PBS’ Religion and Ethics Newsweekly—Christians in the Holy Land

Posted by Kendall Harmon

PROFESSOR BERNARD SABELLA (Al-Quds University): The places are important, but you need to make these places to come alive, and you cannot do that without indigenous Palestinian Christians in the Holy Land.

[KIM] LAWTON: The overwhelming majority of Christians here are Arabs. They were among the hundreds of thousands displaced in 1948, when the State of Israel was established and in the wars that followed. For decades now, Palestinian Christians have continued to emigrate at disproportionately high rates, and their birth rates are much lower than those of Muslims. Roughly 150,000 Christians live in Israel proper—about two percent of the population. In the Palestinian Territories, it’s estimated that Christians make up just over one percent of the population. There are also small Christian minorities in disputed East Jerusalem. The circumstances for Christians vary in each of those places and, like most things here, a lot of it is shaped by the ongoing conflict.

SABELLA: The challenge, I think, to Palestinian Christians, in my view, and to Christian communities in Israel and the Middle East, is really to stay put.

Read or watch it all and you can watch more extended excerpts there if you so desire.

Filed under: * Anglican - EpiscopalArchbishop of Canterbury * Culture-WatchReligion & Culture* International News & CommentaryMiddle East* Religion News & CommentaryInter-Faith RelationsOther FaithsIslamJudaism

0 Comments
Posted July 30, 2011 at 1:00 pm [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]
Registered members must log in to comment.




Next entry (above): More on Jonah from the South Carolina Cathedral—Chris Warner on Jonah 2

Previous entry (below): Sharon Autenrieth—John Stott: “A walking embodiment of the simple beauty of Jesus”

Return to blog homepage

Return to Mobile view (headlines)