Open Letter to Archbishop Rowan Williams from Jonathan Kuttab
The Most Reverend Rowan Williams
Archbishop of Canterbury
Lambeth Palace
London
SE1 7JU
9th September 2004
Dear Archbishop,
I am writing belatedly in response to the paper you sent as a
contribution to the International Sabeel Conference held in Jerusalem
last April on Challenging Christian Zionism.
I regret to say that Palestinian Christians attending the Sabeel
Conference listened with profound disappointment to your keynote address
to the Conference.
Palestinian Christians had suffered much at the hand of theologies and
interpretations of scripture that provided a mantle of divine
legitimisation to the ideology of Zionism and the political movement
that worked for their displacement from their homeland, and built a
Jewish state on the basis of their exile, and oppression. One of our
constant complaints of was that Christian Zionism ignores our national
rights, and indeed our very existence. The creation of the state of
Israel was done on our land and the ingathering of Jews from all the
world came at the price of exiling and scattering our people throughout
the world. All this was supported by Christian theologies that ignored
or delegitimized us as a people, claiming a divine imperative based on
scripture for the creation of the state of Israel.
Such views generally side-stepped or totally ignored the Palestinian
people on whose land the state was created. While the Jewish people were
seen to hold a divinely mandated right to people hood, and even chosen
ness, as well as a promise to ownership of the land, by its creator and
ultimate sovereign, the Palestinian people had only individual and
transient rights, at best, as ‘strangers in the midst’ of God’s people.
These issues were not of passing theological or academic interest to us,
but had direct tangible consequences for us of life and death, as well
as of faith.
It was therefore most distressing to us to hear these same views echoed
your keynote address when you also asserted a theological imperative to
recognize Jewish people hood which needed to be exercised in political
statehood in a concrete land inhabited by others whose people hood is
NOT recognized. There were several references in your lecture to the
‘neighbours’ of such a state, (presumably Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and
Egypt), but none to the indigenous people of Palestine who had
necessarily to be displaced and marginalized to make room for the
exercise of Jewish nationhood.
It was unclear where the ‘good news’ in this to the Palestinians, or
indeed the Arab neighbours of the new Jewish state.
To be sure, you did not give unqualified support to the Jewish state,
and affirmed that it is required to act with ‘law and intelligence’ but
one gets the impression that such a requirement is viewed solely from
the perspective of the dominant Jews themselves, as if Palestinians have
no value in and of themselves in the sight of God, and that the most
they can get, is the crumbs of the state of Israel’s willingness to live
up to the requirements of ‘justice and intelligence(?).
However, if Israel fails to live up to those requirements of justice and
intelligence, then the tragedies , suffering, torture, and displacement
suffered by them would be regrettable,- not because of what the
Palestinian victims are suffering, but more for what this does to Jews-
that is their failure to live up to their role as God’s people.
Your lecture did not support eschatological or prophecy-driven
interpretations, yet you affirmed, theologically, the need for a Jewish
state as a necessary paradigm to the world of a community living ‘under
God’. You even lamented that we did not have the benefit of such a
living example for almost 2000 years. As you seem to see it Israel, in
biblical terms, is still a gift to the community of nations.
In doing so, you not only bracketed out 2000 years of history, but also
the entire teachings of Jesus and the New Testament, with respect to the
Kingdom of God, the removal of the barriers of distinction between Jews
and Gentiles, Jesus’ emphatic separation between Church and State, ( “My
kingdom is not of this world”) which is the basis for the Christians’
critical attitude towards politics, states and nationalism in the modern
world. The concrete challenges with which Jesus responded to those
zealots who yearned for an earthly kingdom and the restoration of power
to the Jews, by pointing repeatedly to His Kingdom, which is open to all
and not just to the “children of Abraham, according to the flesh” are
also side-stepped as we are brought back to the Old Testament covenant
of tribal possession and conquest of the Land.
By utilizing the “tormented meditation in Romans 9-11” and rejecting the
Supersessionist or replacement approach, you appear to be left with the
Old Testament model of the covenant, tempered perhaps by the
requirements for justice towards the “alien in your midst” but nothing
more. Unfortunately, you were not present to explain to us what happens
to the indigenous population when such a model state is established on
their land.
What rights, if any, would such indigenous non-Jews (Christian or
Moslem) have in a professedly Jewish state?
Is discrimination against them (necessary in both theory and practice if
one sets out to create a Jewish state) legitimate, and divinely
mandated?
Is Palestinian nationalism and people hood dangerous, or even evil
because it resists elimination and marginalization within the divine
scheme of creating the ‘paradigm state’?
Are Palestinians the Amaleks to be exterminated, or Canaanites to be
simply reduced to ‘hewers of wood, and drawers of water’?
Is their resistance to this scheme legitimate self-defence, or sinful
rebellion against God’s plan that must be harshly repressed?
Are they ( or the Christians among them) required to graciously vacate
their homes, fields, shops, villages in favour of Jews to whom God is
granting this land to be their home, since it is obvious that ‘ to be
hospitable, you must have a home’?
I would welcome the opportunity to discuss these questions with you in
person, as and when you are in Palestine again, or if it is possible to
visit you in London.
On behalf of the indigenous Palestinian Christian community, I would
urge you to give a lead in challenging the heresy of Christian Zionism
which dares to justify in God’s name, an apartheid regime that will, if
unchecked, lead to a Holy Land devoid of local Christians within 20
years.
Yours in His Grace,
Jonathan Kuttab
LSN : LIVING STONES NETWORK
An informal network of friends and supporters of the indigenous
Palestinian Christian community drawn from the Episcopal Diocese of
Jerusalem http://Jerusalem.anglican.org, Friends of Sabeel
www.sabeel.org, the Living Stones of the Holy Land Trust
www.livingstonesonline.org.uk and the Scottish Palestinian Forum
mortoncc@gn.apc.org. For more information on these organisations and
others promoting justice and peace in the Middle East check out
www.sabeel.org/links/index.htm. If you wish to subscribe or unsubscribe
to the LSN please reply to stephen@sizers.org.
"Thus says the Lord God of Israel: You shed blood, yet you would keep
possession on the land? You rely on your sword, you do abominable
things...yet you would keep possession of the land?... (Ezekiel 33:25-28)