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Christians
Help Israelis in West Bank
By JASON KEYSER
.c
The Associated Press
ARIEL, West Bank (AP) - Digging into the West Bank soil, Christians from
suburban Denver plant seedlings in a vineyard as a blessing for the
18,000 Jews who have built a town here on land the Palestinians claim
for their state.
The two dozen visitors are from a congregation that gives around
$100,000 each year - much of it raised from selling Christmas fruit
baskets - to this settlement, believing the Old Testament obliges them
to support the Jewish people's return to lands from which they were
exiled 2,000 years ago.
Christians mainly belonging to America's evangelical Protestant churches
are among the most outspoken opponents of a new U.S.-backed peace plan
that would uproot many Jewish settlers and establish a Palestinian
state.
Church leaders such as the Rev. Jerry Falwell and the Rev. Pat Robertson
have been criticizing President Bush's vision of Palestinian statehood.
Though not of one mind when it comes to Israel or the Middle East,
evangelicals account for about a quarter of American voters, according
to a University of Akron survey made after the 2000 election. If
galvanized by a vocal leadership opposed to Bush's Mideast policy, large
blocs of voters could threaten Bush's 2004 re-election bid.
Through rallies, Internet-based letter writing campaigns and visits to
Bush and his staff, evangelical leaders have made it clear to the
president, himself a Protestant Christian, that they oppose the ``road
map'' plan, already off to a shaky start because of worsening violence
since its June 4 launch.
Christian support for Israel has greatly increased during nearly three
years of renewed fighting between Israelis and Palestinians.
Some Israelis don't want the support. They take offense at the
theological scenario envisaged by some evangelicals of a final,
apocalyptic battle between good and evil in which Jesus returns and Jews
either accept him or perish.
Looking for allies, however, Israel settler leaders have welcomed
Christian backing.
There's no estimate of how much money going to Jewish settlers comes
from Christians because contributions don't filter through a central
body. Instead, hundreds of churches offer regular donations to about 50
West Bank settlements to buy school equipment, playgrounds, medical
supplies and bulletproof buses, said Sondra Oster-Baraz, a Jewish
settler who is the local director of a group called Christian Friends of
Israeli Communities.
Another group, the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews,
raised $20 million from American Christians for Jewish immigration to
Israel last year. This year it's giving $2.8 million to welfare programs
in 80 communities in Israel, in some cases triple the amount of funding
those cities get from Israel's Ministry of Social Affairs.
Now, some evangelical churches hope to halt the ``road map'' peace plan.
In May, an evangelical organization called the Jerusalem Prayer Team,
led by 300 American church leaders, including Robertson and Falwell, set
up an ``Adopt a Settler'' pledge drive. It aims to give $55 each to
14,000 settlers.
The group's Internet petition uses the slogan ``the Bible is my road
map'' and claims 10,000 signatures from people urging Bush to save the
settlements and reverse course on the peace plan.
About 220,000 Israelis have settled in the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
Arab lands captured during the 1967 Mideast war.
Many evangelicals take literally God's biblical promise to Abraham to
give the Jewish people the Holy Land. But many oppose the interpretation
of modern Israel's rise as a harbinger of the Second Coming. And some
Israelis worry that the so-called Christian Zionists could become an
obstacle to peace efforts.
``They are motivated by a strong sense of solidarity with the idea of
Jewish resettlement of ancestral Jewish homeland and are unconcerned
with the political, demographic or other ramifications of their
actions,'' said Rabbi David Rosen, director of inter-religious affairs
at the American Jewish Committee.
Israel's government seems less concerned. ``This does not in any way
bind the hands of any Israeli government to make decisions,'' said
Zalman Shoval, an adviser to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Leading the trip to Ariel by 25 members of the Denver Faith Bible
Chapel, from Arvada, Colo., was Cheryl Morrison, 58, wife of the
congregation's pastor and head of the church's projects in Israel.
``Pressuring Israel to do something contrary to God's will is very
dangerous,'' Morrison said, explaining why she thinks the new peace plan
is risky.
The group prayed, then planted leafy seedlings into the thin soil on the
edge of town.
It has become a yearly ritual, inspired by Jeremiah 31:5 - ``Again you
will plant vineyards on the hills of Samaria.'' Samaria is the biblical
name of the northern West Bank.
Helen Strait, 60, a retired high school Spanish teacher, buried the
roots of a plant with soil. ``The Bible says when the Jews return to the
land it will bloom like a rose,'' she said.
Seven years ago the church ``adopted'' Ariel, and through a massive sale
of Christmas fruit baskets to retailers it raises up to $100,000 a year
for welfare projects in Israel, most of it for Ariel.
The church's main project here is the funding of a center for about 150
children with learning disabilities.
During their annual tours of Israel, the visitors also perform Israeli
pop songs in wobbly Hebrew and Israeli folk dances for audiences of
settlers and soldiers.
``We're not anti-Palestinian,'' said Rod Ginn, 36, one of the singers.
``They have to have a place too, just not here.''
© Copyright 2003 AP
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