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A Jewish
human rights organization denounced an upcoming World
Council of Churches’ peace event as “blatantly
anti-Israel.”
May 28, 2010:
A Jewish human rights organization denounced an upcoming
World Council of Churches’ peace event as “blatantly
anti-Israel.”
The Simon Wiesenthal Center was referring to the World
Week for Peace in Palestine Israel, which begins
Saturday and will run until June 4. Rabbi Abraham
Cooper, associate dean of the center, accused the WCC of
never standing up for Israel in the 62 years of its
existence but being “fixated” on the plight of
Palestinians.
“It (WCC) never issued a single response to Arab
attempts to annihilate it (Israel), to drive the Jews
into the sea, to mass murder Jews at prayer through
suicide bombings,” said Cooper. “It is remarkably
fixated on the single democracy in the Middle East,
while it cannot find its voice in countries that
criminalize the practice of Christianity and tolerate
the murder of Christians.”
Cooper said the “hate-fest” against Israel this coming
week will not improve the life of Palestinians because
it fails to bring the two people together for genuine
negotiations.
“Christians are the ones who should be worrying even
more than Jews,” added Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein, the
interfaith affairs director at the center. “The WCC
evangelizes a gospel of political activism, not
Christian love and understanding. Protestant leaders and
laypeople should be wary of an organization that seeks
to hijack their faith, and ask themselves whether they
should continue to support the divisiveness of the WCC.”
During the World Week for Peace in Palestine Israel, the
WCC invites member churches and organizations to
advocate for just peace in Palestine and Israel. The WCC
website says participants will seek justice for both
Palestinians and Israelis, but highlighted the
partitioning of Palestine and the “permanent nightmare”
that Palestinians live under.
Last year, WCC supported a “just peace initiative”
proposed by the United Church of Canada that requires
Israel to recognize a fully sovereign state of Palestine
that would encompass the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
In return, Palestine and other Arab states must
recognize Israel’s right to exist.
Under the proposal, Israel also needs to dismantle its
settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, while
Palestinians need to end their suicide bombings and
other violent attacks on Israel.
But some of WCC's rhetoric does not sit well with Jewish
groups. Last year, former WCC general secretary the Rev.
Samuel Kobia called Israel’s occupation of Palestinian
territories “a sin against God” in a report to the
group’s main governing body. He noted the WCC’s stance
that anti- Semitism is a “sin against God,” and asked
WCC leaders if they were “ready to say that occupation
is also a sin against God?”
The American Jewish Committee, one of the oldest Jewish
advocacy organizations in the United States, condemned
Kobia’s statements for ignoring the root cause of
Israel’s presence in the West Bank.
“Israel does not seek to govern another people,” Rabbi
David Rosen, AJC’s international director of
interreligious affairs, maintained. “Rather, Israel has
offered in direct negotiations with the Palestinians
repeatedly to withdraw from most of the West Bank in
exchange for peace and security.”
Rosen criticized Kobia for repeating the “same
hypocritical statements” about Israel that the WCC has
regularly issued.
WCC has had a long troubled relationship with Jewish
groups, which criticize the ecumenical body for favoring
Palestinians and ignoring constant terrorism threats
against Israel in its Middle East policies.
The WCC is the largest Protestant organization in the
world, claiming to represent more than 560 million
Christians. The ecumenical body brings together 349
churches, denominations and church fellowships in more
than 110 countries and territories in the world. Ethan
Cole, Christian Post reporter.
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