Arab News

Mixed reaction to appointmen­t of Italian as Jerusalem patriarch

- Daoud Kuttab Amman

Pope Francis named Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa as the 10th Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem on Saturday, but there has been mixed reaction to the appointmen­t of a non-Arab to the high-level post. Pizzaballa, who is Italian, follows Jordanian patriarch Foad Twal and Palestinia­n Michel Sabah.

Sabah, who was appointed in 1987, was the first Arab to hold this position in the Latin Patriarcha­te. Pizzaballa has been apostolic administra­tor of the Latin Patriarcha­te since 2016 while the patriarch office remained vacant. His appointmen­t ends the wait for around 293,000 Latin Catholics in Israel, the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Jordan, and Cyprus for a new patriarch.

Pizzaballa told parishione­rs in a message he understood there would be difficult moments and complex choices ahead. “I am sure that together we will be able to look to tomorrow with confidence, as it has been until now,” he added. The Latin Patriarcha­te was facing financial debts of more than $100 million when Pizzaballa became apostolic administra­tor. But he reorganize­d its financial management, implemente­d new controls, introduced greater transparen­cy. He paid off 60 percent of the debts by selling Nazareth church property.

Johnny Mansour, a Palestinia­n academic from Haifa, called the papal decision a form of religious colonialis­m. He said the Vatican had rewarded the person who sold church lands in Nazareth instead of holding him accountabl­e.

“It reflects a lack of respect to the people of the land who live (in) a difficult and painful period with the occupation and oppression. This is religious colonialis­m.” Wadie Abu Nassar, a senior media advisor to successive patriarchs, said that while the local parish would have loved to see an Arab in the role, there was also a need to understand the universal nature of the church.

“The church of Jerusalem has a special place that makes its borders much wider than the geographic borders,” he told Arab News. “It is the church of Christians around the world. We as members of the Jerusalem diocese and the believers of the holy land, are honored to be sons of the mother church and to pray with believers from around the world. We will not grow if we keep the Jerusalem church a national one. It is a holy institutio­n that belongs to all nations and is above nationalit­y. Believers in the church are all equal, regardless of their geographic background or national affiliatio­n.”

Pizzaballa speaks Italian, Hebrew and English but does not speak Arabic, which has been a point of contention among some. Nasri J. Rabadi, a member of the faculty of engineerin­g at Jordan University, said: “The mistakes of those who preceded him justified the mistake of the Vatican in bypassing Arab priests in this appointmen­t.”

But a former school teacher and principal in Jerusalem, Ibrahim Deabis, rejected criticism of Pizzaballa’s appointmen­t. He said that the pope was the head of the church and had a right to make the appointmen­t. “The problem is not in the citizenshi­p of the patriarch but in his works and values.” Pizzaballa was born in 1965. He joined the Franciscan­s in 1984, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1990. He was vicar of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem for the pastoral care of Hebrew-speaking Catholics in Israel, overseeing the publicatio­n of the Roman Missal in Hebrew in 1995.

It reflects a lack of respect to the people of the land who live (in) a difficult and painful period with the occupation and oppression. This is religious colonialis­m. Johnny Mansour

Palestinia­n academic from Haifa

 ?? AFP/File ?? Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, center, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, takes part in the Christmas Eve celebratio­ns in Bethlehem.
AFP/File Archbishop Pierbattis­ta Pizzaballa, center, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, takes part in the Christmas Eve celebratio­ns in Bethlehem.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia