Palestinian Writer Warns: 'There Is An ISIS-Like Culture Among Us That Excludes Christians And Is Intolerant Towards Them'. (Memri).
In an article he published April 17, 2017 in the Palestinian paper Al-Hadath,
Nihad Abu Ghosh, a member of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (DFLP) and the director of the PLO's diaspora affairs
department, described the dire situation of the Christians living in the
Palestinian Authority (PA) territories and the drastic decline in their
numbers over the years.
He wrote that this situation results not only
from the occupation but also from an ISIS-like culture that has
infiltrated Palestinian society.
As an example, he noted that preachers at Al-Aqsa call to impose a poll-tax on the Christians and forbid Muslims to greet them on their holidays.He warned that this treatment of the Christians, which drives them to emigrate, could tarnish the pluralistic image of Palestinian society, and called to place this issue on the public agenda and act to find ways to protect the Christians.
The following are excerpts from his article:[1]
"From time to time we hear warnings about
the dangers facing the Christian presence in the [Middle] East region.
These warnings are justified, considering what has happened to
Christians in Iraq and Syria and the [recent] series of bombings of
Egyptian churches.[2]
Prior to and during these incidents, there was a discourse of division,
of accusing the other of heresy, and of continuing to treat Christians
as ahl al-dhimma[3]
and as second-rate citizens.
All the Arab countries, without exception,
have failed to establish a civic state with full equality of rights and
duties among all citizens regardless of religion, origin, ethnicity or
gender.
"It should be noted that in Turkey, our
close neighbor, the number of Christians fell from 30% to less than 1%
in the second decade of the 20th century alone. This was due
to the massacre of the Armenians, the Syrians and the Assyrians, the
ethnic cleansing and population transfer campaigns that also included
the Greeks…
"And what of Palestine, the cradle of
Jesus? Is a danger hovering over the Christian presence in our country
[as well]? In answering this question, there is usually a tendency to
fall into the trap of fine and emotional words about national unity, and
to mention a few pioneers of the [Palestinian] national movement, [as
well as] intellectuals, artists and politicians, who are Christians, or
to blame the occupation for the steady decline in the number of
Christians among the Palestinians who remain in their homeland. But this
is not enough to explain or justify [the fact that] the Christian
[population] of Palestine declined from 20% before the nakba to
less than 2% in the lands that were conquered in 1967, and their
proportion in all the territory conquered since 1948 is [currently] 10%
of the Arab Palestinians and about 2% of the entire population of the
State of Israel.
"Undoubtedly, the occupation bears most of
the blame for the tragic predicament of all Palestinians, Christians
and Muslims alike, [a predicament] that leads entire sectors to consider
emigration. It is also possible that cultural and demographic factors
make the option of emigrating and integrating in the host societies
easier for Christians than for Muslims, as evident from the fact that
the Palestinian communities in South America, and particularly in Chile,
are overwhelmingly Christian.
"The warnings and dangers, then, are
serious and genuine. [But] they are not connected solely to ISIS and its
crimes, but to an ISIS-like culture and the existence of an environment
that excludes the Palestinian Christians and is unsympathetic towards
them.
To this very day we hear of [a preacher] at Al-Aqsa Mosque who
gives lessons and advocates imposing a poll tax (jizya) on
Christians, while ignoring the occupiers and the settlers. We also hear
of someone issuing a fatwa that bans congratulating Christians on their
holidays, or who claims that too many positions are reserved for them in
the municipalities and the Legislative Council.
"This bleeding wound [represented by the
plight of] the Christians does not only pose a danger to the issue of
rights and duties and to the tolerant culture we aspire [to create]; it
can also damage the Palestinian national identity. This identity, since
its inception, is pluralistic and encompasses all components of
Palestinian society, all its hues and all its communities – and is the
very opposite of the monolithic exclusionary and racist identity
embodied by the Zionist program. Our Palestinian identity resembles the
brightly embroidered Palestinian national dress, or our four-colored
flag, rather than the ISIS flag or the chador [a black robe that covers a
woman's body from head to toe] worn by the Taliban. Read the full story here.
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