Presbyterians For Middle East Peace

Pastors and elders for responsible and effective Middle East peacemaking policies

 

Must See Videos

As a resource to commissioners at the last several Presbyterian general assemblies, Presbyterians for Middle East Peace invited a number of distinguished speakers to address commissioners on Middle East Peacemaking issues. These videos remain a valuable resource for understanding the key issues, and we are pleased to provide access to them.

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Addressing the Issues

Partnering for Peace

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Palestinian Unity and Implications for the Peace Process

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The Middle East “Road Map to Peace” calls for a two state solution to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. It is the path that our Church should follow.

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Two Essential Principles for Presbyterian peacemaking in the Middle East

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Promotion of the Kairos Palestine document has become a major focus of the BDS (Boycott, Divest, Sanction) Movement.  We believe the document is seriously flawed, and should be approached carefully.

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Ono Academic College's LLB Program for Spiritual and Religious Leaders in Israel Print E-mail

 

The article below was written by Roger Alford, who was a participant in the 2010 Los Angeles Interfaith Leadership Mission to Israel.

Roger is Professor of Law at Pepperdine University. Prior to joining the faculty in 2000, Roger served as a senior legal advisor with the Claims Resolution Tribunal for Dormant Accounts in Switzerland, the tribunal established by the Volcker Commission to resolve claims to Holocaust-era dormant Swiss bank accounts.

A Priest, Rabbi, Imam and Sheik Went to Law School

by Roger Alford

I am in Israel this week on a nationwide tour with Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders from Los Angeles to examine in detail the current state of Israeli-Palestinian relations. We have heard from Arab and Jewish members of the Knesset, visited hot spots along the Green Line, toured holy sites together, spoken with journalists who report from both sides of the conflict, and met with leading economists, lawyers, academics, business professionals, educators, humanitarians, and religious leaders. The event is sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles and the Board of Rabbis of Southern California. It has been a whirlwind tour through the eye of the Middle East hurricane.

I will report on my impressions of the experience in later posts, but I wanted to flag for our readers one really impressive example of cooperation among religious leaders. There is a young, entrepreneurial law school in Israel known as the Ono Academic College. It’s not as prestigious as the major law schools in Israel, but it has launched a new program that is nothing short of remarkable. Ranan Hartman, Founder of Ono (and son of the famous Rabbi David Hartman) recognized that many of the top religious leaders in the country were routinely providing religious legal judgments and even acting as judges in the top religious courts of the country. Yet they had no formal legal training. So he had the audacious idea of reaching out to top Imams, Rabbis, Sheiks, and Priests in Israel to offer them the opportunity to take classes (at deep discounts) for three years together to earn a law degree. Even more amazing, they agreed. So for the past three years approximately forty Muslims, Christians, Druze and Jews have been studying together every Tuesday to earn their law degree. Now that the inaugural class has just graduated Ono will matriculate a fresh crop of Muslims, Christians, Druze and Jews this coming fall. Hartman hopes to reach the cream of the crop of religious leaders in Israel.

Picture the scene. This morning I was sitting in a bland classroom near Tel Aviv with Muslim, Jewish and Christian leaders from Los Angeles as we met with Orthodox (and other) Rabbis, Imams, Druze Sheiks and Catholic priests affectionately discussing their law school experience. These are not young leaders of the future, these are the current religious leadership in Israel, including judges of the Supreme Muslim Council of Israel, the Israeli Rabbinical Courts (Beth Dien), the Druze judicial courts, and Catholic judicial authorities. (For details read this story from the Jerusalem Post). One Catholic priest said that the experience was miraculous in two respects. First, that the religious leaders would choose to attend law school; second that they would grow so close to one another in the process. Not surprisingly, they disagreed about many, many things. As President Ranan Hartman put it today, “I know that my dream may be your nightmare and your dream may be my nightmare, but that doesn’t stop us from learning together and liking one another.” Powerful. I would venture that there’s nothing like it anywhere else in the world.

Muslim and Jewish participants in Ono Academic College's LLB Program for Spiritual and Religious Leaders in Israel
 

Insights from our partners in peacemaking

Presbyterians for Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Relations (PCJCMR) responds to "Steadfast Hope: The Palestinian Quest for Just Peace"

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Day of Prayer for the Peace of Jerusalem - October 2, 2011

We joined with fellow Christians across the globe as we took time on October 2, 2011 to pray for the peace of Jerusalem. We encourage everyone to make prayer a daily part of their work for peace in the Middle East.

 

Pray for peace in Jerusalem. May all who love this city prosper.

Psalm 122:6

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Additional Resources

For more information on effective peacemaking in the Middle East, we provide several links to resources we think will be helpful

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