The Tucker Carlson Show - Here’s What It’s Really Like to Live as a Christian in the Holy Land
Episode Date: August 11, 2025Self-described evangelicals like Ted Cruz and Mike Johnson have no interest in how Israel treats Christians. Mother Agapia Stephanopoulos has spent years living in the region. They should listen to he...r. (00:00) The Difficult Life of a Christian Living in the Holy Land (06:39) Israel’s Apartheid System (13:17) Are We Being Lied to About the Relationship Between Muslims and Christians in the Middle East? (25:19) Why Are American Christians Supporting Israeli Persecution of Christians? (57:40) How Many Christians in the Holy Land Support the Government of Israel? (59:59) What Is the Purpose of Hamas? Paid partnerships with: Byrna: Go to https://Byrna.com or your local Sportsman's Warehouse today. PureTalk: Go to https://PureTalk.com/Tucker to make the switch Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you for doing this.
So you first moved to the Holy Land in 1996?
Correct, yep.
As a nun.
How are Christians doing in the Holy Land?
Well, it's become a very difficult time for them there.
Basically, the Christians are in the same situation as the Muslims being a Palestinian.
So the problem is, so there's two different things.
If you live in Israel, you're a citizen.
And so they can live there and work, but there's sort of some petty grievances that people might have.
But if you're a Christian in Palestine, which is where most of the activities of the life of Christ are, Bethlehem, Jerusalem,
the Mount of Olives, Jericho, Jacobs Well. That's all within Palestine. And so there's many,
that's the predominance of the Christian population there. And they're treated with the effects of the
occupation, which means you have checkpoints around you. You can't, you're not, a Christian who lives
in Bethlehem cannot go to Jerusalem, to the Holy Sepulchre, without a permit by Israel. And they
don't usually give those permits, especially now. A Christian can't. No, without permission from
Israel.
That's interesting because, I mean, those Christians that you're describing, I mean, they're the
descendants of the Christians who were converted by Jesus.
They've been there from the beginning, yeah.
I mean, right, Christ came as a Jew, right, went to the temple.
But the people that converted and have lived there for centuries are, in fact, I think there's
been studies done that if you, the Palestinians living there now, and they are the Canaanite
descendants. There are people that have been there for centuries. Or the greater part, not just Palestine
included Syria and Lebanon at a different time under different empires and things. So, yeah,
they're the first Christians, the Christians at the time of Christ. And it's very difficult to
practice their faith. It's sort of like you're in a gilded cage. And the best, that's how I look at
Bethlehem. Within Bethlehem, you can live there, but you can't go and visit your friend who lives
near Jacob's well in Nablus without taking it. In fact, the priest in Bethlehem just told me the other day.
His wife is from near Janine, which normally would take you about an hour and a half to get between the two.
Her father has prostate cancer. In order to get treatment, there was only hospitals, nothing in the
Northwest Bank could deal with it, either in Jerusalem or in Hebron, which is south of Bethlehem.
And last year, or a couple years ago, he was able to go to Jerusalem with a permit to get the
treatment, but this year the Israelis wouldn't let him. So it took him over five hours to get down
to Hebron and a man who's old and sick to doing things. So whether it's for those kind of activities
or practicing your faith or visiting your relatives, which is part of Christian life too,
right? You want to celebrate the holidays with your family and friends? It becomes very difficult
to do. The reason I'm asking these questions, well, first, I think it's worth worrying about Christians
who are the minority population,
well, it's worth our Christians in general.
But the United States is a majority
Christian country that pays
for a huge percentage of the Israeli economy,
both through trade and direct grants
and military assistance and all the rest.
Israel couldn't exist without the United States.
And it has the support of so many Christians
in the United States,
and I don't know if they're fully aware.
I want to think they would care if they knew
how the Christians are doing.
And I keep reading that the Christian population,
in the region has declined dramatically since Israel became a state in 1948.
And I'm not quite sure why.
Well, again, I think it has to do because the whole issue is that Israel has continued to grow
and think that they can dominate the Christian areas, the areas of Palestine.
So they make it very difficult for anyone else to be able to live there, as simple as that.
