Thursday, December 17, 2009

A Marvelous Christian, Israel-Defender

Oh my gosh! Someone on our side! Please visit it regularly

Contact: www.christianfairwitness.com

Christians For Fair Witness Questions New Posting on Israeli Settlement Freeze

Christians for Fair Witness questions the Churches for Middle East Peace website posting on Israel’s settlement freeze. Fair Witness previously issued a press release (Dec. 8) questioning CMEP’s failure to discuss Israel’s 10-month freeze on West Bank settlement construction. Shortly afterwards CMEP posted a Bulletin on the front page of its website which included a feature on the freeze entitled Temporary Settlement Moratorium and the Response.CMEP, however, omits the critical fact that the freeze was a deliberate attempt by Israel to re-start peace talks with the Palestinians, not a unilateral measure taken with no intention of moving onto a negotiated settlement. We are glad to see CMEP at least acknowledging that Israel has taken this step said Fr. James Loughran, S.A., Director of the Graymoor Ecumenical & Interreligious Institute.

However, we are surprised that CMEP did not acknowledge that PM
Netanyahu expressly presented the freeze as a way of re-starting peace negotiations. That was the whole point of the freeze. We are also surprised that, while they posted some helpful links, Kemp’s discussion was cast wholly in negative terms. CMEP emphasizes that the freeze is one-time and temporary and that Jerusalem remains a very serious problem. They complain about the potential for settler violence. Why is a Christian peace organization not seizing this opportunity for peace making?

I admit to being thoroughly confused by this, says Rev. Thomas Prinz, pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Leesburg, Virginia. The stated goal of CMEP is to encourage negotiated, just and peaceful resolutions to conflicts in [Israel/Palestine]. This is a chance to do just that. PM Netanyahu said he hoped that this decision would help launch meaningful negotiations to reach a historic peace agreement that would finally end the conflict . . .So why does CMEP take a negative attitude? It makes no sense.

Parties rarely, if ever, make serious concessions prior to starting negotiations, notes Rev. Dr. Bruce Chilton, Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Religion at Bard College in Annandale, New York. Why would a church organization dedicated to Middle East peace attempt to downplay this Israeli action? Even if CMEP sees the gesture as imperfect, it is a golden opportunity to encourage the parties to get back to the negotiating table.

Additional Commentary from ChristianFairWitness:

· Fair Witness Challenges America Magazine's Omission of Facts in the East Jerusalem Evictions: to see America magazine continue its pattern of omitting critical facts while reporting about recent evictions in East Jerusalem.

· Fair Witness Expresses Serious Concern About the Holy Land Christian Ecumenical Foundation:
· Fair Witness is seriously concerned about the content and tone of the Holy Land Christian Ecumenical Foundation's ("HCEF") 11th International Conference, held at the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington, D.C., October 24, 2009. "I thought this conference was going to be about helping Palestinian Christians," said Rev. Thomas Prinz, pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church ...

· America Magazine’s Omissions and Misrepresentations in the Israeli/Palestinian Conflict:
· A careful review of the coverage of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict in America Magazine over the past fourteen months ( September 2008- October 2009) reveals repeated omissions and misrepresentations which invariably result in Israel’s actions being portrayed in a particularly negative light while the relative culpability of Palestinian militants and their political leadership is seriously downplayed.

· This is a discussion of the witness of the American Churches with regard to the Arab/Israeli conflict. Christians for Fair Witness on the Middle East is concerned that a bias against the state of Israel has emerged within many of the mainstream Christian denominations. This prejudice is reflected in a troubling willingness to lay the blame for the conflict in the Middle East on Israel’s shoulders while saying very little about any culpability the Palestinians or Arab nations might have

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