Sacred Christian Site Emmaus Destroyed By The Evil Racist Jews' Anti-Christian Anti-Muslim Apartheid Regime Israel
One of the most covered up aspects ofthe racist Jews' Israel regime is its systemic mistreatment of Christiansfrom its earliest days
“The
Road to Emmaus,” 1877 painting by Robert Zund. The Gospel of Luke
account remains beloved reading and gives inspiration to spiritual
retreats. From United Methodist News Service. (source)
In 1967 Israel ordered the razing of Emmaus (the site where the
Bible says the resurrected Jesus broke bread with two of his disciples)
After destroying Emmaus, Israeli soldiers forced the inhabitants
to trek for days to find refuge. Four seniors and a one-year-old baby
died along the way. Elderly and disabled residents who were unable to
leave their homes had their houses demolished on top of them. Eighteen
were killed, buried underneath the rubble
Israel then confiscated the land and built its famous Canada Park on the location of the obliterated village (see video below)
Meanwhile, Christian churches throughout the US (which gives Israel over $10 million per day)
retell the Biblical story of Emmaus in inspirational sermons, unaware
of the modern version… and of the victims in need of succor
And this wasn’t the first such incident…
By Alison Weir
Emmaus is a profoundly important place in Christianity. The Bible says
that after Jesus’ death and resurrection, he appeared before two of his
disciples while they were walking on the road to Emmaus, although at
first they didn’t recognize him. When they arrived in Emmaus, Jesus took
bread, blessed it, broke it in pieces, and gave it to them.
In 1967, after Israel launched
its Six Day War, Israel expelled the inhabitants of Emmaus and
obliterated almost all traces of the village, along with two other
Palestinian villages nearby. This was part of the Israeli strategy, in
the words of an Israeli historian, “to take over as much of Palestine as possible with as few Palestinians as possible” (a strategy initiated in the 1948 war to establish the modern state of Israel and then to erase the Palestinian presence).
Israeli journalist Amira Hass describes
Emmaus before it was leveled: “Schools, mosques, an ancient church,
olive presses, paths to fields and orchards, bubbling streams, mountain
air, sabra bushes, carob and olive and deciduous trees, harvested
fields, graves, water cisterns.”
Israel then “brought in the bulldozers and destroyed and detonated
and trampled. Not for the first time, not for the last. And the owners
of all that beauty – the elderly, the children, the infants – heard and
watched the explosions from a kilometer or two away.”
The villages’ inhabitants then “trekked for days
through the mountains to Ramallah, leaving their belongings behind.
Four seniors and a one-year-old baby died along the way. The elderly and
disabled residents who were unable to leave their homes had their
houses demolished on top of them. Eighteen were killed, buried
underneath the rubble.”
IDF soldiers expel the residents of Imwas (originally named Emmaus)from their village (source)
In 1972 Israel built its popular Canada Park on the location, named
after Jewish Canadians who had been persuaded to donate for the venture.
Hass writes that the park “was designed to conceal and bury” its war crime.
Christians often focus on the Biblical Emmaus story
Today, Christian pastors often retell the story of Jesus’ appearance to his disciples in Emmaus.
The numerous paintings of this sacred event are featured on Christian websites around the country. The story is often used as an inspirational message to Christians, for example, to become “more committed to serving others.” Below are just a few of the numerous examples:
“The journey to Emmaus is our journey,” Today’s Catholic (source)“Simple Easter Lessons On the Road To Emmaus” (Christ on the Roadto Emmaus, c. 1725/1730) (source)“We
should be asking ourselves how to use this moment to recognizeChrist’s
presence with us on this road….. to help those who are suffering…(Rembrandt, 1648) (source)“The Mission of Emmaus is to empower leaders to be the hands and feetof Christ.” (source)“On
occasion I have felt in a sense that I have walked with Him alongthe
dusty Road to Emmaus.” (Road to Emmaus, by John Mcnaughton.) (source)From the website “Emmaus Road Ministries” (source)From Emmous Homes, a faith-based nonprofit that helps provide homesfor people with development disabilities. (source)
Yet, almost none of the sites featuring the Biblical story of Emmaus
seem aware of the modern story, and of the people made homeless and in
need of help – perhaps because so few know these facts. As author Grace
Halsell wrote in a powerful essay,
most Christians are unaware of what they don’t know about Israel. “They
were indoctrinated by U.S. supporters of Israel in their own country
and when they traveled to the Land of Christ most did so under Israeli
sponsorship.”