But you would think Christians would get a special pass or dispensation because the United States,
is the great patron and it's a Christian country?
No, because, well, the problem you have is one with the Christian Zionists,
the ones who don't recognize the Christians in the Holy Land as being fully Christian, apparently,
because why would it, I have a very hard time understanding why someone who calls themselves a Christian
and then gives money to support the building of settlements.
Do we understand what that means?
The settlements are in the areas of Palestine, they're taking over the land that belongs to the people,
of Palestine. And this has been going, like I said, I've been there since 1996, and I've seen the
continued growth of the settlement. I lived in Bethany, biblical Bethany. And over the mountain
of Mount of Olives was the convent I was in, in Jerusalem. And to the east of me was the settlement
of Maladamim in 1998. It was a relatively small settlement then. And then you go down the road to
Jericho. It was one lane. It's now a larger highway. And that settlement of Maladamian,
Al-Amin is like a huge city and has closed off the people of Bethany.
We are closed off in Bethany from going to our convent in Jerusalem because of the wall that was built on Palestinian land, on Christian land.
There's a Christian home for boys that the Israelis just took over and cut up to make part of the wall that's separate.
So it wasn't done for security to build that wall.
It was done simply to expand the borders of Israel.
Wait, so they went right through Christian land.
Did Christians in the West say anything about this?
Very few.
I mean, there was, and also on that stretch at the lower end of the Mount of Olives,
there was a nursing home run by Catholic Church,
and the nun that was in charge,
she spoke to the French press,
and soon after she was told, she was sent to Lebanon or to another post,
wasn't allowed to be there.
me at the same time, we had, the wall was built right beyond Lazarus's tomb.
Our school is walking distance from Lazarus's tomb, from where Martha and Mary lived,
and they built the wall right above where the tomb is.
So that separated some of our teachers from being able to come to school.
It separated our families on either side of the wall.
So in April of 2005, I went to Washington and spoke to some congresspeople,
not to demean Jews or not to even demean the state of Israel,
to say, look, we are being affected by this wall. It's affecting our religious life. I can't
bring my, I can't go to visit my convent easily anymore because of this wall. It's disrupting
our school life. And we'd like to see, it's not for security. It's not separating Israel from
Palestine. It's separating Palestine from Palestine in the two. I get back home. I'm sorry,
what kind of reception did you see went to Congress? Yeah. And a handful. Actually, I remember a very
sweet occurrence he's died since but uh senator paul wellstone of minnesota i was scheduled to meet him and
he wasn't there but then he came and he literally ran down the hall to catch me so there were a few
there are a few people that were sympathetic but um overall no and and i even felt the sense when i
was talking to people that um that the like i went to a meeting where there were a few aides there
of different congress people right not just in one office and just felt as if there was someone there
watching what was saying or doing going on.
So anyway, so I give that.
Did you meet with any Christian church leaders here in the U.S.?
Unfortunately, I mean, the Catholic Church has done a lot and said a lot, but I, sad to say,
I feel the Orthodox Church in America has been very reluctant to speak out on this issue.
Why?
Or to get involved.
Maybe sometimes we, I think it's a partly, it's just simply awareness, even when people go on
pilgrimages to the Holy Land. They probably have Israeli tour guides, and they don't, you know,
it's an amazing experience to go to the Holy Land. It's overwhelming to be, you know, a pious person to go
there, and you're thinking about going to see where Jesus was, and here I'm on the Sea of Galilee,
and you don't really perceive what that wall means, or who are those people living over there,
or how come there's only cars with yellow plates here, and then we were in Jericho, and I saw these
green and white plates. What does that mean going on? They don't understand it, so they don't get the
concept you only there for two weeks. Yellow plate is for people who live in the state of Israel
and they can go on certain roads, all roads, and for Palestinians who have a Jerusalem ID
are allowed to have a car with the yellow plate. And then Palestinians have green and white plates
and they cannot use. So over that time that I've been here, as the settlements have grown,
you build the infrastructure for it. The electricity, the roads, separate roads that are used only by people
that have yellow plates. As a foreigner and part of a foreign church, we were entitled to have
either those or they also have white diplomatic plates, the kind of diplomatic and religious plates
that are there. So there's very much an apartheid system, very much so. And but so, which gave me
the freedom to help my Christian's friends in Bethlehem and other places. Like one time there was a
woman who, her daughter, they were from Bethlehem, married a Christian who lived in Jerusalem.
