Historian William Dalrymple writes: "The Israelis are eliminating one of the last Christian Palestinians strongholds in the West Bank and the place I chose to stay when I was researching the Palestinian Christians in From the Holy Mountain. It is a place with an incredibly ancient history, a cradle of Christianity, and its people have some of the closest DNA matches to the people of the time of Christ. Why is no one reporting this?"
On X (Twitter ) he writes: "Israeli Finance Minister Smotrich officially announces building a new settlement in Jabal al-Makhrur in the town of Beit Jala near Bethlehem. The settlers and the army have begun expelling the citizens and declaring it a closed military zone. Many of its residents are holding a sit-in in a tent and refuse to leave despite all the attacks. This is one of the last Christian Palestinian villages."
And this is also in the same week that Christian prayer services have been banned on Mount Tabor:
Within the last year attacks on Israeli Christians have also increased:
The findings are part of a report by the Jerusalem-based Rossing Center, called Attacks on Christians in Israel and East Jerusalem, which examined the increase in hostilities towards Churches and their members in 2023.
This included "a worrying increase in severe property and physical assaults" affecting communities in Jerusalem's Old City.
Speaking to Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), Hana Bendcowsky from the Rossing Center divided up the problems faced by Christians in the region into 'smash' and 'squeeze', terms used by human rights observers.
"The 'smash' describes incidents such as the attack on the Church of the Flagellation, where a statue was smashed with a hammer", she explained.
These violent attacks are mostly carried out by marginalised young ultra-Orthodox Jewish men with hardline-nationalist views, she added, stressing however that "even among the ultra-Orthodox such behaviour is not normative, the majority would not go into a church and smash a statue of Jesus."
"And the 'squeeze' pushes members of the community away, it is incidents like priests being spat at or a nun being told to take off her cross when she goes to the hospital.
Figured I'd provide a counterweight to @911roofer. I support neither side.
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why are they living in "the jewish state of israel" if theyre christian?
edit: lol chuded and exiled for simply disagreeing with OP. lol what b-word
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Well the group in the title are in the West Bank, which is supposedly outside Israeli borders. Do you support the Chinese stealing territory as well?
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what country is the "west bank" in then? Also I find it so amazing how much antisemites love whataboutism.
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You're just not worth the energy. If people showed up at your doorstep with guns and told you to leave you might develop some empathy for what's going on.
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is that something that actually happened too you, or is this more bullshit that youre making up?
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Lmbo, you've admitted defeat.
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There used too be more christians in Palestine and Israel but the palestinians decided palestinian lives mattered more than christians and the jews are like all other middle easterners in that they never forgive or forget a grudge.
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When did this happen? Back in boomer times the Christians were over-represented in Palestinian terrorist groups.
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That was back when Palis were secular
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That's who I was thinking of. Thanks for looking it up for me. I have to admit that after all the time I've spent researching this stuff I can't tell the PFLP apart from the PFLP-GC.
You think every Palestinian became an Islamist wacko? Why? Just because Hamas is hated less than Fatah?
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Non islamist wackos were invited to a few rooftop meetings by the Islamic wackos
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That makes no sense other than Muslims did that once somewhere in the world. Stay in your lane, r-slur.
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Literally what happened when Hamas took over gaza but keep impressing internet r-slurs with 40 years outdated knowledge
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PFLP-GC was created by Syria as part of their foreign policy gambit. A Baathist attempt to claim the place of unifier of the Arab world.
Soviet money dried up and Baathist money too, Palestinian rejectionists will support whoever can provide guns. They have a young population so they aren't going to have attachment to old organizations, they've only grown up in a world where secular groups are shells or Syrian puppets. Associating with Assad used to be bad for cred about ten years ago among Sunni Arabs.
Soviet money and technical support was the deciding factor in many secular leftiod movements winning over alternative, now that bulwark is gone.
Islamism became popular, because like in every Muslim country, they provided economic social justice and charity services while the government didn't. They used to be very good at sending five different messages to five different groups. They did this all the time in Algeria, even had two leader of the FiS which had contradicting messages.
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