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By Sheera Frankel, TIMES
ONLINE
JERUSALEM - An unholy
dispute over the rights to a rooftop section of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
could bring the entire structure tumbling down, destroying Christendom’s
holiest site.
While renovations are
needed across the Church, the small Deir Al-Sultan monastery on a part of the
Church’s rooftop has reached an “emergency state”, according to engineers
who completed an evaluation earlier this month.
The
Times has learnt that the two chapels and 26 tiny rooms which comprise the
monastery were pronounced in dire need of reinforcement in 2004. They have since
deteriorated to the point where engineers now fear they will crash through the
roof and into the Church, venerated by millions of Christians as the site of
Jesus’ crucifixion and burial.
Yigal Bergman, the
engineer who led the investigation, reported that the church, situated in the
Christian Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, was in “a dangerous state of
construction. The structures are full of serious engineering damage that creates
safety hazards and endangers the lives of the monks and the visitors. This is an
emergency … also due to the immediate danger to the site that would damage
other parts of the nearby churches.”
Local officials are
pressing the Church to begin repairs before the autumn’s heavy rains begin,
but have stopped short of directly interfering in the Church’s notoriously
acrimonious affairs.
The Church has been
vigilantly managed by six competing and often fractious Christian denominations
— Roman Catholic,
Greek Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, Coptic,
Syrian Orthodox and Ethiopian – since an agreement reached under Ottoman law
in 1757.
Rival denominations often
battle for access or space and the congregation at the annual Easter service
sometimes resembles the terraces of a boisterous football match. Under British
rule soldiers with fixed bayonets had to separate brawling Christians. To this
day the keys to the Church’s main entrance are held by a Muslim family,
because the Christians do not trust each other.
The dispute over the the
Deir Al-Sultan monastery is a more recent phenomenon dating back to Easter 1970.
When the Coptic monks, who had controlled the area, went to pray in the main
church and left the rooftop unattended, Ethiopian monks seized the opportunity
to change the locks at the entrances before the Copts returned.
Relations between the two
groups have remained tense ever since, with the Coptic church refusing to
relinquish its claim to the monastery and posting a single monk there at all
times. In the midst of a blistering heat wave in the summer of 2002, the Coptic
monk on duty moved his chair from its agreed spot to a shadier corner. The move
was taken as a hostile manoeuvre by the Ethiopians and eleven monks were
hospitalized in the ensuing fracas.
The rest of the Church’s
factions have been unable to mediate between the two groups, even in the case of
minor repairs or renovations to the rooftop. Earlier this month, Archbishop
Matthias, head of the Ethiopian Church in Jerusalem, wrote a letter to the
Israeli Interior Ministry and the Bureau of Jerusalem Affairs describing the
dire state of affairs.
The Archbishop stated in
the letter that he did not recognise the right of the Coptic church in any part
of the disputed area. He said, according to the Haaretz Hebrew daily, that it
was “inconceivable that the implementation of emergency repairs at the holy
site would be conditioned on the consent of the Coptic church.” The Archbishop
added that he was turning to Israeli authorities, as a neutral party, to carry
out the repairs.
Israel has offered to
shoulder part of the cost of repairs, but will only do so if the Christian
factions first come to an agreement among themselves.
“We are afraid that if
we proceed with the renovations before the two sides come to an agreement
themselves we will be accused of favouritism? we are trying to keep our hands
clean of the politics here,” said an Israeli Interior Minister official.
The Copts, who are mainly
of Egyptian origin, received preferential treatment during Ottoman, British and
Jordanian rule. That changed after Israel took control of Jerusalem in the in
the 1967 Six-Day war, fought against a combined Arab force, including Egypt. The
Copts accused Israel of using its position in Jerusalem to aid the Ethiopians in
1970 in their takeover of Deir Al-Sultan. Nine years later, when Israel and
Egypt signed the Camp David peace accords, Coptic officials hoped that rooftop
monastery would be restored to them. But Israel is mindful of its sensitive
relations with Ethiopia, where hundreds of thousands of Ethiopian Jews lived and
were brought to the Jewish
state in the 1980s and 1990s.
Greek
Orthodox Patriarch Theophilus III said: “There is a greater issue
here, something that has to be addressed sooner or later. To be honest, so far
the (Israeli) government has tried to keep out of the dispute. But now it seems
that the government is under pressure to demonstrate concern in helping resolve
the issue.”
He added, however, that
the Israeli government ultimately had to wait until there was “an internal
solution or agreement within the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.”
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