Israel's Military Occupation Celebrate Xmas by Tear Gassing Demonstration in Bethlehem
I must confess that despite being a confirmed atheist, I enjoy having a Xmas tree in my living room each year. I particularly enjoy seeing the lights as it provides a kind of warm glow. It doesn’t make me believe in the Resurrection though! For most people in Britain, the Xmas tree, like Xmas itself, is a secular symbol of a secular festival. But in Israel it is entirely different.
Even Santa gets tear gassed Bi'ilin 2011 - Popular Committee Against the Wall via europalestine.com |
In a State where religion defines who belongs to the herren volk and who doesn’t, then of
course Rabbi Elad
Dokow of Israel’s Technion University is right when he says that “This is not about freedom of worship,,, This
is the world’s only Jewish state. And it has a role to be a ‘light unto the
nations’ and not to uncritically embrace every idea.”
Of course
there are very few religious states in the world and even fewer where
nationality is based, not on residence but on religion. Most religious states either use the
religion to oppress adherents of that religion (Saudi Arabia, Iran) or it is a
constitutional adornment without any significance (UK). Only in Israel does belonging to the state
religion confer significant advantages.
Therefore
the display of a Xmas tree does indeed strike a blow at the heart of Israel’s ‘national
identity’ in a way it wouldn’t in say Ireland, which is also nominally a Christian
country.
The
article mentions Shimon Gapso, the notoriously racist Mayor of Upper Nazareth
(built as a Jewish town to contain the Arab Nazareth beneath it but which has
seen a steady ‘encroachment’ of Arabs because of the usual restrictions on any
expansion of an Arab town. Christmas
Trees Are Still Banned in Nazareth Illit and Forbidden
to celebrate: Israel’s war on Christmas continues despite Netanyahu’s claim of
tolerance.
APA images |
Israeli rabbis launch war on the Xmas tree
23
December 2016
In Bethlehem the Israeli Army Tear Gas a Demonstration Calling for Free Movement
Israeli soldiers fired tear gas, pepper spray and stun grenades at Palestinians calling for free movement between Bethlehem and Jerusalem on Friday.
The Christmas-themed protest was held in front of Checkpoint 300, where Israeli soldiers control Palestinian movement between the occupied West Bank cities.
Approximately 100 protesters, some of them dressed in Santa Claus suits, chanted against Israel’s military occupation and for Palestinian freedom.
“Jesus came with a message of peace, his city suffers oppression,” one demonstrator’s sign read.
“Santa Claus stands with the Palestinian people,” stated another.
Half a dozen people were injured, including journalists, during the protest.
Palestinians and their supporters highlight around Christmastime that if Joseph and Mary were to make their journey from Nazareth today, Israel’s military checkpoints and massive concrete wall would prevent them from accessing the Bethlehem manger where tradition holds Jesus Christ was born.
Israel’s wall completely encircles Bethlehem, as do its settlement colonies, turning a once vibrant Palestinian cultural center and international tourist destination into a shuttered ghetto.
Israel’s regime of movement restrictions imposed on Palestinians living under its military rule prevents the free access to places of worship, including the al-Aqsa mosque and Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.
Even the Holy Fire of Easter must pass through an Israeli checkpoint during the ancient ritual observed by Orthodox Christians in Palestine.
Jerusalem hotels receive warning letter noting that Jewish religious law forbids Christmas trees and new year’s parties
Al-Jazeera
– 23 December 2016
As tens
of thousands of Christian pilgrims converge on the Holy Land this week to
celebrate the birth of Jesus, senior Israeli rabbis have announced a war on the
Christmas tree.
Christmas Trees Banned in Nazareth Illit |
In
Jerusalem, the rabbinate has issued a letter warning dozens of hotels in the
city that it is “forbidden” by Jewish religious law to erect a tree or stage New Year’s parties.
Many
hotel owners have taken the warning to heart, fearful that the rabbis may carry
out previous threats to damage their businesses by denying them certificates
declaring their premises to be “kosher”.
In the
coastal city of Haifa, in northern Israel, the rabbi of Israel’s premier
technology university has taken a similarly strict line. Elad Dokow, the
Technion’s rabbi, ordered that Jewish students boycott their students’ union,
after it installed for the first time a modest Christmas tree.
He called
the tree “idolatry”, warning
that it was a “pagan” symbol that violated the kosher status of the building,
including its food hall.
About a
fifth of the Technion’s students belong to Israel’s large Palestinian minority.
The Technion’s Christmas tree (copyright Firas Espanioly) |
While
most of Israel’s Palestinian citizens are Muslim, there are some 130,000
Christians, most of them living in Galilee. Other Palestinian Christians
live under occupation in East Jerusalem, which Israel has annexed in violation
of international law.
“This is
not about freedom of worship,” Dokow told the Technion’s students. “This is the
world’s only Jewish state. And it has a role to be a ‘light unto the nations’
and not to uncritically embrace every idea.”
Rabea
Mahajni, a 24-year-old electrical engineering student, said that placing the
tree in the union was backed by Palestinian students but had strongly divided
opinion among Jewish students and staff. The majority, he said, were against
the decision.
“One
professor upset [Palestinian] students by taking to Facebook to say that the
tree made him uncomfortable, and that those who wanted it should either put one
up in their own home or go to Europe,” he told Al Jazeera.
