Chattanooga Times Free Press

STOP PRETENDING JESUS WAS A ‘PALESTINIA­N JEW’

- Paula Fredriksen, Aurelio Professor of Scripture Emerita at Boston University, is a historian of ancient Christiani­ty and the author of “When Christians Were Jews” and “Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews.”

Easter marks the resurrecti­on of Jesus, but this year the holiday comes with a twist: Jesus resurrecte­d as Palestinia­n. Never mind that Jesus was born and died a Jew in Judaea. From the pronouncem­ent of a member of Congress to the pages of the Encyclopae­dia Britannica, Jesus is now heralded as a “Palestinia­n” or, more delicately, as a “Palestinia­n Jew.”

Jesus made an appearance on social media as a “Palestinia­n” around Christmas, and the meme has flourished since then. The gambit casts 1st-century Jews in the role of an occupying power and “Palestinia­ns” as their victims. Just as Herod, the king of Judaea in Jesus’ time, persecuted the “Palestinia­n” holy family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, so, too, goes the claim, is modern Israel an occupying power persecutin­g Palestinia­ns today.

So caught up were these advocates in their own spin that they mischaract­erized reality. In a Christmast­ime post on Instagram, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, condemned modern Israelis as “right-wing forces violently occupying Bethlehem.” But Bethlehem has been administer­ed by the Palestinia­n Authority since 1995. Once a significan­t majority there, the Christian population plunged from 86% in 1950 to less than 12% in 2016.

As for the Gaza Strip, it is even less hospitable to Christians. As the New Yorker reported in January, a count by the Catholic Church in Gaza, “once home to a thriving Christian community,” found just 1,017 Christians, amid a population of more than 2 million.

So how did Jesus end up “Palestinia­n”?

Roughly 3,000 years ago, on the eastern rim of the Mediterran­ean, a coastal confederat­ion of five cities stretched from Gaza into Lebanon. The Bible refers to this zone as Philistia, the land of the Philistine­s. In 430 B.C., the Greek historian Herodotus, translatin­g this term, gestured toward the broader area as “Palaistine.”

To the east, the region of the biblical highlands was called Yehudah. The name predates Herodotus by centuries. By Jesus’ lifetime, the Romans labeled this whole area, coast and highlands together, as “Judaea,” a Latinizati­on of “Yehudah.” The people living in Judaea were called “Iudaei”: “Judeans” or “Jews.” Their temple in Jerusalem, the focus of their ancestral worship since the first millennium B.C., was sacred to Jesus, which is why the gospels depict him as journeying there for pilgrimage holidays. An ethnic Judean, Jesus was, accordingl­y, a Jew.

Where, then, did the name “Palestine” come from? From a foreign imperial colonizing power: Rome. Judeans revolted twice against the Romans. The first revolt, from A.D. 66 to 73, reached an awful climax with the destructio­n of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem. Still, Rome kept “Judaea” as the region’s designatio­n. But in A.D. 132-135, the Jews again revolted. By that point, Rome had had enough. The empire changed the administra­tive name of the region to “Syria-Palestina” — a full century after Jesus’ death. It was a deliberate way to “de-Judaize” the territory by using the throwback term for the coastal Philistine­s.

What does this mean? It means that Jesus was not “Palestinia­n.” Nor was he a “Palestinia­n Jew.” This is so for a simple reason: There was no political entity called “Palestine” in his lifetime. If Jesus was born in Bethlehem, he was born in Judaea as a Jew. He certainly died as one.

It was Roman colonizers who changed the name of Judaea to Palestine.

Why rehearse this well-known history? Because now, in the current crisis, even Jesus is being enlisted for attacks on Israel. Calling Jesus a “Palestinia­n” or even a “Palestinia­n Jew” is all about modern politics. Besides being historical­ly false, the claim is inflammato­ry. For two millennia, Jews have been blamed for Jesus’ execution by the Romans; casting him as a Palestinia­n just stokes the fires of hate.

There have already been too many casualties since Oct. 7. Let’s not allow history to be one of them.

 ?? ?? Paula Fredriksen
Paula Fredriksen

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