any wonder that Christians in such situations
desire to emigrate? Could anyone judge harshly the few thousand
Christians in Gaza if they were to leave entirely?
A second noteworthy dimension of the Gaza YMCA bombing is, well, how
un-noteworthy it was. It was treated in the Israeli press as a sort of
news brief. After all, there was the continuing story of the
assassination in Damascus of Hezbollah's chief of terror operations,
Imad Mughniyeh. And just hours after the YMCA attack, eight
Palestinians in Gaza were killed in an explosion at the home of Ayman
Fayad, a senior Islamic Jihad official. All Palestinian organizations
blamed the Israeli Defence Forces for the blast; Israel denied any
involvement.
So how can the destruction of a library, or the firebombing of a
school, or the desecration of a church be reported against the daily
toll of political violence elsewhere, to say nothing of the
international stories? On the same weekend, the French foreign
minister arrived for a visit, and a German newspaper reported that
Israel was preparing to declare dead the two soldiers who were
kidnapped in 2006, the incident which gave rise to the Second Lebanon
War.
Even then, who would do the reporting? There is no free press in Gaza.
Outside reporters, whether Israeli or foreign, cannot move about
freely and pursue such stories. Foreign reporters in particular need
extensive handlers, as they do not know the local language, the local
geography or the local leaders. It is much easier to stay in Tel Aviv
or Jerusalem and rewrite press statements about the visit of the
latest foreign dignitary.
Even if the reporters came, what would they be told? It is well known
that Christian Palestinians who have been subject to firebombings,
seizures of homes and businesses, assaults and death threats still
tell foreign visitors that they have excellent relations with their
Muslim neighbours. After the foreigners go home, these Christians must
remain, and are loath to give any reason for jihadist extremists to
think that they are stirring up trouble.
And so it goes -- news trickles out about one outrage or another, but
it gets lost if it gets noticed at all. Meanwhile, Christians in Gaza
and the West Bank try to live quietly, never knowing whether a
newspaper in Denmark or a papal speech in Germany or nothing in
particular might be the pretext for violence coming to their doors.
It is an awful way to live. It is more awful still that so few know,
or care about it.
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