Mahajni
added: “This is not really about a Christmas tree. It is about who the tree
represents. It is a test of whether Jewish society is willing to accept an Arab
minority and our symbols.”
He
pointed out that Palestinian students had not objected to the students’ union
also marking Hanukkah, referring to the Jewish winter “festival of lights” that
this year coincides with Christmas.
Interest in Santa hats
For most
of Israel’s history, the festive fir tree was rarely seen outside a handful of
communities in Israel with significant Christian populations. But in recent
years, the appeal of Christmas celebrations has spread among secular Israeli
Jews.
Interest
took off two decades ago, after one million Russian-speaking Jews immigrated
following the fall of the Soviet Union, said David Bogomolny, a spokesman for
Hiddush, which lobbies for religious freedom in Israel.
Many, he
told Al Jazeera, had little connection to Jewish religious practice and had
adopted local customs in their countries of origin instead.
“The tree
[in the former Soviet Union] was very popular but it had nothing to do with
Christmas,” he said. “Each home had one as a way to welcome in the new year.”
Nazareth,
which claims to host the tallest Christmas tree in the Middle East, has
recently become a magnet for many domestic tourists, including Jews, Christians
and Muslims. They come to visit the Christmas market, hear carols and buy a
Santa hat.
Haifa and
Jaffa, two largely Jewish cities with significant Palestinian Christian
populations, have recently started competing. Jaffa, next to Tel Aviv, staged
its first Christmas market last year.
Meanwhile,
hotels are keen to erect a tree in their lobbies as a way to boost tourism
revenue from Christian pilgrims, who comprise the bulk of overseas visitors.
‘No danger’ to Judaism
But the
growing popularity of Christmas has upset many Orthodox rabbis, who have
significant powers over public space. Bogomolny said that some rabbis were
driven by a desire to make the state “as Jewish as possible” to avert it losing
its identity.
Others
may fear that the proliferation of Christmas trees could lure Israeli Jews
towards Christianity.
Wadie Abu
Nassar, a spokesman for the Latin Patriarch in Jerusalem, said that he had
noticed an increasing interest from Israeli Jews in Christian festivals,
including in some cases requests to attend Christmas mass.
He told
Al Jazeera this was not a threat to Judaism, but healthy curiosity. “If we want
to live together in peace, we have to understand each other and learn to
trust,” he said.
Tree-free Knesset
The
controversial status of Christmas in Israel was underscored four years ago when
Yair Netanyahu, the 21-year-old son of Israel’s prime minister, caused a minor
scandal by being photographed wearing a Santa hat next to a Christmas tree.
The
office of Benjamin Netanyahu hurriedly issued a statement saying that Yair had posed
as a joke while attending a party hosted by “Christian Zionists who love
Israel, and whose children served in the [Israeli army]”.
Two years
earlier, Shimon Gapso, the mayor of Upper Nazareth, originally founded for Jews
on Nazareth’s land, banned all signs of Christmas in the city’s public places.
He has been a vociferous opponent of an influx of Christians from overcrowded
Nazareth.
The
Israeli parliament, the Knesset, has also been declared a Christmas tree-free
zone.
In 2013,
its speaker rejected a request from Hanna Swaid, then a Palestinian
Christian legislator, to erect a tree in the building. Yuli Edelstein said it
would evoke “painful memories” of Jewish persecution in Europe and chip away at
the state’s Jewish character.
Attack on religious freedoms
Swaid
pointed to the prominence of Jewish symbols in public spaces in the United
States, including an annual Hanukkah party at the White House, during which the
president lights menorah candles.
“Israeli
leaders expect the US to be religiously inclusive, but then they refuse to
practise the same at home,” he told Al Jazeera.
He also
noted that the religious freedoms of the Palestinian minority were under ever
greater attack, most notably with the recent drafting of a so-called “muezzin
bill”, which would crack down on mosques’ use of loudspeakers for the call to
prayer.
“Given
this hostile political climate, the battle to gain legitimacy for our religious
symbols becomes all the more important,” he said. “Otherwise we face a dark
future.”
Threat to kosher status
Nonetheless,
there has been a backlash, especially from secular Jews, against the rigid
control exercised by Orthodox rabbis.
Haifa’s
mayor, Yona Yahav, overruled the city’s rabbi in 2012 when he tried to ban
Christmas trees and new year’s parties. The Jewish new year occurs several
months before the Christian one.
And last
year, in the face of a legal challenge from Hiddush, the chief rabbinate backed down on threats to revoke the kosher status of
businesses that celebrate Christmas.
But while
the ban on Christmas trees has been formally lifted, in practice it is still
widely enforced, according to Bogomolny.
“The
problem is that the chief rabbinate actually has no authority over city rabbis,
who can disregard its rulings, as we have seen with the letter issued by the
Jerusalem rabbis,” he said.
Most
hotels wanted to ignore the prohibition on Christmas trees because it was bad
for business, but feared being punished.
“It is a
problem throughout the country,” he said. “The hotels are afraid to take a stand.
If they try to fight it through the courts, it will be costly and could take
years to get a ruling.”
One hotel
manager in West Jerusalem to whom Al Jazeera spoke on condition of anonymity
said he feared “retaliation” from the rabbis.
“The
letter was clearly intended to intimidate us,” he said. “The Christian tourists
are here to celebrate Christmas and we want to help them do it, but not if it
costs us our certificate.”
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