The Christian Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City, typically bustling with international pilgrims and local worshippers during Holy Week (leading up to Easter), now stands deserted, its shops shuttered. This situation is exacerbated by restrictions imposed by Israeli authorities amid the ongoing military situation they refer to as the “US-Israel war on Iran.”
A local Palestinian Christian shopkeeper, Boulos (who declined to give his real name), keeps his religious garments and wares store half-closed, as Israeli officials have ordered such businesses closed. He says his trade, which suffered severe interruptions for six years starting with the COVID-19 pandemic and continuing through subsequent wars, had just begun to recover with the return of some international pilgrims after the October ceasefire in Gaza. “Before the war [with Iran], business was still really bad, but it was at least enough to feed yourself. Now, there’s no business at all, no money at all,” he says despondently.
While most businesses in Israeli West Jerusalem are allowed to remain open (due to proximity to bomb shelters), in the Palestinian Old City, where such shelters are absent, local commerce is mostly forced to shut down. The Christian Quarter, heavily reliant on tourism, shows the least signs of life. Jerusalemite and principal at the College des Freres School in the Christian Quarter, Brother Daoud Kassabry, states, “It is the first time in my life to see Jerusalem as sad as it is.” The school has had no in-person classes for over a month.
Israeli authorities went so far as to bar the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, and other senior church officials from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (believed by most Christians to be the site of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection, the holiest site in Christianity) to perform Palm Sunday Mass. According to the Latin Patriarchate, this was the first time “in centuries” that church officials were unable to do so. Speaking at a news conference last Tuesday, Cardinal Pizzaballa said “all the celebrations” and gatherings had been cancelled in the past month to abide by military command restrictions. “But there are things that we cannot cancel. No one, not even the pope, has authority to cancel the liturgy of Easter.”
After Israeli police blocked Cardinal Pizzaballa on Palm Sunday, leaders from Italy, France, and the United States criticized the actions by Israeli police. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu subsequently sought to assuage concerns, saying the measures were taken for the cardinal’s “safety” – citing the lack of bomb shelters near the church, despite Pizzaballa living meters away at the Latin Patriarchate. As church officials noted, Netanyahu’s implicit assertions of Israeli sovereignty over such properties conflict with the prevailing status quo governing holy Christian and Muslim sites in Jerusalem – which vests control with the heads of churches and the Islamic Waqf under the custodianship of Jordan’s King Abdullah II.
To local Palestinian Christians, such rhetoric belies the hostile environment they say they endure under Israeli control. Bishop Emeritus Munib Younan laments the “many times” he has been spat at by Jewish yeshiva students in the Old City without any legal repercussions. Boulos says that when he goes to church, he now chooses the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem or a small church just outside Jerusalem. “There, nobody is pointing a gun at you on the way to church. Life is at least normal. Here, life is not,” he says. “They [Israelis] want to show the whole world that this country is only meant for them – not Christians, not Muslims.”
The logic of prohibiting a few high church officials from entering the holiest site in Christianity also struck many as hollow. “In 1967, during the Six-Day War, I was living in the Christian Quarter, we hid under the Church of St. John [the Baptist],” recalls Bishop Emeritus Younan. “During war, where do you [find] refuge? To church, to the mosque, to the synagogue, to pray and say, ‘God give me strength.’”
Following backlash from Western Christian allies, Netanyahu said he would allow religious ceremonies at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during Holy Week, though keeping them off-limits to the general public. Locals saw this swift backtracking as a pointed contrast with the ongoing treatment of Muslim worshippers, who have been barred from the Al-Aqsa compound since February 28, including for much of Ramadan. During Eid, Israeli border police violently dispersed Muslim worshippers attempting to pray outside the Old City walls with tear gas, stun grenades, and batons – with little condemnation offered by Western leaders.
The restrictions have made it impossible for the dwindling Palestinian Christian community to assert its presence as a unified community in Jerusalem. School principal Brother Kassabry noted the cancellation of the Way of the Cross procession and Holy Fire Saturday – celebrations specific to Jerusalem. “This year, we miss it,” he said. From a religious and communal standpoint, the cancellation of these public ceremonies threatens a fragile community whose population has dwindled to less than 2 percent of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory.
Local churches have remained open for services, even though “some people were afraid to come,” Brother Kassabry said. At local churches, priests like Father Faris Abedrabbo of the Annunciation Latin Parish in Ein Arik, northwest of East Jerusalem, are weaving these circumstances into their Holy Week messages to congregants. “I tell them… we can recognise in our daily lives something of Christ’s own suffering: his fear, his anguish, his sense of abandonment,” Father Abedrabbo said. “In this context, one word becomes central for us: steadfastness. As Christ himself teaches in the Gospel: ‘By your perseverance you will gain your lives.’”
These developments – especially the total closure of the tourism industry, which the Palestinian Christian community heavily relies on – come as many young Palestinian Christians are actively looking to emigrate. “Many of the young people tell me, ‘Can you help me get a visa to emigrate to the United States or Canada or Australia?’” says Bishop Emeritus Younan, lamenting their lack of employment opportunities. “I don’t blame them if they think of emigration. But this is bad for our future.” Shopkeeper Boulos admits he’s thought about leaving. “They try as much as they can to get us to lose hope, and to leave this country,” he says.
For the past five weeks, he says he’s mostly stayed at home, bored. But he still makes the effort to come to the shop a couple of times a week, despite Israeli instructions and having next to no customers. “I try to have hope. That is why I still come here – to show myself I still have hope,” says Boulos from inside his lonely shop. “But then, you know it doesn’t stop. It never stops. And they know at some point, you will just give up. You will lose hope.” Upon such despair, this holy season Father Abedrabbo had a message for his congregation: “Steadfastness is not passive endurance. It is an active, spiritual resistance: to remain rooted in good, in truth… to refuse hatred, and to continue choosing life.”
Source: www.aljazeera.com