So he had rights to be in the city of Jerusalem, have blue ID. But the mother, when the daughter gave birth to their first child, she didn't have any way to go to see her daughter because it would be illegal for her to go into Jerusalem to get there. So I had the school van and I went to Bethlehem, go get her, and a lot of times we'd have a little more leeway. You know, if I go through a checkpoint, they'll see it to none and I'd go pass through a lot easier than someone else would.
So I was able to get her through to be able to go see her daughter at the birth of her granddaughter.
We're sorry to say it, but this is not a very safe country.
Walk through Oakland or Philadelphia.
Yeah, good luck.
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I'll just be totally blunt with you.
Most Americans are aware that there's a system, something like what you just described.
But the pretext for it, the justification for it is that there's a lot of Islamic terrorism.
There are a couple intifadas.
There are a lot of suicide bombings.
and it's Islamic terror
and most Americans have been taught
for 25 years of Islamic terror
is a threat and you know
there's some truth in that of course
but so we assume
that Christians
would be getting an exemption from all this
why would Christians who are not
responsible for Christian terror
there's no such thing
why would they be penalized for this
why wouldn't they again
when the patron saint state
is majority Christian
And why wouldn't the Christians there be getting some kind of special pass?
I just don't understand that.
Why punish the Christians for Islamic terror?
Because I don't think it's Islamic terror that's taking place in the first place.
I think we have to disabuse ourselves of that notion that this is a battle between Muslim and Jew.
Or that, you know, constantly you heard after October, the October event was that Hamas, Hamas, Hamas.
Even to this day we hear it's Hamas, Hamas, Hamas.
What is Hamas?
Hamas are people
who have had their homes taken from them
who if they live in Gaza
have not been able
basically been in an open-air prison
for certainly the last 20 years going on
even when the Israelis withdrew from Gaza
they didn't leave open borders
there was no freedom for people in Gaza
to develop their economy
if I know people who wanted to try to go to school in America
and couldn't get out of Gaza
you know had a full bright scholarship
and weren't able to leave.
I mean, couldn't get out.
Israel didn't give her permission.
So what kind of freedom is that if you live in Gaza?
They couldn't even fly out?
No.
And their airport had been bombed in what?
Early on, there was an airport built soon after the Oslo Accords.
But Israel has intervened many time in Gaza and little by little destroyed.
You know, when I first went there in 2002 after the second infight of the started, I remember saying to my mother back home, you know, this is genocide.
even that genocide by Chinese water torture.
But now we're seeing genocide on steroids.
You're American, I should say.
Yes, I'm born in America, yeah, lived in America.
And so getting back to Hamas, so also the school I was at has 350 girls.
It's in a town that's 98% Muslim.
Though it has roots, I mean, it's the roots of where Bethany,
where on our school grounds is a stone from the 6th century.
that said, this is where Christ met Martha at the resurrection.
So we're talking about, and it's the road leading,
there's still part of the road that existed when Christ walked during that time
and would have seen Lazarus and Martha and Mary.
Lazarus's tomb is down the road, right?
And so permeated even with Palestinian Muslim culture
is the sense that Christians lived here,
and they recognized Jesus as a prophet.
So they respect him as a, and so there's,
I'm not saying that everything is perfect.
You can't have divisions between, just like even with Christians.
Some Christians might think we should have, allow politics to be in the church or legislate Christian morality.
And others would think totally different.
So you can have sort of differences in opinion, if you will, and we can all live with each other between that.
So with Muslim and Christian, they can have their differences.
But overall, the Palestinian culture is infused with both there.
So you were a nun in a majority Muslim town, a Christian nun, in your habit, I assume.
And which also was to an advantage because pious Muslims are not jihadists, the ones that I know.
I'm not saying other parts of the world that may be the case, but in Palestine it's simply not the case.
Or Syria or Lebanon or Iraq.