A moving film recounting the facts about Emmaus, “Ritorno a Emmaus”
(Return to Emmaus), was broadcast on Swiss Italian Television on May 29,
1987 but was not shown in the U.S. This is the first time it’s
available in English:
Historian Tom Suarez reports
that this was not the first such action in the area. Israeli soldiers
had brutallt attacked one of the three villages in 1950 and 1951,
quoting from his book “State of Terror”:
On the 2nd of November 1950, an Israeli patrol of twelve
soldiers penetrated about 400 metres into the West Bank and discovered
three children from Yalo village collecting wood. One, an eight-year old
girl, ran away at the sight of the patrol, escaping with a bullet in
her thigh. The soldiers dragged away the other two children, a brother
and sister aged twelve and ten, just as their father and uncle rushed to
the scene. As described by Glubb, the children were forced into a ditch
“and there butchered by one soldier with a sten-gun, while the rest of
the patrol looked on. All this was plainly visible to their parents,
standing helpless on the border only a few hundred yards away”.
The boy was dead, with two bullets in his head and one in his
shoulder. The girl—ten-year old Fakhriyeh Muhammad Ali Alayyan—had been
shot seven times, but was still breathing. Once the soldiers moved on,
her father carried her away, while the uncle carried the boy’s body.
Fakhriyeh lived several hours, long enough to make a statement to the
authorities.
This atrocity was unusual in that it was witnessed, documented, and
hit the British press, saddling Israel with a public relations problem.
Questions were raised in the House of Commons, and the British Zionist
establishment’s denials convinced few. Both the MAC and UN observers
confirmed the incident as do, we know these decades later, internal
Israeli records.
Yalo was targeted again less than three months later, on 29 January
(1951). About sixteen Israeli soldiers descended on the village,
approaching simultaneously from two directions while attacking with
gunfire and grenades. The Tulkarm area was invaded by Israeli soldiers
on the night on 2 February, and the following day the IDF killed three
Palestinians in an attack on Saffa.
Israel’s long history of anti-Christian actions
While Israeli violence against Muslims is somewhat familiar, many
people are unaware that Israel has also perpetrated anti-Christian
actions from its earliest days.
Dead
Sea Scholar Millar Burrows reported that a friend in Jerusalem had been
told, ‘When we get control you can take your dead Christ and go home.’”
(source)
“During and after Israel’s founding 1947-49 war, Zionist forces
attacked a number of Christian sites. Donald Neff, former Time Magazine
Jerusalem bureau chief and author of five books on Israel-Palestine,
reports in detail on Zionist attacks on Christian sites in May 1948, the
month of Israel’s birth.
“Neff tells us that a group of Christian leaders complained that
month that Zionists had killed and wounded hundreds of people, including
children, refugees and clergy, at Christian churches and humanitarian
institutions.
“For example, the group charged that “‘many children were killed or
wounded’ by Jewish shells on the Convent of Orthodox Copts…; eight
refugees were killed and about 120 wounded at the Orthodox Armenian
Convent…; and that Father Pierre Somi, secretary to the Bishop, had been
killed and two wounded at the Orthodox Syrian Church of St. Mark.”
“’The group’s statement said Arab forces had abided by their promise
to respect Christian institutions, but that the Jews had forcefully
occupied Christian structures and been indiscriminate in shelling
churches,’ reports Neff. He quotes a Catholic priest: ‘Jewish soldiers
broke down the doors of my church and robbed many precious and sacred
objects. Then they threw the statues of Christ down into a nearby
garden.’ [The priest] added that Jewish leaders had reassured that
religious buildings would be respected, ‘but their deeds do not
correspond to their words.’
“After Zionist soldiers invaded and looted a convent in Tiberias, the
U.S. Consulate sent a bitter dispatch back to the State Department
complaining of “the Jewish attitude in Jerusalem towards Christian
institutions.”
