Bit by bit Israel aims to
squeeze out the Palestinian
Christians
By Jonathan Cook
December 23, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- Its decision to trap the
minority group in Gaza this
Christmas is a prelude to a
seemingly contradictory plan
to sap the people of the
will to stay and struggle
for what is theirs
Gaza’s minuscule community of Christians
will spend this Christmas feeling even
more under siege than normal. The
Israeli military authorities have
denied the vast majority of the
enclave’s 1,100 Christians a permit
to exit the Palestinian territory for
the holiday season.
Unlike previous years, none will be
allowed to join relatives in Bethlehem,
Jerusalem or Nazareth, or visit their
holy places in the West Bank and Israeli
cities. Alongside the enclave’s nearly
two million Muslims, they will be forced
to celebrate Christmas in what is dubbed
by locals as “the world’s largest
open-air prison”.
Israel has issued 100 permits for travel
abroad, via Jordan, but even those are
mostly useless because only one or two
members of each family have been
approved. No parent is likely to choose
to enjoy Christmas away from their
children.
As
ever, Israeli authorities have justified
their decision on security grounds. But
no one really believes this tiny,
vulnerable minority poses any kind of
threat to their giant military and
intelligence-gathering machine.
For decades Israel has pointed to the
steady decline of the Palestinian
Christian community as proof of a
supposed clash of civilisations in which
it is on the right side. The gradual
exodus of Christians, it argues, is
evidence of the oppression they suffer
at the hands of the Palestinians’ Muslim
majority. Claiming to represent
Judeo-Christian values, it supposedly
stands as their sole protector.
In
fact, the fall in Palestinian Christian
numbers relates chiefly to other
factors.
A
lower fertility rate than Muslims means
Christians have been shrinking as a
proportion of the overall population. More
significantly, however, Christians have been
fleeing oppression – not by Muslims, but by
Israel.
That began with the country’s creation in
1948 and
the events Palestinians call their Nakba, or
Catastrophe.
Christians, who lived historically in
Palestine’s main cities, were among the
first targets of the new Israeli army’s
ethnic cleansing operations.
Since then, those in the West Bank,
Jerusalem and Gaza have sought to escape
from decades of occupation, while those
belonging to a
Palestinian minority living as citizens in
Israel have tried to break free from the
institutionalised discrimination
they face in a self-declared Jewish state.
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Christians have enjoyed greater success than
Muslims in bolting the region because of
their historic connections to international
churches. The legacy of missionary activity
– church-founded schools and hospitals in
the region – have offered a gateway to the
West and a new life.
The
current treatment of Gaza’s Christians hints
at the lie in Israel’s claim that it
protects Christians. It has denied them
permits for two reasons unrelated to
security.
First, in violation of its commitments under
the Oslo accords, it has been reinforcing
the complete physical separation of the West
Bank and Gaza.
The
Christians of Gaza, with family ties to
Palestinians in the West Bank and Israel,
are a reminder that all belong to the same
Palestinian people, forcibly dispersed by
Israel 71 years ago and then imprisoned in
different ghettos. Rather than view Gaza and
the West Bank as two territories integral to
an emerging Palestinian state, Israel has
been carefully fashioning a narrative of
division that dominates in the West.
Gaza is presented as an abhorrent, Islamic
terrorist entity on Israel’s doorstep, which
would exterminate its Jewish neighbours
given half the chance. The occupied West
Bank and East Jerusalem, meanwhile, have
been depicted as the epicentre of the Jewish
people’s national revival.
Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the
settler-right are gripped by a fear that
their chauvinist, exclusivist approach might
be subverted by a Christian
counter-narrative. That is, in part, why the
West Bank’s Christians and holy sites in
East Jerusalem and Bethlehem are as besieged
– by concrete walls – as Gaza’s own
Christians. Far from respecting and
nurturing Palestinian Christians, Israel has
treated them as a grave threat to its
self-serving, contorted narrative of a clash
of civilisations.
Second, the blanket denial of permits is a
reaction to previous years in which a
proportion of Christians failed to return to
Gaza at the end of the holiday break. They
disappeared into the West Bank cities, given
shelter by relatives. From there, some left
for a new life in the US, Latin America or
Europe.
In
other words, Christians have taken advantage
of the chance to escape Gaza for the West
Bank, where Israel’s chokehold is a little
looser and its military footprint a little
less menacing and lethal.
The
family members denied permits this year are
being held ransom, an insurance policy
ensuring that those few allowed out return.
The
reasons why Gaza’s Christians would want to
flee are manifold. Like their Muslims
neighbours, most are desperate to find
release from a blockade entering its 14th
year.
We
are only days away from the year 2020, which
the United Nations warned several years ago
would mark the moment when Gaza would become
“uninhabitable” – were Israel not to change
course.
That prediction was not wrong. Unemployment
and poverty are rife; schools overcrowded to
bursting point; hospitals lack medicines and
equipment is failing; power supplies are
intermittent; rivers of sewage bubble up
into the streets after heavy winter rains;
and drinking water is so polluted as to be
dangerous to human health.
Infrastructure and many homes are in ruins
or crumbling after waves of Israeli military
attacks.
For
Gaza’s unemployed young, Christian and
Muslim alike, the future looks bleaker
still. Families unable to raise a dowry or
build a home have little hope of persuading
another family to give their daughter’s hand
away. Most of the next generation are
unlikely ever to be in a position to support
a family of their own.
Back in 2006, an adviser to former Israeli
prime minister Ariel Sharon explained that
the aim of the blockade – a policy then
being formulated – was to engineer the
population’s chronic starvation. “The
Palestinians will get a lot thinner, but
won’t die,” Dov Weissglass said.
Nearly 14 years later, Gaza’s population is
increasingly emaciated – physically,
financially, emotionally and spiritually. It
is the outcome of a policy devised by army
generals and politicians to immiserate
Palestinians, to inject into their lives a
gnawing fear and to force them to focus
exclusively on daily survival.
The
decision to trap Christians in Gaza this
Christmas is only a prelude to a larger,
seemingly contradictory longer-term plan.
The
choking blockade is designed to sap the
people of the will to stay and struggle for
what is theirs. Rumours in the media and
elsewhere have suggested for some time that
both Israel and the US ultimately want to
push the Palestinians into the neighbouring
Sinai peninsula, if Egypt can be arm-twisted
into agreeing.
By
keeping all of Gaza’s population under siege
this Christmas, Israel hopes that a few
Christmases hence it will receive the gift
it craves most: the permanent exodus of most
of the enclave’s Palestinians, to make them
someone else’s problem.
Jonathan Cook
is a Nazareth- based journalist and
winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize
for Journalism. No one pays him to
write these blog posts. If you appreciated
it, please consider visiting his website
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https://www.jonathan-cook.net/supporting-jonathan/
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