| Church of Scotland unmoved by Zionist bullies 
 Editor
 
   Church of Scotland report challenging Jews’ “divine right” to Palestinian homeland unchanged
 
 Impertinent complaints politely sidestepped By  Stuart Littlewood
 
 The Church of Scotland’s revised report,  The Inheritance of Abraham?’ A Report on the “Promised Land”, has now been released ahead of their Assembly.
 
 The Church felt obliged to change some of it after Jewish leaders  sought to interfere, one complaining that it was “an outrage to  everything that interfaith dialogue stands for… and closes the door on  meaningful dialogue”. Another said: “It reads like an Inquisition-era  polemic against Jews and Judaism.”
 
 The Israeli ambassador moaned that it belittled the deeply held  Jewish attachment to the land of Israel in a way which was “truly  hurtful”.
 
 So do the changes amount to a caving-in to Zionist meddlers?
 
 Cool under fire I soon gave up comparing the two versions word for word to spot the  difference. The press release gives no clues either. In it, Convener  Sally Foster-Fulton simply says:
 
 
 We believe that this new version has paid attention to  the concern some of the language of the previous version caused amongst  the Jewish community whilst holding true to our concerns about the  injustices being perpetrated because of policies of the government of  Israel against the Palestinian people that we wanted to highlight. The  views of this report are consistent with the views held by the Church of  Scotland over many years.Cool under fire, this lady.
 
 
 The report’s key conclusion remains that “the Church of Scotland does  not agree with a premise that scripture offers any peoples a divine  right to territory”. At least they stand firm on that.
 
 Points of contention They also recap on what they already believe, and here’s where disagreements might flare up. For example:
 
 
 Yet Israel’s right to exist seems somehow  inconsistent with the Church’s statement that scripture does not bestow  a divine right to someone else’s land. Even if the Church believes that  the UN’s 1947 Partition Plan was morally and legally right, what does  it say to the Jewish terror groups that were driving Palestinians from  their homes before the ink was dry and before the state of Israel was  declared? What about the hundreds of towns and villages not even  allocated to the Jewish state in the UN plan but erased by Israel in  order to implant itself. What about the systematic ethnic cleansing and  the criminal occupation of additional Arab territories in the 1967 war?  Perhaps the Church should remain silent on the “right to exist”  question, at least until Israel declares its internationally recognized  boundaries and halts its illegal expansion.“Israel is a recognized state and has the right to exist in peace and security.”
 
 
 Israel doesn’t recognize the Palestinians’ right to a state.“There should be a Palestinian state, recognized by the  United Nations, that should have the right to exist in peace and  security.”
 
 
 The Jewish state is a racist entity.“We condemn racism and religious hatred.”
 
 
 “Recent” actions? Israel has been  building illegal settlements since 1967. Gaza has been blockaded since  2006. The West Bank has lived under permanent blockade for decades.“We are especially concerned at the recent actions of the  government of Israel in its support for settlements, for the  construction of the security barrier or ‘the wall’ within occupied  territory, for the blockade of Gaza and for the anti-boycott law.”
 
 
 Well said.“We assert our sincere belief that to be critical of the  policies of the Israeli government is a legitimate part of our witness  and we strongly reject accusations of anti-Semitic bias. We regularly  engage with and critique policies of all governments, where we deem them  to be contrary to our understanding of God’s wish for humanity.”
 
 Central to the Church’s discussion is this excellent passage:
 
 
 To Christians in the 21st century, promises about the  land of Israel shouldn’t be intended to be taken literally, or as  applying to a defined geographical territory; the “promised land” in the  Bible is not a place, so much as a metaphor of how things ought to be  among the people of God. This “promised land” can be found or built  anywhere.The report’s key conclusions appear the same as before. Christians  should not be supporting any claims by any people to an exclusive or  even privileged divine right to possess particular territory. It is a  misuse of the Hebrew Bible (the Christian Old Testament) and the New  Testament to use it as a topographic guide to settle contemporary  conflicts over land.
 
 
 Regarding Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory, the Church  remains committed to the following principles (previously set out and  agreed by the General Assembly):
 
 
 That the current situation is characterised by an  inequality in power, therefore reconciliation can only be possible if  the Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and  the blockade of Gaza, are ended.This stance seems pretty robust to me, and the Church’s support for refugees’ right of return is very welcome.
 The Church of Scotland condemns violence, terrorism and intimidation no
 
 matter the perpetrator.
 
 The Church of Scotland affirms the right of Israelis and Palestinians  to live within secure and fixed boundaries in states of their own.
 
 The Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank are illegal under international law.
 
 The Church of Scotland should do nothing to promote the viability of the illegal settlements on Palestinian land.
 
 That human rights of all peoples should be respected, and this should  include the right of return and/or compensation for Palestinian  refugees.
 
 That negotiations between the government of Israel and the  Palestinian Authority about peace with justice must resume at the  earliest opportunity and the Church of Scotland should continue to put  political pressure on all parties to commence such negotiations, and  asking all parties to recognize the inequality in power which  characterizes this situation.
 
 That there are safe rights of access to the sacred sites for the main religions in the area.
 
 
 
 However it also raises questions. Why, having already emphasized that  the crisis in the Holy Land is characterized by “an inequality of  power”, call for the two sides to be thrown together again in fruitless  negotiations? Negotiate what? Freedom? Is that negotiable? The return of  stolen lands and property? Is that negotiable? These matters are  already decided by international and humanitarian law and numerous UN  resolutions waiting to be enforced. How can the Church approve so-called  “negotiations” while one party is still under illegal occupation with a  gun to his head? What justice is likely to come out of that?
 
 The Church does urge the UK government and the European Union “to do  all that is within their power to ensure that international law is  upheld”, but that surely must come first, rather than relying on  discredited talks.
 
 The report going in front of the Church’s Assembly appears unchanged  in substance and has cleverly sidestepped objections. The only  caving-in, so far, has been the senior clergy’s agreement to listen to  the Zionists’ impertinent demands in the first place.
 
 I can only wish the Assembly an enjoyable week ahead and, on this issue, firm judgement.
 
 redressonline.com
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