Kuwait Times

Pastor slams Western church ‘silence’ on Gaza

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For his first service of 2024, Palestinia­n pastor Munther Isaac read a biblical passage in which God chooses the weakest “to shame the powerful”, a key theme to him as the Zionist attack on Gaza rages on.

Since the start of the Zionist attack, Isaac has tirelessly preached for a ceasefire in Gaza and reproached Western churches for their “silence”. Isaac, 45, said the passage, from Saint Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthian­s, is more relevant than ever given the current situation in the Palestinia­n territory.

“I believe God is using the children of Gaza to challenge the hypocrisy of the Western world, the racism, the prejudice of the Western world towards Palestinia­ns and towards the children of Gaza,” he told AFP. Isaac is a pastor at the Evangelica­l Lutheran Christmas Church in Bethlehem in the Zionist-occupied West Bank, the city revered by Christians as the birthplace of Jesus Christ.

Around 50,000 Christian Palestinia­ns live in the West Bank and Jerusalem, according to the US State Department’s 2022 Report on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom. Isaac said he felt that, as an English speaker and a Christian, he had to speak up against the “genocide happening in front of everybody’s eyes” in Gaza.

Viral video

“Many in the world will not listen to the actual stories of the people of Gaza but they will listen to me because I’m a pastor, because they resonate with a Christian clergy speaking,” he said. A video of Isaac labelling the Zionist entity’s actions in Gaza “genocide” during a sermon in December has been shared tens of thousands of times on social media.

During the sermon he also slammed Christian leaders for not speaking out, telling his congregati­on that “silence is complicity”. “And we still don’t see strong calls from church leaders calling for a ceasefire,” he told AFP, calling on Christian leaders to visit the West Bank, occupied by the Zionist entity since 1967. The Zionist entity and its powerful ally, the United States, have vehemently rejected accusation­s of genocide.

Nativity scene

Instead, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently said his army was waging a war of “unparallel­ed morality”. But Isaac said the Zionist entity was being treated with “impunity” and

“can break not just the internatio­nal law, they can commit war crimes, and no one’s going to hold them accountabl­e”. “We’re angry that the world does not see us, does not look at Palestinia­ns as equals,” he said.

Isaac draws on sacred texts in his weekly sermons to cast light on the horrors of the war, now in its fourth month. At Christmas, he set up a nativity scene with images of baby Jesus, wrapped in a Palestinia­n scarf called a keffiyeh, lying in the rubble of what was meant to

represent a bombed-out house.

Images of the scene quickly spread on social media. “We thought of making this nativity scene because we see Jesus’s image in every child pulled from under the rubble, especially when they are dehumanize­d in the eyes of the world,” the pastor said. Isaac said the image resonating with so many people showed that “many in the world actually feel our pain and many are not pleased with the actions of their government­s”.

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