“An American Christian Biblical scholar concurred, reporting that a
friend in Jerusalem had been told, ‘When we get control you can take
your dead Christ and go home.’” (For citations, go here.)
Israeli violence against Christians & desecration of churches
Garden
Tomb, believed by some to be the site of Christ’s burial and
resurrection. In 1948 Israeli forces killed its warden and tried to kill
his wife. (photo)
In the years following the creation of the state, Israeli violence
against Christians and desecration of church property continued to be
widespread. Neff describes some of the numerous attacks:
Churches were again desecrated during the 1967 war when
Israel captured East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza, completing the
occupation of all of Palestine. On July 21, 1967, the Reverend James L.
Kelso, a former moderator of the United Presbyterian Church and
long-time resident in Palestine, complained of extensive damage to
churches adding: “So significant was this third Jewish war against the
Arabs that one of the finest missionaries of the Near East called it
‘perhaps the most serious setback that Christendom has had since the
fall of Constantinople in 1453.’”
Kelso continued: “How did Israel respect church property in the
fighting…? They shot up the Episcopal Cathedral [in Jerusalem], just as
they had done in 1948. They smashed down the Episcopal school for
boys…The Israelis wrecked and looted the YMCA…They wrecked the big
Lutheran hospital…The Lutheran center for cripples also suffered…”
Nancy Nolan, wife of a physician at the American University Hospital
in Beirut, who was in Jerusalem during and after the fighting, charged
that “while the Israeli authorities proclaim to the world that all
religions will be respected and protected, and post notices identifying
the Holy Places, Israeli soldiers and youths are throwing stink bombs in
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.
“The Church of St. Anne, whose crypt marks the birthplace of the
Virgin Mary, has been severely damaged and the Church of the Nativity in
Bethlehem also was damaged. The wanton killing of the Warden of the
Garden Tomb followed by the shooting into the tomb itself, in an attempt
to kill the warden’s wife, was another instance that we knew first-hand
which illustrated the utter disregard shown by the occupation forces
toward the Holy Places and the religious sensibilities of the people in
Jordan and in the rest of the world.”
“The desecration of churches…includes smoking in the churches,
littering the churches, taking dogs inside and entering in inappropriate
manner of dress. Behavior such as this cannot be construed other than
as a direct insult to the whole Christian world.”
Desecration has occurred not only in times of war. As recently as
1995, an Israeli soldier, Daniel Koren, 22, entered St. Anthony Catholic
Church in Jaffa and went on a shooting rampage, firing more than 100
bullets in the altar and the cross above it but causing no injuries.
Koren said his Judaic convictions forced him to destroy all physical
images of God, and admitted that he had staged a prior attack in
Jerusalem’s Gethsemane Church.
The Church of Scotland school where a mob of 200 Israelis beat children and damaged the school in 1963. (photo)
Perhaps the worst outbreak of organized desecration of Christian
institutions came on Sept. 10, 1963, when hundreds of ultra-orthodox
Jews simultaneously attacked Christian missions in Jaffa, Haifa and
Jerusalem. (One has to say “perhaps because reporting on this sensitive
subject in the U.S. media has been so poor over the decades.) At any
rate, the attacks were a concerted effort to intimidate Christians in
Israel by a religious vigilante group called Hever Peelei Hamahane
Hatorati, the Society of Activists of the Torah Camp. In an attack on
the Church of Scotland school in Jaffa, Christian children were beaten
and considerable damage was caused to the school by at least 200
rampaging Jews.
Other attacks occurred at two nearby church schools, the Greek
Catholic missionary school of St. Joseph and a Christian Brothers
school. In Jerusalem, attacks occurred at the St. Joseph convent and the
Finnish Lutheran mission school. In Haifa, the American-European Beth
El Messianic Mission Children’s Hostel and School was attacked. No
serious damage occurred in any of the attacks except at the Scotland
school. More than 100 Jews were convicted in the attacks, none of them
receiving more than small fines and suspended sentences.
The first half of the 1980s, with Likud governments in control, was a
particularly active period for Jewish bigots. On Oct. 8, 1982, the
Baptist Church in Jerusalem was burned down. Kerosene had been sprinkled
on the church’s wooden chapel, constructed in 1933. Although no one was
ever charged in the arson, the Baptist Center’s bookstore had been
vandalized a dozen times in previous years, and Jews were suspected.