The Muslims that for the most part are, they've all grown up together, the Christians and the Muslims.
And there's a certain amount of commonality.
and respect. And so me wearing being dressed like this was just like many of the women there, right?
So they kind of respected that. There's the same sort of conservative culture. There's the same
sort of idea that we're both have some same basic values of compassion for our neighbor, of taking
care of our families and trying to live. They have their form of fasting and almsgiving.
And it's actually very important to them. And I think the best parts of Islam come from its development
from Christian ideas that that Mohammed came to know.
I'm sure of that.
You can sense it.
This is a very different story from the one that we're told in the American media
that Christians are imperiled by Muslims in the Middle East.
They are not imperiled by Muslim in Palestine.
That is an absolute fact.
Yeah, that's just simply not the case.
And again, going back to my school, in our school,
we had icons, which are part of the Orthodox tradition,
pictures of saints, and crosses.
in every classroom.
No problem with that.
I could show you a photograph, I can't know,
but of the graduates of the latest high school graduation.
And, you know, they're embracing the nuns there.
They're dressed, actually, in a more secular way.
And, yeah, it all, it all works together.
So a lot of your students from Muslim?
All, yeah, 98%.
The only Christian students.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And about half the teachers during the time I was there,
some Muslim, some Christian.
In a Christian school.
Yes.
And actually, that's all throughout Palestine.
The Orthodox is relatively small.
We do have schools in many of the Palestinian towns, but also Catholic schools, Lutheran schools, and most of the population, most of the students are Muslims.
Huh.
And the beautiful thing about where the great danger is, if the Christians continue to diminish a key part of Palestinian society and within Israel as well, you go to Nazareth, you'll see many Catholic-run hospitals, schools.
And so it's a fabric.
It's a part of the whole character.
But I'm just still confused by the idea that the Christian population is declining under Israeli rule.
You would think just the opposite.
What gives them a – what I observed from my time in Israel and going back every year is that they do not want any Palestinians there.
So the majority of Christians in Israel and Palestine are Palestinian.
So they have to leave too.
I can, what grieves me is that the Holocaust is a horrible, horrible thing that happened.
People slaughtered fairly quickly.
Sometimes the thought comes to me when I've driven between, I'm a drive, there's a tunnel road that goes from Jerusalem to Bethlehem.
And it's only for the settlers to go on down to the continued settlements that lead down further south in Israel to Hebron, or actually.
I shouldn't say Israel, into Palestine, other Palestinian territory.
As you're going, that tunnel road has been carved out of land that belongs to people in Bethlehem and Bejala, which you're passing by on that tunnel road.
So it's like a living death.
How would you like to be a man?
That was your grandfather's olive trees.
But now it's controlled by Israel, and you're not even allowed to drive on that road.
And on that very same road, I remember another poignant picture.
There was a woman that worked at our convent, a nurse, and took care of the nuns.
And she had a home, a very typical stone Arab home, beautiful home with grape vines.
I remember going to pick the grapes at the house.
That is now part of, they just confiscated the land.
She fought it.
She fought as long as she could to try to keep her property.
And I remember passing by there some years, and there's slowly, slowly new Israel homes are being built that look very,
different and she's there's her something that looks out of for as if it you know belongs to biblical
Palestine and so what I was getting at is that these people they're dying as they're living
because it's like and I remember sitting at the home of one of those people in bed Jala and they had
lived in the center of town it was his father's home and then he built a new one near the taluthi
talitha kumi Lutheran school and I'm literally was sitting with them one afternoon and he gets a call from
his brother, the Israelis are here. They're pulling up our olive trees, cutting them down on some of
their land. And he ran over. He got collected as many of the trees as he could. Military order,
that's what it was. They just go and do it, even though it's not their land. And then military order,
nothing you can do. They have jeeps and weapons. You're not going to stop them. But he was able to take
some of those trees. This shows the resiliency, and the word is Samud. It's like, it's a quiet,
persistence. This is our land
and we're going to stay here. And this man
is a doctor who studied in Hungary. He took
those olive trees and they now
are in a plot of land next to his new house
and trying to grow. So it's like
this is, I'm not
sure what Israel is trying to do.
