[size=1.5em]To a Western mind, Allahu Akbar sounds like a threat. What do Christians of the Holy Land think about them? [size=1.5em]We Christians also say Allahu Akbar. This is an expression of our understanding that the Creator is great. We don’t want this phrase to be related to terrorism and crimes. [size=1.5em]We refuse to associate these words with massacres and murders. [size=1.5em]We speak against using this phrase in this context. Those who do, they insult our religion and our religious values. [size=1.5em]Those using these words while taking some unreligious, unspiritual, uncivilized actions are harming the religion. [size=1.5em]Allahu Akbar is an expression of our faith. [size=1.5em]One must not use these words for non-religion-related purposes in order to justify violence and terror.
![](http://rt.com/files/opinionpost/37/a1/f0/00/23543464576.jpg) [backcolor=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.74902)][size=1em]Christian priests hold a Christmas Midnight Mass at the Church of the Nativity in the West Bank town of Bethlehem December 25, 2014. (Reuters/Ammar Awad)
[size=1.5em]Do people say Allahu Akbar in church? [size=1.5em]Of course. [size=1.5em]For us, Allah is not an Islamic term. This is a word used in Arabic to indicate the Creator who’s made the world we are living in. So when we say Allah in our prayers we mean the Creator of this world. [size=1.5em]In our prayers and pleas, in our Orthodox Christian religious ceremonies we use exactly this word. We say, glory be to Allah in all times. We say Allah a lot during our liturgy. It’s erroneous to think that the word Allah is only used by Muslims. [size=1.5em]We the Arab Christians say Allah in our Arabic language as a way to identify and address the Creator in our prayers. [size=1.5em]Is this all about Christ? Was he the one to provoke a religious split in the Holy Land? Christians and Muslims recognize that Jesus Christ had been born, and they are awaiting his second coming, and the judgment day. Jews deny this however, and await their Messiah. [size=1.5em]We Christians believe that Jesus has already come. We have recently celebrated Christmas as a reminder that Jesus came into this world, that he was born in Bethlehem, and began his road here in the Holy Land for the sake of all mankind, and for the salvation of the world. [size=1.5em]So as far as we are concerned, Jesus has already come. [size=1.5em]Jews believe that he hasn’t come yet, and await his coming. This is the main disagreement between Jews and us. We believe that Jesus has already come, whereas they don’t. [size=1.5em]Despite this fact, we are not at war with Jews. We do not express aggression against Jews or anyone else in the world, despite any differences in our beliefs. [size=1.5em]We pray for those who disagree with us. [size=1.5em]When Jesus came into this world he didn’t tell us to hate, ignore, or be at war with one or the other; he didn’t tell us to kill this one or that one. He gave us one very simple instruction: to love one another. When Jesus told us to love one another this love wasn’t conditioned by what a person was like, or what he was doing. If we are indeed true Christians it is our debt to love all people, and to treat them with positivity, and with love. [size=1.5em]When we see someone who’s sinful, lost, and distant from Allah and from faith, someone who acts wrongly, then it is our duty to pray for him although he might be different from us and our religion. When we have religious disagreements with people we pray that Allah would guide them the right way. Hatred, anger, and accusations of having a wrong faith are not a part of our ethics as Christians. This is the key disagreement and difference between the Jewish religion and ours. The Jewish religion that had existed before Christ is the religion of people who were awaiting Jesus’ coming. Many Jews followed him, yet there were those who didn’t believe in him, and rejected him. [size=1.5em]We know that Jesus was persecuted, and so were the early Christians. For instance, Herod the King killed thousands of babies in Bethlehem thinking that Jesus would be among them. The book of the Acts of the Apostles, as well as sacred tradition, talk about numerous instances of persecution of early Christians. [size=1.5em]Despite that, we see each person who disagrees with us on religion as our brother, our fellow human. Allah created all of us, he gave us life, therefore it is our duty to love each person, and to pray for those who are mistaken or are misunderstanding, so that Allah would guide them the right way. [size=1.5em]Is that why Christians and Muslims are persecuted? [size=1.5em]We don’t divide the Palestinian people based on who is Christian and who is Muslim, who is religious and who isn’t, who is left or what party they are a member of. We don’t divide the people based on convictions and religion. [size=1.5em]For the resistance it doesn’t matter whether they are Muslim or Christian. [size=1.5em]Regardless of what their political views may be, all Palestinians actively support the idea that the Palestinian people should be able to exercise their rights and achieve their dream. [size=1.5em]Yes, a number Christians have been killed since 1948 to this day. Some Christians have been driven away from their houses. Some Christian villages have been completely destroyed, and now there’s not a single house or resident there, for example, Al Galil in the Golan Heights. [size=1.5em]Many churches have been attacked in Jerusalem; there have been attempts to seize their property and lands. [size=1.5em]There are Christians in Israeli prisons – not as many as Muslims, but there are some. The Christian community is smaller in general, but we have our own martyrs who were killed and prisoners who spent years and years behind bars. [size=1.5em]Christians suffer under the Israeli occupation just the same as Muslims – the entire Palestinian population suffers under it. They don’t distinguish between us. [size=1.5em]Are there any special aspects when it comes to Christians living in the Holy Land? [size=1.5em]Here’s one of the many examples, connected to the Russian Orthodox Church. [size=1.5em]The Holy Trinity Cathedral located in the western part of Jerusalem belonged to the Russian Orthodox Church, but after 1948 Israel used the situation in Russia to its advantage and seized some of the buildings around the Cathedral, using them as police quarters and a prison with torture practices. [size=1.5em]When someone says “moskobiya”, referring to something connected to the Moscow Patriarchate, something holy and spiritual, the first thing that comes to the mind of a Palestinian living in Jerusalem is torture, police, interrogation and prison. [size=1.5em]In Nazareth, for example, the word “moskobiya” is associated exclusively with the old Russian school where the Palestinian cultural elite, scientists and politicians studied. Although it was closed after the 1917 Revolution in Russia, its fame lives on. [size=1.5em]So it’s only for the Palestinians in Jerusalem. [size=1.5em]What do Palestinian Christians, I mean Orthodox Christians first of all, think of the Ukraine crisis? [size=1.5em]Overall, we are deeply concerned with the divide in Ukraine. We still believe all Ukrainian Christians must stay within the fold of the Mother Church that is the Moscow Patriarchate. [size=1.5em]I wish the Ukraine crisis would resolve through dialogue so that we see reconciliation and an end to violence and bloodshed. [size=1.5em]Christians do not need wars, killings and massacres. This political crisis must be resolved in a peaceful way. The Church must work hard to ensure that the divisions are bridged and overcome. [size=1.5em]The Orthodox Church in Ukraine is strong because most of the people preach Orthodox Christianity. [size=1.5em]Divisions must be healed. We really hope that the efforts by the Moscow Patriarchate and the Patriarchate of Constantinople will help to re-unite the Ukrainian Church. [size=1.5em]I believe the split can be reversed and those who broke away could come back. But in order for that to happen we need humility, belief and strong will. [size=1.5em]We pray for the Orthodox Church in Ukraine.
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