• FEATURES \ Oct 24, 2005
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    A holiday in Palestine is never going to be easy but, finds Andrew Mueller, the rewards for tourists and locals alike can be huge.

    To get to the birthplace of the Prince of Peace, I have to negotiate a military checkpoint. Opposite the church marking the site of the Nativity, a building flies a huge poster of a man infamous, in some circles, as a terrorist.

    The Observer, Sunday, Oct 23, 2005

    Humour and hospitality go with the Territories
  • EGYPT \ Oct 24, 2005
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    Thousands of police manned barricades around Christian churches in Egypt's second largest city Saturday, a day after Muslim rioters attacked churches and shops, leaving four people dead in the country's worst religious violence in five years.

    The Daily Herlad, Oct 23, 2005
  • PALESTINE \ Oct 23, 2005
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    Director and President of the Sabeel Center in Jerusalem, Rev. Canon Naim Ateek opened the 2005 Chicago Sabeel Conference at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago.

    The theme for the conference, ?Jerusalem: will justice and peace embrace?? focused on the struggles Palestinians face living under Israeli military occupation; and the ways in which Jews, Christians and Muslims can stand together for human rights and social justice.

    Sonia Nettnin, Amin, Oct 10, 2005

    Palestine: Chicago Sabeel Conference 2005: will Justice and Peace Embrace?
  • ISRAEL \ Sep 26, 2005
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    Dwight and Emma Baker, emeritus missionaries of the Southern Baptist Convention's International Mission Board (IMB), have donated 100,000 USD toward the purchase of property in Nazareth, Israel, owned by the IMB.

    Dr and Mrs. Baker, from Duncanville, Texas, originally purchased the land on behalf of the IMB in the 1950's and built the house and used it for their residence. Dr. Baker served as pastor of the Nazareth Baptist Church, director of village evangelism (church planting) and a Bible teacher in Nazareth and the Galilee.

    Special For "Come and See", Sep 27, 2005

    Baptists in Nazareth buy a building from the Southern Baptist Mission Board
  • OPINION \ Sep 21, 2005
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    Last week, Moslems from the village of Deir Jarrar broke into houses in the Christian Village of Taibe and stole furniture, jewelry and electrical appliances. They threw Molotov cocktails at some buildings and poured kerosene on others, then torched them.

    Usually, the Christians remain silent when such incidents happen, for the sake of keeping the good long relations with their Moslem neighbors.

    While Palestinian Christians remain silent, some Jews enjoy telling the story of the Moslems beating the Christians. The following is an article by Daniel Pipes, a right wing American Jewish columnist. Even though Christian Arabs may find this article irritating, it is important to tell the story of Taibe and learn the lessons, just before no more Christians are left in the West Bank.

    Daniel Pipes, New York Sun, Sep 13, 2005

  • ISRAEL \ Sep 21, 2005
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    While Israel was busy preparing for withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, in one of the most complicated logistic assignments, a group of 350 Athletes were meeting in a Hotel near the Sea of Galilee and preparing for another complicated assignment. These Athletes were planning their project to reach out to Arab and Jewish kids through Sports, both in Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

    Special For "Come and See", Sep 15, 2005

    350 Athletes share the good news in Israel and Palestine
  • PALESTINE \ Sep 09, 2005
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    This week Palestine Report Online interviews Taybeh's Latin Parish Priest, Raed Abu Sahliyeh on the recent violence where men from a neighboring Muslim village torched houses and cars in the Christian village.

    Palestine Report, Sep 8, 2005
    An interview with Fr. Raed Abu Sahliyeh of Taybeh
  • ISRAEL \ Sep 07, 2005
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    Shas spiritual leader Ovadia Yosef: Hurricane Katrina result of Bush?s support for disengagement, failure of New Orleans? black residents to study Torah. ?This is the punishment for what Bush did to Gush Katif,? rabbi says

    Zvi Alush, YNET, Sep 7, 2005

    Rabbi: Hurricane punishment for Gaza pullout
  • PALESTINE \ Sep 05, 2005
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    It began as yet another "honor killing," still relatively common in the Arab world: a young Muslim woman was poisoned, allegedly by her family, over an extramarital affair. But in a twist, her lover was a Christian ? and 13 of his relatives' homes were burned by an angry mob, all Muslims from the dead woman's clan.

    The woman's family insist they were simply dispensing tribal justice. But some Christians say they were targeted because of their religion, reflecting growing worries about a rise in sectarianism after decades of tolerance between Palestinians' Muslim majority and a dwindling Christian minority.

    By LARA SUKHTIAN, Associated Press Sep 5, 2005