Catholic Bishops in the Holy Land
on Israel’s Nation State Law
Old City of Jerusalem with the Holy Sepulchre, the Dome of the Rock, and the Mount of Olives.- AFP |
The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land
released a statement on 2 November responding to the Nation State Law of 19
July 2018 passed by the Israeli Knesset.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
It is out of a “spirit of dialogue” that the Catholic
Bishops of the Holy Land speak out in a statement responding to the “issue of
the Nation State Law passed by the Israeli Knesset on 19 July 2018.
We are all citizens
The legislation at issue limits the promotion and protection
offered by the State of Israel to “Jewish citizens of the State of Israel”. In
direct response to this, the Bishops write:
“We must draw the attention of the authorities to a
simple fact: our faithful, the Christians, our fellow citizens, Muslim, Druze
and Baha’i, all of us who are Arabs, are no less citizens of this country than
our Jewish brothers and sisters.”
Discrimination
The Bishops also draw attention to the ongoing tension
arising from the definition of Israel’s democracy being both “Jewish” and
“democratic”. It is the Jewish majority who determines what this means, while
the Arab minority experiences the discrimination caused by the imbalance of the
“Jewish” element over the “democratic”. An ongoing struggle to “protect the
rights of all citizens, to guarantee as much as possible the values of
equality, justice and democracy” received a milestone victory with the 1992 passage
of the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty, the statement says.
Legal discrimination
Recent passage of the new Nation State legislation “is a
blow to these values”, the statement continues. Now there is a “constitutional
and legal basis for discrimination” because “Jewish citizens are to be
privileged over and above other citizens”. In addition to “seriously
downgrading the standing of the Arab language”, the law ignores “Palestinian
Arabs, other major religious communities, Christians and Muslims as well as
Druze and Baha’i”.
Demand for equality
The statement continues with a declaration that the
above-mentioned groups “demand to be treated as equal citizens.” In addition,
equality must incorporate civic, ethnic, and religious identities. This demand
is based on the fact that “Jerusalem and the whole of this Holy Land is a
heritage we share with Jews and Muslims, Druze and Baha’i, a heritage we are
called upon to protect from division and internecine strife”.
Call to rescind the law
In conclusion, the Bishops “call on the authorities to
rescind” the law since it is contradictory to both the humanistic and
democratic basis of Israeli legislation and international law. Thus all can be
assured that the “State of Israel seeks to promote and protect the
welfare and the safety of all its citizens”.
Signatories
There are 25 signatories to the statement, representing the
Latin, Armenian, Melkite, Chaldean and Maronite Churches, as well as the
representatives of men and women religious serving in the Holy Land.
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