\ Iman’s constant cravings… » Appalled.

Appalled.

Under: Around The World, How Outrageous, Palestine, Uncategorized @ 11:43 pm on Saturday, 09.16.06

What has gotten into the Palestinians lately? Why are our Palestinian people being driven by ignorance day in and day out. Why have they forgotten who their real enemy is? I am very disappointed, very appalled, very disgusted and very saddened by the latest out of Nablus and Gaza.

Burning churces and threatening to blow up more in Gaza and the West Bank are irrational, ignorant and irresponsible acts which could lead to ‘an unprecedented sectarian dispute in Palestine.’

Supreme Judge of Palestine Sheik Tayseer At-Tamimi called on Muslims in Palestine ‘not to harm any Christian church, home or people, as that would be a violation of the historical treaty which the Caliph Umar Ibn Al-Khattab gave to the Christian people in Jerusalem when he vanquished the Roman occupation.’
Father George Awad, the leader of Roman Catholics in Nablus strongly condemned this incident and denounced both the statements issued by the Pope about Islam and the church arsonists, saying, “the goal of these actions is to create a rift among the peoples who have lived for hundreds of years with love and tolerance.”

“The Pope does not represent all Christian denominations in the world, but the Timorese Christians stood side by side with Muslims against the Crusaders during the Crusader invasion of Palestine, offered martyrs and the wounded. The sons of the Christian community in Palestine are still standing with the struggle of the Palestinian people against the Israeli occupation”.

Father Awad issued a public letter, in which he said, “All the Palestinian people, that the Christians have become an integral part thereof, are in the dire need for unity and solidarity, and people will get out from this crisis as they got out from the crisis that occurred several months ago when the cartoons were depicting the Prophet Muhammad.”

6 Comments »

tommy

09.17.06 @ 3:12 am

I have to say, it is interesting that Sheik Tayseer At-Tamimi has to cite what amounts to an old prescription for dhimmitude to justify not engaging in violence against the Christian community. It is as if Palestinian Christians don’t have any particular right to exist in Gaza or the West Bank short of their “protected” status under an ancient treaty. More proof, as if any was needed, that Palestinian Christians really aren’t highly respected by their Muslim peers.

I think it is this very same paternalistic attitude which contributes to the periodic violence against Palestinian Christians. Christians are just a minority to be protected, not a minority to be respected.

Iman

09.18.06 @ 1:40 pm

Hi Tommy,

It’s rather interesting how you chose to take Sheik At-Tamimi’s quote out of context…

Christians and Muslims in Palestine have been living side by side for many many years. There is no difference between the two…Christian lives have been lost as a result of israel’s brutalities, and Muslim lives as well … and as Father George Awad said, they [Christians and Muslims] have lived [side by side each other] for hundreds of years with love and tolerance. So what periodic violence against Palestinian Christians are you talking about?

tommy

09.18.06 @ 9:10 pm

Hello Iman,

I don’t think I took anything out of context. The Sheik is clearly stating that Christian should not be hurt….

…because they basically dhimmis under an ancient treaty. Not because they are fellow Palestinians, per se. Because they are dhimmis.

Your feelings about Israeli brutality don’t diminish that fact. It was the Christians in your piece who were quoted as saying that Palestinian Christians deserve to not be molested by Muslims because of they have shared in the common sufferings of all Palestinians. The Muslim authority simply stated that Muslims were obligated not to harm them because of some treaty.

Kerr

09.19.06 @ 2:57 pm

from Khalid Amayreh in the West Bank

Palestinian nationalist and Islamic leaders on Sunday strongly condemned fire-bombing attacks against a few churches in the West Bank, calling the incidents “suspicious” and “incompatible with Palestinian and Islamic culture.”

Three churches in Nablus, Tulkarm and Tubas in the northern West Bank have been attacked with fire-bombs by unknown perpetrators resulting in minor damage.

MY COMMENT: Why this unknown material was not used on the israelis before? It does not make any sense to be used on people who are fighting the israelis with them.

The mayor of Tubas, where a small Greek Orthodox Church was attacked, accused “suspicious elements,” a reference to Israeli Shin Bet (Israel’s chief domestic intelligence agency) agents of “having embarked on this ugly act and criminal act.”