I mean, it's horrific what's going
on in Gaza and what is very
concerning to me and why
I'm grateful to be on your show is that what
is going to happen
the people that I know in the
West Bank, Christianity
Muslim, it's not said, but it's like we're next, that what they've done to Gaza is going to
come to us because who's going to stop them? Already in the northern parts where the refugee,
the UNRWA, the refugee camps were, I was there in September. They had already been making
raids. I was in the center of Janine, right in front of the Catholic Church. They had bulldozed
the middle of the road and broken the water pipes. No bullet holes.
I lived in 2002 during the Antifada in Bethlehem.
The whole city was full of bullet holes.
So there hadn't been any confrontations,
but they were still bulldozing and doing what they wanted to do
to wreck the infrastructure to make it harder for people to go to work up there.
But now, in the last eight months, they've cleared out at least 15,000 people in Tolcarum and Janine in the northern part.
They're not in their homes.
Do you hear those stories?
And these affect Christians as well.
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So why do American Christian churches send money to a government that does this to Christians?
Well, I think the ones that send money that support the settlements are obviously the Christian Zionists.
There's an organization called Christians United for Israel, Pastor John Hagee.
I was in Washington a few weeks ago because, well, they had a conference in Baltimore.
So it's slowly growing an awareness by other Christians in America that just like many Jews are protesting and saying not in our name and Jewish, you know, the Jewish voice for peace, there has to be much more done by the Christians in America because these Christian Zionists are speaking in our name.
Someone like Ted Cruz, Senator Cruz, is saying and doing what he's doing because he's falling a Christianity that is not the Christianity of the Holy Land.
It's not the Christianity of a Catholic or an Orthodox or a traditional Christian.
It's a heretical belief.
What is Christian Zionism?
As far as I understand it, they believe in the idea of the rapture.
They believe that it's sort of this cruel bargain they have going with Israel.
Because basically what they say, that they're going to be swooped up into heaven, right?
And then there's going to be a thousand-year kingdom.
And then there'll be the end of the world and the judgment by Christ, and he'll come back.
This is a false, it was condemned as a heresy in 381 because basically there is no thousand-year millennium to come.
No thousand-year period.
The end, look, we are in that time period now.
And so it's a false belief there.
And the...
So basically they're arguing is that
Jesus coming the first time wasn't enough?
Yeah. And it's like in a way
it's denying the Messiah.
As an orthodox Christian,
the most important thing in my life
is that we receive the body
and blood of Christ. And
we prepare ourselves to receive that body
because Christ came as God
and as man. And if you read
John, it's actually I read 666,
first he says,
this is my body, and drink, this is my blood. And many of people that heard the saying and found
it to be a hard saying and turned away from him. So everybody was Jewish then, right? But some believed
and some didn't. And some continued to follow only the law. And Christ superseded the law.
He said there's something more than that law. I am the law. I fulfill the law and the prophets.
We believe in the Feast of the Transfiguration. I'm Mount Tabor. It takes place near Nazareth. I have been there
many times. And in our icons, in our images, you see Moses and you see Elijah aside Jesus,
because the law and the prophets have been fulfilled in Jesus Christ. He came and said, I'm the
church, I'm your salvation. And you know, what I think often about is where I lived in Mount
of Olives, St. Mary Magdalene Convent, right above it is a Catholic monastery called Dominus Flavit.
Christ wept. It's where Christ wept. And I think of it often now because
to some degree with Muslims to a lesser degree
because they retain some of the Christian
sensibility,
but he's weeping over the people that didn't see him,
that didn't understand who he was.
And the, okay, so they follow only the law,
and I think that's why you see
these are people that can somehow justify
allowing for the starvation
and ethnic cleansing of so many people.
Because think of the stories from the Gospels,
where Christ heals the man with the withered hand.
Yes.
And he's looking behind him are the Pharisees, and he's grieved at their hardness of heart
because he was healing, healing, doing a work on the Sabbath day, and that was against the law.
And so now these Christians of wrong belief believe that they need to rebuild the temple
as part of their plan.
