Letter From
Christian Leaders to President Bush, Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas and Israel's Prime Minister-elect Ehud Olmert
MAY 2, 2006
May 2, 2006
The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States
The Honorable Mahmoud Abbas
President of the Palestinian Authority
The Honorable Ehud Olmert
Prime Minister-Elect of Israel
Dear President Bush, President Abbas and Prime Minister
Olmert,
We write to you as leaders of churches and church-related
organizations from the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant
traditions that work together in Churches for Middle East Peace.
With a sense of great urgency, we appeal to you to take
immediate actions that can restore hope for peace between the
state of Israel and the future state of Palestine. With anguish,
we recognize the tremendous grief, anger, suffering and fear
felt by both the Israeli and Palestinian people. With alarm, we
observe the growing danger that this unresolved conflict brings
to the people of the United States as anti-American sentiment is
fueled by the continued Israeli occupation of the West Bank and
East Jerusalem. With hope, we ask for your intervention in four
areas of deep concern: the pending humanitarian crisis, the
cessation of violence, the establishment of a mutually
negotiated border between Israel and the future Palestine, and
the status of Jerusalem.
The looming humanitarian crisis among the Palestinian people
is our most immediate concern. We have heard reports from a
recent Churches for Middle East Peace delegation to Jerusalem
and the West Bank and from staff of humanitarian and development
agencies that the cut-off of aid to the Palestinian Authority
and the strict limitations on aid going through NGOs poses a
threat of massive dimensions. We ask each of you to adopt
policies and take actions that provide both space and
opportunity for the newly elected Hamas government to make
positive changes, while finding mechanisms that allow financial
assistance to reach the Palestinian people immediately.
President Abbas, we encourage you to maintain your persistent
commitment to peacemaking and nonviolence. We were deeply
grieved by the suicide bombing in Tel Aviv on April 17 and
alarmed by Hamas officials’ statements condoning this terrible
act of violence. We urge you and the Palestinian people to
remain steadfast in pursuit of peace and to press the officials
of Hamas to accept previous agreements regarding Israel and to
renounce violence.
Prime Minister Olmert, we commend you for declaring that
under your leadership Israel will withdraw from additional
occupied land and dismantle some settlements in the West Bank.
Such actions, undertaken in consultation with the Palestinians,
could be important moves forward in Israel’s compliance with
UNSC Res. 242, which continues to be the internationally
accepted legal basis for resolution of the conflict. We also
urge you to end the practice of targeted assassinations and
incursions into Palestinian areas.
President Bush, your vision of a two-state solution that
provides for a viable state of Palestine living in peace
alongside a secure and internationally recognized state of
Israel remains our goal – a goal that is shared by the majority
of the Israeli and Palestinian peoples, according to polling
data. Yet, steps are being taken by both governments that make
this solution increasingly difficult. As you continue to press
Hamas to change, we ask you to remain diligent about changes
being made by Israel on the ground. We applaud your statements,
and those of Secretary of State Rice, that no one should try to
unilaterally predetermine the outcome of final status agreement
and encourage Prime Minister Olmert to heed your words.
It is extremely important that decisions on the final status
issues of borders, Jewish settlements, refugees, water and the
sovereignty of Jerusalem be agreed upon in the context of
negotiations and with the strong leadership of the United States
in cooperation with the Quartet and the Arab League. We believe
that in you, President Abbas, the Israelis do have a partner
with whom to negotiate. That is the only means by which the
outcomes will be viewed as legitimate and conducive to a durable
peace between Israel and its neighbors. Prime Minister Olmert,
if you choose to unilaterally disengage from portions of the
West Bank and the environs of East Jerusalem, we urge you to
publicly declare that the withdrawal lines are not permanent
borders and that those will be determined in negotiations with
the Palestinians.
Similarly, we ask for Prime Minister Olmert’s assurance that
the separation barrier is only temporary, and that its route,
where it extends beyond the Green Line, is not a permanent
border. The separation barrier is having a tremendously negative
impact, both psychologically and economically, on the
Palestinians and on the potential of a viable Palestinian state.
While the separation barrier may prevent some terrorist attacks,
we believe Israel’s security lies ultimately in a negotiated end
of the occupation that is accepted by the United Nations as the
fulfillment of Security Council resolutions and is consistent
with the requirements of the Geneva Conventions.
Churches for Middle East Peace has long advocated the sharing
of Jerusalem by the two peoples and the three faiths. The
severing of Bethlehem and other parts of the West Bank from East
Jerusalem by means of the separation barrier and restrictive
residency and other laws is extremely troubling. It is no longer
possible for the vast majority of Palestinian Muslims and
Christians in the West Bank and Gaza to worship at their holy
sites and to have access to Jerusalem-based institutions. We
believe that a negotiated solution for Jerusalem, that takes
into account the profound dimensions of the Holy City for Jews,
Christians, and Muslims globally, is the key to Middle East
peace and the eventual reconciliation of the Abrahamic family.
President Bush, President Abbas and Prime Minister Olmert,
you alone are capable of reawakening your peoples to the promise
of peace. Our urgent appeal to you is witness to the great
numbers of people of the Christian tradition, in the United
States and globally, who pray for peace and for your strength
and courage to be peacemakers.
Sincerely,
Bishop Vicken Aykazian
Legate
Armenian Orthodox Church
Bishop Dimitrios Couchell
Ecumenical Officer
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
Dr. Robb Davis
Executive Director
Mennonite Central Committee
Marie Dennis
Director
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Rev. Robert Edgar
General Secretary
National Council of Churches USA
Rev. Wesley Granberg-Michaelson
General Secretary
Reformed Church in America
The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold
Presiding Bishop
The Episcopal Church in America
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson
Presiding Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
The Rev. Dr. Stan Hastey
Executive Director
Alliance of Baptists
Fr. Dominic Izzo, OP
President
Conference of Major Superiors of Men’s Institutes
Rev. Dr. Clifton Kirkpatrick
Stated Clerk
Presbyterian Church, (USA)
Rev. John McCullough
Executive Director & CEO
Church World Service
Mary Ellen McNish
General Secretary
American Friends Service Committee
Metropolitan Philip Saliba
Primate
Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese of N. America
Bro. Mark Schroeder, OFM
President, Franciscan Friars (OFM)
English Speaking Conference, JPIC Council
Rev. William G. Sinkford
President
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations
Rev. John H. Thomas
General Minister and President
United Church of Christ
Joe Volk
Executive Secretary
Friends Committee on National Legislation
Rev. Sharon E. Watkins
General Minister and President
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
James Winkler
General Secretary
General Board of Church and Society
The United Methodist Church |