MY COMMENT: israelis have no shame, criminal and cowards. The israelis who burn the churches, remember the one who enetered the Church in Nazareth?

“It is either Israeli collaborators or some overzealous fools upset by the remarks of the Pope,” said Iqab Darghmeh (Abu Ahmed), in a telephone interview.

MY COMMENT: It is the israelis and their collaborators

Darghmeh and Muslim notables, including representatives of Fatah, Hamas and civic leaders visited the church Sunday morning to show solidarity with the small Christian community in the town.

“Christians here are not a separate sect. They are our flesh and blood. They are our brothers. An attack on their churches is an attack on Islam and the Palestinian people.”

MY COMMENT: This is very nice:”They are our flesh and blood. They are our brothers. An attack on their churches is an attack on Islam and the Palestinian people.”
Every day passes by, my despise to the israelis sky rocket

The fire-bombings have been widely condemned by religious and political leaders throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Sheikh Muhammed Hussein, the highest-ranking Muslim clergyman in East Jerusalem described the bombing as “immoral, unethical and injurious to Palestinian unity.”

“Those who perpetrated these acts don’t represent the Palestinian people. They are a gang of ignoramuses and fanatics, or suspicious elements.” In the Palestinian political lexicon, “suspicious elements” is an allusion to Israeli collaborators and informers.

Earlier, the Mufti of Ramallah, Jamal Bawatneh, called on all Palestinians to inform on any person seen attacking or vandalizing Christian churches and property.

“I urge our people to inform on any person carrying out a crime against people and property. Failing to do so amounts to treason and complicity, ” read a statement issued by the Palestinian Interior Ministry in Gaza.

Hamas condemns vandalism

Meanwhile, the Islamic Resistance group, Hamas, strongly condemned attacks on churches in parts of the West Bank, calling such attacks “criminal and harmful to the Palestinian cause.”

“I am sure that Israel is enjoying this. Israel always wants to create problems and divisions between Muslims and Christians. And those who committed these acts are only serving Zionist propaganda and goals,” said Yousuf Ibrahim, a Hamas spokesperson in the Bethlehem region.

“I am nearly certain that at least some of the perpetrators are Israeli agents.”

On Sunday, the Palestinian Authority (PA) Interior Minister, Sa’eed Siyam, ordered the security apparatus to step up security measures around churches in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Pope’s remarks condemned

Muslim and most Christian religious and secular leaders did condemn anti-Islam remarks made by Pope Benedict XVI in Germany on 14 September.

The Pope, quoting a medieval Byzantine emperor as saying that “Show me just what Muhammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”

The remarks drew angry but mostly non-violent reactions from across the Muslim world, with Muslim leaders calling on the Pope to apologize for offending Muslim sensibilities.

Some Muslim scholars interpreted the remarks as “a declaration of war on Islam.”

“When you say that Islam is evil, you are not only de-legitimizing it, but encouraging open war on its followers,” said the Supreme Sharia Judge in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Sheikh Taysir Tamimi.

The pope more or less apologized during a Sunday mass.

“I wish also to add that I am deeply sorry for the reactions in some countries to a few passages of my address at the University of Regensburg, which were considered offensive to the sensibility of Muslims.

“These in fact were a quotation from a medieval text, which do not in any way express my personal thought.”

Iman

09.20.06 @ 3:33 pm

Tommy,

Again, Christians in Palestine have been living side by side Muslims for many many many years … there is no difference between the two … there are always instances in which civil disorder erupts between individuals of the same community which prompts individuals of ‘higher authority’ to remind them of the importance of being one… and Palestine is not an exception

Bottom line, what some Palestinians have done in light of the Pope’s comments is outrageous and should not be tolerated - regardless if the targets/targeted were Christian or Atheists!

Tom in Cala Dor Palma de Mallorca

10.1.06 @ 7:47 am

Very fitting I think: “God is the inner principle of all movement, the only identity which already fulfils and illuminates the universe. Everything is incorporated in this one principle, because it encloses infinity, it includes everything, and there is nothing that could be outside of it. ” Giordano Bruno

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>