JERUSALEM, Israel, Nov. 18,
2004 (CNA)
- Representatives of different Christian denominations
signed a statement this week exhorting the faithful
around the world to make pilgrimages to the Holy
Land to help stop the massive exodus of Christians.
The statement entitled, “A call to
all people of faith: Visit the Holy Land,” was
signed by the Apostolic Nuncio to the Holy
Land, Archbishop Pietro Sambi, as well as by
religious leaders of the Catholic Church, the
Armenian Church, the Greek and Russian Orthodox
Churches, and Evangelicals.
According to the guardian of the Holy Land,
Father Pierre Battista Pizzaballa, OFM, the
signing of this document is a sign that while “there
are many things that divide us,” there
are “many more that unite” Christians.
Archbishop Pietro Sambi pointed out that for
Christians in the Holy Land, pilgrimages are
the only times of “joy and spiritual
enrichment” in which they can enjoy an
environment of peace and thus set aside for
a few moments the tensions between Israelis
and Palestinians.
According to a 2003 report by the Franciscans
who are the custodians of the Holy Land, the
fear is that the Christian presence will continue
to decrease in the region. In 2002, the document
said, Christians in this part of world formed
only 1.6% of the populace.
The data takes on particular significance
when one considers that in 1840 Christians
in Jerusalem, who were mainly Palestinian,
formed 25% of the populace. In 2002 this percentage
dropped to 2%.
The drop in the Christian population is countered
by the growth of the Jewish and Muslim populations.
In the case of the Jews, they have grown from
4,000 in 1840 to 400,000 in 2002, while the
Muslim population has grown from 4,000 to 143,000,
due to their high birth rate, which enables
the population to double every 25 years.
The decrease in the Christian population is not only felt in Jerusalem,
but also in Bethlehem and Nazareth.
“ Along with the Christian exodus the Christian vision of man regarding
the respect for the human person and human life is also disappearing, in a region
in which these values are in open decline,” said the report.
The statement laments that “governments
of the Christian West, driven by a false vision
of religious freedom and perhaps by an exacerbated
secularism” insist on helping the Palestinians
instead of the Christians.
Israel’s Minister of Tourism, Gideon Ezra, said that during the
Jubilee Year of 2000, “60% of the 2.67 million visitors to the
Holy Land were Christians, while of the 1.5 million visitors projected
for this year, only 29% will be coming on pilgrimage.”
Courtesy of ZENIT.
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