So they believe that the current state of Israel, which has nothing to do with the biblical Israel,
is needed to be built up
so that then somehow they can restore
and build that temple.
Fulfill an obligation of the law
and the price of that,
they're willing to forego the compassion
that Christ talked about
and allow people to be starved
and wiped out.
And Christians in America
have to understand
that you're allowing
both people who support the state of Israel
who are Jewish
and those Christians
who think they're doing something
in the name of
Christ when it's far from the name of Christ, and it's actually causing the end of the Christian
population in the Holy Land. It's going to be, the numbers have dwindled. Now we're getting to the
small thousands. I just received a call the other day. Jacob's Well is in the large city of Nabilis,
in the center of the West Bank, which has been grievously, raids take place all the time,
and it's very difficult. But what happened the other day was that a Christian-run factory,
In Nablus, there's about 600 families, around 600 Christians, a number of churches, and Jacobs well, which is a very important site to us.
We always go there on a pilgrimage when we can.
And their factory, no warning, no permit.
First, on June 26th, I believe, the Israeli Army came in and confiscated some of the factory equipment.
And then two weeks later, they came and blew up a big portion of the factory.
So how are people supposed to have...
they gave no reason.
There was no permit.
They have lawyers.
There has been, as far as I know, to this state, no court order, no reason.
And the only thing, I mean, quickly what popped into my head because it is a metal-making
factory, okay, they must be using it to make weapons, right?
These are Christians who have been there for decades, the centuries, I think, even the family.
And it's a well-known business, all right?
And no order was given.
And quite, I almost feel a little worried.
about saying anything because I don't know what the repercussions will be with that family because
they have no recourse. Who do they go to? Where's Ted Cruz in all this? Ted Cruz talks about how he's a
Christian. Mike Johnson, as the Speaker of the House, talks about how he's a Christian. They talk about it a lot,
actually. I think they have to, we have to, I'm not sure that it can be done by, we have to battle
APEC and the Christian Zionists by the Christian standing up, say, not in my name. We can't be doing
this. So if they're getting money from these organizations, then Christians have to have to
have enough concern to say, I don't want this happening in my name.
No, and to my brothers in Christ.
Right, exactly.
And not only it's the real people, the living stones that are there, that keep the
church is open, that keep things going, but also for our Christian legacy.
You know, we're supposedly a country based on a Judeo-Christian heritage, right?
But so where is that Judeo-Christian heritage when you're destroying the very foundations
of it?
St. Jerome translated the Bible in Bethlehem.
his the cells where he is at are under the church of the nativity you know the the very roots of
our Christian heritage are there and we're letting it be destroyed not physically and uh yeah
physically by killing the people but also there's a wonderful person when you talk about resistance
when this all started with Hamas so for the most part I would say they're a resistance move
they're simply people fighting for their people trying to protect their land um
And I don't know if we want to reach into the area of the whole problem is, is there was never defined what Palestine is.
You know, the Oslo Accords took place.
And then there was nothing to, there was area A, B, and C.
And you didn't have a Palestine.
So little by little, Israel just keeps taking over the landless and confiscating, building the settlements, adding the checkpoints, and making, strangling the life of anybody living there.
Now I lost my train thought.
I'm going to do anything.
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the state of israel um you know it's less than 80 years old but that area is thousands of
years old controls by various empires as you've said uh and then finally the british up until
1948 during all that time huge pieces of land were owned by various christian churches
particularly in jerusalem what happened to that are they
or own that land? They own the land, but this is where it's sort of a lesser kind of persecution,
is that they use legal means or semi-legal means because you have land that was under the Ottoman Empire,
and there might be some documents or certain leases, and they say, well, the lease is up now,
we have to renegotiate it, and suddenly the Christians have lost a portion of their land.
Or they'll use middlemen and say, and it's sort of acts of deceit, and they end up buying large,
these front companies come and buy off some of the land
and you don't realize that it's going to not Christians
or not to Palestinians and being used in another way.
In Jerusalem?
All, yeah, primarily around Jerusalem, Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
There's large chunks that have been taken.
The Knesset sits on the own land owned
by the Jerusalem Patriarchate.
What?
Yeah, well, it was their land.
Yeah, and they have a lease.
