As Christians enter into Holy Week, Church leaders from around the world have signed a letter calling for an end to the killing in Gaza. The Balfour Project, which brings together people from all faiths and none, has asked one of our Trustees, Bishop Michael Doe, to sign the letter and indicate the Project’s support for its demands.
25 March 2024
As Christians around the world prepare to commemorate the final suffering in the earthly life of Jesus Christ during Holy Week, we stand in solidarity with all in the Holy Land who suffer. During Passion Week, Roman Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox alike engage in prayer, reflection, and repentance. We repent of the ways we have not stood alongside our Palestinian siblings in faithful witness amid their grief, agony and sorrow. Christian witness and engagement with the world must be marked by faithfulness to God, love of neighbour, and mercy toward those who are suffering and in need. For the Holy Scriptures teach, “Uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed.” (Psalm 82:3).
As the ongoing devastation, bombing and ground invasion in Gaza continue into their sixth month, Palestinians, including our Palestinian Christian siblings, cry out to the world, asking, “Where are you?” World leaders have responded with empty rhetoric and political volleying about addressing the “humanitarian crisis” in Gaza while ignoring the direct causes of the catastrophe. Those causes are the daily bombing and ground invasion by the Israeli military, in addition to shutting off basic life-sustaining services to more than 2m people who are suffering the consequences of crimes not their own.
As of 12 March 2024, more than 31,150 people in Gaza have been killed, and more than 72,880 have been injured, the vast majority of them women and children. Gaza has been declared one of the most dangerous places in the world to live, where “no place is safe” according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). The World Health Organization (WHO) describes the situation as desperate, as children are dying from hunger and dehydration. The WHO reports that 15 per cent of children under the age of two in northern Gaza show signs of wasting, suggesting a serious and rapid decline over just a few months, which is unprecedented globally.
The average number of people killed every day in Gaza is just under 200 people a day, with roughly one person dying every eight minutes. The slaughter continues every day even as more and more men, women and children are pulled out from underneath the rubble, and more than 1.8m people remain displaced. As of late January, reports indicate more than half of Gaza’s buildings have been damaged or destroyed. All of this compounds the devastation that Palestinians have experienced during Israel’s 16-year blockade of Gaza and the occupation of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza since 1967.
Palestinians, South Africans and experts around the world have said what is happening in Gaza is nothing less than a genocide. South Africa asserted that the Israeli government engaged in action with “genocidal intent” in its complaint at the International Court of Justice (ICJ). The ICJ’s preliminary ruling found it “plausible that Israel’s acts [in Gaza] could amount to genocide” and issued provisional measures to seek to prevent further deaths. By the end of February, human rights groups around the world asserted Israel had already violated the ICJ ruling by intentionally limiting humanitarian assistance to Gaza. The global church—and world—cannot be silent as people continue to die in Gaza by military assault, lack of adequate medical care, hunger, and disease.
The US, the UK, Israel and other countries must uphold their responsibility as signatories to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. The United States and other nations’ further militarisation of the conflict makes no one safer and instead prolongs suffering and causes more death and destruction. We call on the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia and France to join the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Italy and Japan to halt additional military support and arms to Israel and not be complicit in the ongoing military campaign that is having such devastating effects on civilians in Gaza.
We say, ‘enough killing!’ and together demand a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire
On 7 Oct, Hamas attacked southern Israel and killed approximately 1,200 Israelis and internationals, and took more than 240 people hostage in Gaza. We have been clear in our condemnation of these actions of Hamas, which were an atrocious crime. It is believed 100 hostages or more could still be held captive in Gaza. We have consistently called for the remaining hostages to be returned home to their families. The horrific actions Hamas committed on 7 Oct in no way justify the massive deaths of tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza at the hands of the Israeli military.
We, as global Christian leaders, stand with our brothers and sisters in Christ in Palestine and around the world and say the killing must stop, and the violence must be brought to an end. We ask world leaders to exercise strong moral courage to bring an immediate end to the violence and to open a pathway toward peace and an end to the conflict. We call for a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire where all combatants lay down their weapons and Israeli hostages and Palestinian political prisoners held without the due process of law are released. Immediate and adequate humanitarian assistance must be provided for the more than 2m Palestinian people in Gaza who have such desperate needs. We support efforts toward a negotiated settlement that addresses the core causes of the current crisis and brings an end to the decades-long violations of the rights of the Palestinian people in accordance with international law: such solutions must advance security and self-determination for Israelis and Palestinians.
As we prepare for Holy Week, we lament and pray for comfort for all who have lost loved ones over the past months in Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank and Israel. We know that Jesus himself was among those who suffered, and he comforted the brokenhearted. We say: “Enough atrocities in Gaza; enough violence, death and destruction! May love triumph over hate.” We hold onto the hope that peace is possible even amid this darkest hour.