Tuesday, March 6, 2012

A pastorial letter to Palestinian friends and partners

Guest Editorial

As I write this letter, dear friends, the military and humanitarian crisis intensifies around you. We watch with horror and outrage as Israel punishes an entire population for the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier in Gaza, and as belligerence escalates with Hezbollah's attack on military personnel near Lebanon. While we pray for the Israeli soldiers' release and safe return to family, we also know that these incidents have become an occasion for the further oppression of the Palestinian community, for the massive destruction of economic infrastructure and for the tragic loss of much innocent life. Meanwhile, the separation barrier continues to restrict travel, even for the purpose of meeting desperate human need, and sanctions against the Palestinian Authority have caused a financial strangulation of vital political, educational and humanitarian institutions. The complicity of our own government in these sanctions is cause for particular grief.

Making this situation even more burdensome is the recognition that there are many in the United States, including many Christians, who see only Israel's need for security, who focus only on a few terrorist acts which you yourselves condemn. In doing so, they largely ignore the systemic oppression of an entire people in what increasingly amounts to a virtual prison in which almost every aspect of Palestinian life is controlled by Israel. Many in our own churches are subject to intense lobbying by Jewish groups demonizing the Palestinian community in general and many of you in particular. Even some of our denominational gatherings of ecumenical partners here in the United States sound what may seem to you to be an uncertain voice.

In the face of such suffering and the temptation for despair, I write to assure you of the prayers and solidarity of the United Church of Christ. I am grateful that this is being signified personally aby Peter Makari's presence in the region this summer, accompanied by several of my colleagues. Know that we continue to be guided by our commitment to peace with justice, to negotiations leading toward a future in which Israel and Palestine mutually co-exist within secure and internationally recognized borders, to a shared Jerusalem, and to full protection and access to holy sites. In addition, we remain steadfast in our denunciation of

Israel's separation barrier, articulated in last summer's General Synod resolution, and in our readiness to use our church's economic resources, including the possibility of divestment, to press for an end to the Occupation and to support peacemaking and the Palestinian community. Finally, we will not remain silent in the face of our own government's policies which continue to reward Israel while failing to press in significant ways for the "road map" it has proposed.

Centuries ago, in the midst of equally urgent times, our Reformed forebears asked, "What is your only comfort in life and in death?" They answered, "that we belong, body and soul, in life and in death, not to ourselves but to our faithful savior Jesus Christ." May this comfort sustain you, and may the knowledge that we belong together in bonds of mutual affection and shared commitment be encouraging in these desperately challenging days.

This Pastoral letter to Palestinian friends and partners was written just as the situation in Lebanon began, thus is focused almost entirely on Gaza. The Rev. John H. Thomas, General Minister and President, United Church of Christ (USA) offers solidarity and prayers in the midst o humanitarian and military crisis.

[Sidebar]

DEFENDER PLATFORM SINCE 1905

1. Prejudice and racism in all of its forms must be eliminated and destroyed.

2. Racial profiling and police brutality must be removed from police practices.

3. Reparations, or remediation, must be the final chapter in the arduous ordeal of slavery and legal segregation.

4. Opportunities for inclusion and advancement in all unions must be unrestricted.

5. Full access to government contracts for all.

6. Representation in all police and fire departments must reflect the community they serve.

7. Increase access and availability for quality, affordable housing for all.

8. Establish a living and fair wage as a fundamental right for all Americans.

(Revised January 1966, May 2001)

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