They have a lease for it.
How did they get it?
Well, obviously they allowed them to have that.
That was a legal operation that was done, yeah, to have that land.
When you first got there 30 years ago, were there more Christians than there are now?
There were more.
I mean, it still has been a relatively small population in the tens of thousands, I think, in Palestine overall.
But it's certainly, I think, the greater degree, and little by little, it's decreased.
but it's really getting frightening now
because I think these last two years
it's sort of like almost pushed people over the edge
but then you hear of families in communities
like five or ten families that are leaving now
going to Europe, sometimes US or Canada or Australia
and that's not only Christians of course
Muslims are a bigger population
because there are people, if you're raising your child
and there's no job opportunities for them
And quite frankly, there's a good likelihood that they, if you're a teenage boy, that you could get shot.
I mean, I know a number of kids in Alazaria where I was, 14, 15-year-olds who have been shot.
And look at the difference in that.
Supposedly throwing a Molotov cocktail.
And now think about when the war started with Ukraine in Russia.
I remember a story in the New York Times.
It was a huge story celebrating that a beer factory was now generating,
Molotov cocktails to throw against the Russians. And that was celebrated. In Palestine,
hundreds of teenage boys have been killed because Israel will say they were throwing a
Molotov cocktail. And I know of one case, he wasn't even, I think he was 12 years old last
year. I know a beautiful man and Dr. Salim Muslim, but who used to take care of the nuns in our
convent. He lives in Shofat refugee camp, which is part of Jerusalem. They pay Jerusalem. They pay Jerusalem.
taxes, but a wall surrounds them.
They're guarded by Israeli soldiers.
He tries to run a disability center, but they're constantly being raided, people being
detained by the Israelis and the infrastructure there.
You can tell when you're in a Palestine, East Jerusalem versus the West.
One has nice sidewalks, good schools, the other is decrepit.
Anyway, Dr. Salim, there was a boy at the camp there, 12 years.
old. It was a Muslim holiday and he had, he was shot dead. And what they said was he had thrown
a Molotov holiday. He was 200 yards from any soldier and they shot a dead. But that literally
happens every day. I have a young man that we just helped come to America a year and a half ago
who lives north of Hebron, the Christian. And his family, he went to school a half hour north
in Shepard's Field. We wanted to bring him to America because he was at that age where you look
the wrong way to soldier and its possibility
of getting shot. He's Christian, but he
could be Muslim. It doesn't, you know, the point is that this
is what happens to them. So any normal family
how, you know,
they want to stay in their land. It's difficult
to immigrate. How are you going to be treated
going to another country and have to
pick up your livelihood and leave other
family members? It's not an easy thing
to do, but yeah, it is happening that the
population is declining.
And the priests are very concerned. I've talked to a number
of priests in the West Bank
and they are aware of the
situation. So what we're hoping to do, you know, there's sort of a latent movement of Christians
that don't have this Christian Zionist perspective. And, you know, the Catholic Church has always
done some to support the communities over there, but we haven't done anything politically.
Because ultimately, it's not the money that's needed now. It has to be the change that we have
to change the support of Israel. If you allow the settlements continue, if you continue,
you know, James Carville, right? He was under Clinton and he came up with a phrase.
for the campaign, it's the economy
stupid. The problem with Israel
and Palestine is not Muslim versus
Jew, it's the occupation
stupid. That's really what it
comes down to. And unless we get
something where a
sovereign Palestinian state, where
granted their freedom is created,
and maybe that'll be two states
with the boundary, or maybe it'll be some sort of
confederation. That's up to the politicians
to decide. But unless there's freedom
and an ability for the Palestinians
to develop and be, and
be free to have their country, Christians will continue to leave. And what will happen, not only those
living stones will leave, but the holy sites, what gives me the greatest pleasure is after I left
Jerusalem. I've lived in America, but two times a year I've been pilgrims, people who want to come
and visit the holy sites. Go and see where Jesus Christ was crucified and resurrected. Go see where he was
born go up to the sea of Galilee, be a part of that. And one of our saints says, taking a pilgrimage
to the Holy Land is like the fifth gospel. So we can read the Bible all we want, but it's when we go there
and really are at the places where our Lord walked and lived and performed his miracles, that
you really, it deepens your Christianity and your sense of, one of the loveliest things is,
I take people of all ages, and I'll ask them younger people at the end of the trip. So what, what do you
liked the most. And some people might say the Dead Sea or something, but I've also been struck
that 15-year-old boys will come back and tell me it's when we went to the Holy Sepulchre and to
the tomb of Christ. Yes. So there's obviously something there that's important to our Christian
heritage. And what's happening is if the Christians are forced to leave, if Israel takes greater
control, what we will have is museums. They won't be living places of prayer. And that will be a great
tragedy, not only for the Christians, but I think for the whole world.
