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Presiding Bishop joins in call for renewed efforts at Middle East peace
By Mary Frances Schjonberg 12/15/2006 |
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[Episcopal News Service]
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori is one of 34 Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders who wrote to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice December 12 asking for a meeting with her to discuss the "urgent situation in the Middle East" and calling on the United States to make peace in the region an "urgent priority."
The leaders, acting as the National Interreligious Leadership Initiative for Peace in the Middle East, issued a statement the same day, saying that "as Jewish, Christian and Muslim religious leaders, our shared Abrahamic faith compels us to work together for peace with justice for Israelis, Palestinians and all peoples in the Middle East." "As Americans, we again ask the United States to make peace in the Middle East an urgent priority," the statement's preamble concludes. "Our nation has an inescapable responsibility and an indispensable role to provide creative, determined leadership for building a just peace for all in the Middle East." Quoting from the religious texts of all three faith traditions, the statement says that "building peace through justice is simultaneously an urgent human challenge and a gift of God." The leaders express disappointment that the United States "did not more actively pursue the Road Map for Peace which we felt held great promise." Saying they must "speak a word of hope," the leaders write that it is their "conviction that the current crisis can also open up new opportunities for peace." "Our shared faith in the One God gives us hope and reminds us that God is on the side of peace. Hatred will not have the final word," the statement says. The leaders write that the way forward is a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine, implementation of certain UN resolutions dealing with Lebanon and reconstruction aid for that country, and diplomatic efforts to restart Israeli-Syrian and Israeli-Lebanese peace talks. The statement also includes a series of steps the U.S. ought to take on the part of both Israeli and Arab states. The leaders sent the statement, "Arab-Israeli-Palestinian Peace: From Crisis to Hope," to Rice. "Our statement comes at time when the ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinians raises hope for restarting negotiations and in the wake of the Baker-Hamilton Report that supports renewed efforts for a comprehensive Arab-Israeli-Palestinian peace as essential for achieving U.S. goals in the Middle East," they say in their letter. "The only solution is a negotiated one based on U.N. Security Council Resolutions, realistic compromises, and monitored security arrangements with international guarantees," the letter tells Rice. "Whatever develops in terms of a possible change of course for U.S. policy in Iraq, we believe a commitment by the Administration, with the support of Congress, to actively reengage in pursuing Arab-Israeli-Palestinian peace is essential and will have positive reverberations in the region and around the world." The signers of the letter and statement are listed below. Christian Leaders: Jewish Leaders: Muslim Leaders: |
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