Tensions Pervade Jerusalem in the Midst of Easter, Passover

By Meredith Lee-Clark
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

JERUSALEM, Israel/West Bank – As the religious calendars of Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Protestants, and Jews converge this week, tensions are rife throughout the holy city of Jerusalem. Thousands of pilgrims from Israel, the Palestinian Territories, and the rest of the world have converged on this city to celebrate their holidays, though with a sense of unease permeating the celebrations.

A major source of the tension is the restrictions on Palestinian travel to and through Jerusalem. Israel “closes” Jerusalem to Palestinians during Jewish holidays. This year, the six days of Passover coincide with the celebration of Easter, which, this year, falls on the same Sunday for both Greek Orthodox and for Roman Catholic and Protestant Christians. As part of a protest on Palm Sunday, March 28, hundreds of Palestinians marched the five to ten miles from the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem to the Israeli checkpoint at Jerusalem, where several protestors were arrested for allegedly crossing into Israel illegally. Israel claims the whole of Jerusalem as its undivided capital, while Palestinians seek to make East Jerusalem the capital of a future Palestinian state.

Usually, Palestinian Christians have an easier time gaining permits into Jerusalem during Christian holidays than do Palestinian Muslims during Muslim holidays, but there have been several incidents of violence in and around Jerusalem in recent weeks because of Israeli plans to build settlements in the predominantly and traditionally Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem. Palestinian Christians who applied for permits to enter Jerusalem during the Easter holiday were told they would not be allowed in. As of March 31, Israeli officials had announced that only international Christians would be allowed to enter Jerusalem.

Some Middle East observers have characterized the recent tensions between Israelis and Palestinians as a “cold Intifada,” referring to the two Palestinian uprisings that began in 1989 and 2001. Professor Yitzhak Reiter explains the significance of sites like Jerusalem in such conflicts:

“Holy places have become the symbol of the conflict,” said Reiter. “Ever space where someone can find some holy connection becomes part of the conflict.”

Reiter believes the low-scale violence of the “cold Intifada” will persist because Palestinians believe that the Israelis want to “Judaize” the Arab portions of East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and that any proclaimed confidence-building measures by Israel are meant only to appease the United States.

For more information, please see:

World Magazine – O Jerusalem – 10 April 2010

The National – Christians Angry at Jerusalem Lockdown as Easter Clashes with Passover – 4 April 2010

SperoNews – Israeli Raid in Gaza Injures Three Children as Jerusalem Prepares for Easter – 3 April 2010

Ma’an News Agency – Palestinian Christians to be Barred from Jerusalem Old City – 31 March 2010

Author: Impunity Watch Archive