Saturday Star

Palestine’s spirited champion

- SHAKIRAH THEBUS shakirah.thebus@inl.co.za

EVANGELICA­L Lutheran Christmas Church pastor in Bethlehem, Reverend Dr Munther Isaac, says no one is better suited with the moral credibilit­y to mobilise a global Anti-apartheid Movement than the people of South Africa, who knew its reality too intimately.

Isaac is part of a larger Palestinia­n delegation, including Dr Mustafa Barghouti, Saleh Hijazi and Dr Basem Naim, among several others in South Africa, currently taking part in the Global Anti-apartheid Conference on Palestine today and tomorrow at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesbu­rg.

Standing in front of a segment of a graffiti wall across from St George’s Cathedral, Isaac said the vestige of what was once part of the Berlin Wall was proof that walls of separation and apartheid were meant to fall down.

Isaac joined the St George’s Cathedral’s Sunday Eucharist Service last week, presided over by Reverend Canon Michael Weeder, followed by a sermon at the Groote Kerk in the evening.

The following day, he addressed attendees at Masjidul Quds in Gatesville in collaborat­ion with Gift of the Givers. 6The Palestinia­n reverend is widely known for his outspokenn­ess on the Israeli occupation of Palestine and more recently in referring to Israel’s attacks on Gaza as genocide from as early as October following the events of October 7.

“When we saw people being forced to move from the north to the south, memories of our Nakba in 1948 came to mind when half of the Palestinia­n people became refugees, but we never expected that this would be even worse than the Nakba of 1948, so we had to call it a genocide because we knew what was coming and we knew this was the intention.”

During the Christmas period, Isaac said if Jesus were to be born today, he’d be born under the rubble in Gaza.

During his Christmas sermon, Isaac expressed his outrage over the complicity of the church in the form of their silence, noting that some churches had not even called for a ceasefire in Gaza. He said that mosques and churches had been targeted and attacked, as in the case of hospitals, schools and universiti­es, by the Israeli government.

“We’ve had Palestinia­n Christian women killed by snipers inside the church campus where they were taking refuge. Nobody is safe,” Isaac said.

“I can’t say that the church is entirely silent, but definitely, especially in the West, we’ve been a little bit disappoint­ed, even angry by the positions of some, whether it’s the justificat­ion of this genocide, Christian Zionism or the silence of many who chose neutrality and what I call naive peacemakin­g in which they want to be neutral.

“When there is a genocide, you can’t just sit on the sides and watch and pray for peace. You have to intervene, you have to speak out, you have to call things by their name. And this is why we have been urging the church to speak louder, even challengin­g and speaking in this forceful manner.”

The aim of the conference is to mobilise a global Anti-apartheid Movement to hold Israel to account and dismantle apartheid policies.

Chair of the conference steering committee, Reverend Frank Chikane, said a steering committee was constitute­d in May last year, comprising Palestine solidarity organisati­ons, faith-based organisati­ons, academics, activists and others.

“The objective is to develop strategies to mobilise the people of the world,” Chikane said.

 ?? ?? Reverend Munther Isaac
Reverend Munther Isaac

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