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Feb. 16, 2006
Holy Land Christians seek Vatican
aid
Group claims dwindling minority
will soon be all but ‘extinct’
by Michele
Green
Ecumenical News International
JERUSALEM
— A delegation of Israeli-Arab Christians visited the
Vatican
recently, urgently seeking aid for the struggling Christian
communities of the Holy Land.
The delegation met earlier this month with members of
a Holy See assembly that deals with the problems of
Christians in the Middle East,
including Israel,
and sometimes approves projects for local communities. The
delegates submitted a plan to help revive Christian
communities in the Holy Land, whose
numbers are dwindling.
The plan includes obtaining more support from
Christians abroad, especially pilgrims visiting holy sites
in Israel
and the Palestinian territories, to alleviate the sense of
neglect and isolation felt by the Christian community there.
One representative of the group said it is time for
churches abroad to take a more active role in revitalizing
Christian communities in the Holy Land.
“We are a dying congregation,” said Dr. Raed Mualem, head of
Mar
Elias University
in the Galilee town of
Ibillin.
Mualem told Israel’s
Haaretz newspaper that Christians soon will be all
but “extinct” in Galilee
because of emigration. Christians now make up 1.7 per cent
of Israel’s
population of 6 million — about 110,000 people.
If the high rate of loss continues, Mualem said, the
number of Christians living in
Israel
will drop to less than half of 1 per cent by 2020.
About 40,000 Christians live in the Palestinian
territories. They are leaving at a rate of about 2,000 per
year. Christians, who often have been wealthier and better
educated than their neighbors, have increasingly sought to
make better lives abroad rather than live as a small
minority caught between the predominantly Israeli-Jewish and
Palestinian-Muslim populations.
The plan submitted to the Vatican calls for more direct
support of congregations, institutions, private Christian
hospitals and schools, as well as the establishment of a
cultural center for Christians and community television and
radio stations.
“Projects of this sort ensure a better future, not only for
Christians but for the entire Israeli Arab population,”
Mualem said.
Original link:
http://www.pcusa.org/pcnews/2006/06098.htm
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