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"I am listening. What is
God's message? God's message is peace for his people, for his
faithful, if only they renounce their folly" (Ps 84/85, 9).
1.
A Blessed and Joyous Christmas to all who seek peace and justice
in this Holy Land. May the peace and joy of Christmas fill your
hearts and minds. With all of you, and with the psalmist,
"I am listening. What is God's message? God's
message is peace for his people, for his faithful, if only they
renounce their folly" (Ps 84/85, 9).
We celebrate Christmas and we
rejoice so as to renew our energies, learn patience, and conquer
the forces of evil in our land. As we celebrate Christmas, we
pray, we pray more than ever, we fast, and we purify our hearts
and our intentions so that we might be filled with the holiness,
life, love, and strength of spirit that are needed to build the
peace that seems so difficult, if not impossible, to attain.
2.
At
this time, there seem to be prospects of peace. We are hopeful
that peace will indeed come about, after so many prayers, so many
lives sacrificed, so many tears, and so much suffering. We hope
that the political leaders will have the courage needed to sign a
just and definitive peace and to accept the painful sacrifices
this might entail either for themselves personally or for their
people.
Each one of us has surely drawn
lessons from the past violence that has destroyed the image of God
in both the perpetrators and the victims, the oppressors and the
oppressed. Though, in recent years, there have been many victims,
much fear, many homes demolished, and much agricultural land
devastated, we are still at the same point. Israelis are still
looking for security, and Palestinians are still yearning for an
end to the occupation, for their freedom and for their
independence.
Yet, both peoples are destined to
live together in peace. This is our conviction, and we believe
that it remains possible.
3.
However, the people must be freed from fear and given reasons to
hope. It is the role of the leaders to facilitate this process.
Palestinian leaders are now preparing for their elections with
great calm and have adopted plans for peace. Israeli leaders are
invited to do likewise by putting an end to their military
interventions and by stopping the construction of the wall as well
as the hunt for the wanted, which only increases the number of
prisoners and dead. Peace cannot be held hostage to those who
still see violence as a means of obtaining justice and peace.
For its part, the wall of separation
will really never separate or protect. Quite to the contrary, it
will only increase hate, ignorance of the other, and, therefore,
hostility toward the other and, as a further consequence, violence
and insecurity. What is needed is a search, in all humility, for
the underlying causes of the violence. In all humility and
sincerity, the cries of the poor and the oppressed must be heard.
Ending the oppression and the humiliation of the Palestinians
would at the same time put an end to the fear and insecurity of
the Israelis. It would also put an end to those who are exploiting
the attendant oppression and the poverty.
The wall of separation will not
produce secure borders. Only friendly hearts can produce them.
With friendly hearts, all borders will become pure symbols and
disappear before the life and joy that will come from being able
to live in peace and fraternity.
4.
Religious leaders have a double role at this time: to continue
insisting on justice, on the dignity of the human person, on
security, and on the end to occupation. But at the same time,
they must point out the paths to peace. Neither of the two
peoples is condemned to continue offering up its youth to death.
Each one has the desire and the right to see its young people live
like their counterparts elsewhere in the world. The Israelis are
not condemned to live eternally in insecurity and war. Likewise,
the Palestinians are not condemned to live eternally asking for an
end to the occupation and to remain on the road to death.
5. We have seen the life and we have
heard what says the Lord. God says “peace for his people, for
his faithful, if only they renounce their folly" (Ps 84/85, 9).
The Christian significance of Christmas is this: the Word of
God has made his entrance into the world and has brought us life.
Christmas is a promise of life, joy, and dignity in the presence
of God who has chosen our land to be his dwelling: “No one has
ever seen God. It is the only Son, who is close to the Father’s
heart, who has made him known. From his fullness we have all of us
received” (Jn 1,18.16). Only in this perspective and in the
presence of God can the peace of Jerusalem and of the Holy Land be
built.
To all, a Blessed Christmas filled
with Peace, Justice and Joy.
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Michel Sabbah, Patriarch
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