When the Baptists sought to rebuild the church, Jews demonstrated
against the project and the Jewish district planning commission refused
to grant a building permit. In 1985, the Israeli Supreme Court advised
the Baptists to leave the all-Jewish area.
On Christmas Day in 1983, a hotel in Tiberias where Christians held
meetings was set afire, the latest in a series of attacks on a small
group of about 50 Christians. Two Jews were arrested in the arson
incident. Other attacks included stones thrown through windows at the
hotel while the group was meeting and break-ins at the homes of members
of the group. The anti-missionary group Yad Le’Achim complained that
Christian missionaries were offering money, clothes, jewelry and tennis
shoes to listen to Christian lectures.
Just over a fortnight later, on Jan. 11, 1984, suspected Jewish
extremists stacked hymnals on a piano in a Christian prayer room in
Jerusalem and set them afire. Also in the same week angry Jews
protesting Christian proselytizing caused Beth Shalom, a Christian
evangelical group, to withdraw its plans to build a multimillion-dollar
hotel in Jerusalem. Beth Shalom took its action after about 150 Jews
showed up at a city council meeting with placards reading “You can’t buy
me” and “I didn’t immigrate to live next door to missionaries.” A
leader of the protest, Rabbi Moshe Berlinger, compared Christian
missionaries to Trojan horses.
Jewish infringements on Christian rights became so bad by 1990 that
on Dec. 20 the leaders of Christian churches in Jerusalem took the
extraordinary decision to restrict Christmas celebrations to protest
“the continuing sad state of affairs in our land,” including
encroachment by Israel on traditional Christian institutions. Among
concerns expressed by the patriarchs and heads of churches were attempts
by Jewish settlers to move into the Old City and an “erosion of the
traditional rights and centuries-old privileges of the churches,”
including imposition by Israel of municipal and state taxes on the
churches.
The statement added: “We express our deep concern over new problems
confronting the local church. They interfere with the proper functioning
of our religious institutions, and we call upon the civil authorities
in the country to safeguard our historic rights and status honored by
all governments.”
Anti-Christian prejudice helps account for the fact that the number
of Christian Palestinians in all of former Palestine had dwindled to
only 50,000 in 1995. They no longer were a major presence in either
Jerusalem or Ramallah, and they were fast losing their majority status
in Bethlehem.
When Israel was established in 1948, the Palestinian Christian
community had numbered 200,000, compared to roughly 600,000 Jews in
Palestine at the time. Now the Christians are not even one percent of
the population of Israel/Palestine. Of today’s estimated total 400,000
Christian Palestinians, most now are living in their own diaspora,
mainly in the Americas. [Footnotes here]
Recent anti-Christian actions
A
nun looks at a heavily damaged Church of Multiplication after arsonistsset it on fire in 2015. A passage from a Jewish prayer, calling for the
wipingout of idol worship, was found scrawled in red spray paint on a
wall outsidethe church. (source)
This pattern has continued in recent years. A few examples can be found in these articles:
These actions are enabled by the massive amount of Americans’ tax money that U.S. politicians, under the influence of the Israel lobby,
expend on behalf if Israel. Some of the money is given directly to
Israel, some is disbursed on items because they benefit Israel; the
combined total is over $20 million per day.
The American public permits this misuse of their money for two reasons: (1) U.S. media rarely tell Americans how much of their money is being spent on Israel, and (2) Americans have received Israeli-centric reporting through the years, leaving them largely unaware of the type of Israeli actions described above.
An Israeli journalist explained
in 1996: “We believe with absolute certitude that right now, with the
White House in our hands, the Senate in our hands and The New York Times
in our hands, the lives of others do not count the same way as our
own.”
A principled minority of Israelis have long opposed this view, but
their efforts to stop Israeli violence are undermined by the blank check
US politicians give Israel, and the pro-Israel spin mainstream media
provide no matter what it does. Until Americans demand that their
elected representatives stop pandering to pro-Israel campaign donors,
and push back on media disinformation, this will continue.
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