Christians for Fair Witness
Praises Episcopal Church for Refusing to Take Unbalanced Stand on
Israel/Palestine
NEW YORK, July 20 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The 2009 Episcopal
General Convention ("GC") made a strong statement on July 17th when
the House of Bishops refused to pass the Israel/Palestine resolution
which called for dismantling Israel's security barrier and ending
the blockade of the Gaza Strip without demanding an end to
Palestinian terrorism. Several bishops who opposed the
defeated resolution said they favored a more balanced approach.
"Fair Witness was initially concerned because we were the only
ones at the GC testifying at Legislative Committee hearings in
opposition to the resolution," said Sr. Ruth Lautt, O.P. "But we
were heartened by calls for balance coming from the House of
Bishops."
"Some statements coming from supporters of the resolution were
reflective of appropriate concern for Palestinian suffering, but
also reflective of both a lack of similar concern for Israeli
suffering and a serious misunderstanding of the factual realities in
the region," said Fr. James Loughran, Director of the Graymoor
Ecumenical and Interreligious Institute. "One Bishop actually said
that the 'wall' did not contribute to the lessening of suicide
bombings. The security barrier, problematic as it is for
Palestinians, not only lessened suicide bombings coming from the
West Bank -- which had taken the lives of over one thousand Israelis
-- it virtually eliminated them."
Even more disturbing was the fact that some of the Bishops who
spoke in support of the resolution said that balanced language was
taken out specifically to get the attention of the Israeli
community.
"Integrity in the churches' approach to this conflict demands
fairness and an understanding of all the facts on the ground," said
Rev. Dr. Peter Pettit of Muhlenberg College. "It requires the church
to be an honest witness. The House of Bishops made this choice for
integrity when it refused to use misrepresentation to provoke a
response from a nation state."
"This is an historic moment," said Rev. Dr. Bruce Chilton,
Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Religion at Bard College in
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. "Prayerful discernment, a gift of the
Holy Spirit, prevented the Episcopal Church from passing unbalanced
legislation on the Arab/Israeli conflict at this GC. I am deeply
gratified by the stand taken by the House of Bishops and proud of my
church."
SOURCE Christians for Fair Witness on the Middle East