Yeah, because they're not owned by government.
I mean, these are pre-existing.
Of course, they've been there for centuries.
And they have gone down in up.
I mean, there have been times over the centuries where Christians have had difficult times
and then rose up again and did.
So I think actually we're in one of those dark times.
I mean, we could go into a whole explanation of why the world it is.
Why do we even allow?
This is mind-boggling to me.
it's getting painful.
I can't look at anything right now.
I think a lot of people,
every day these stories of what is happening
and people justifying it.
To anyone with a conscience,
it's sort of like,
what are we doing?
And how has this evil been allowed to grow
and develop?
Did you make any converts in Palestine ever?
You mean Muslims?
You have to be careful with it.
But I will say that I don't know
those Muslims that have converted.
to Christianity, but it's not something you can do
openly. Not that they're going to be
killed, but it's not, it won't be
looked upon well. And it's not easy to do.
Is it legal?
To proselytize?
Yeah.
We in Palestine?
Yeah.
You can talk to be. I guess it doesn't, you know,
the interesting thing is I'm Orthodox.
In Orthodoxy,
we don't, aren't really a
proselytizing faith. It's a faith that's
becomes of what you are and how you live.
You know what I mean?
it says you don't actively do missionary work in a lot of cases.
Mostly it's just by your example.
And that was the first Christians, right, and who were martyrs.
Or were people, or their way of life because they weren't pagans,
because they were trying to treat people decently and people responded to that.
You were following the message of Christ and that people say, oh, yeah, well, we really don't
want to live like the Sybaritic life that we were living before, and that looked appealing to people.
So that is what the witness of Christianity is.
And that's another reason why if it's gone,
it'll only hasten the bloodshed and the destruction in the Middle East
because I think the Christians are a buffer between Muslim and Jew in Palestine and Israel.
Yes, well, that makes sense.
Were you there?
There was a siege at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, birthplace of Jesus?
Maybe 2002, I remember.
Oh, yes, I was there.
Yeah.
Yeah, I had, that's where I became a special.
close to the Palestinian Christian community, because in Bethany, there aren't that many Christians, but we had teachers from there and students from there, the boarding students. And when the siege happened, it wasn't just a siege on the church itself. What they claimed was that there were some fighters that were in the church, which actually, that's a Christian tradition, you know, for people to take refuge in a church. But the Israelis used that as a way to, well, they besieged the church. But the whole town was under siege, not just the church.
So that meant that the teachers who lived in the Bethlehem area couldn't get out of Bethlehem to come over to Bethany.
People couldn't get food and medicines.
After a while, it became, I would get calls and saying, you know, my neighbor has epilepsy and we cannot get a new medication for her.
Can you find a way to get something in, you know, through a care organization into us?
And finally, when the siege end during that time, I remember a doctor telling me how describing how someone had been shot in his,
house and he was bleeding to death and he was calling the doctor you know what do i do what can i do
and the doctor literally heard him just bleed to death during that because no ambulance nothing was
allowed and after the 40 days roughly 40 days which is ironic um uh i went in there and i met up
with some of the people the everything was strewn with garbage all over the streets the bullet holes
you know what israel likes to do is destroy not only did they they control the place but they
almost take glee. And we're not talking about Hamas time. We're not talking about
2003. We're talking about 2002. They would go through the town of Bethlehem and purposely
with their tanks, a piece of the smaller ones, like knock over the light poles or the things
that are garnished with Christmas trees, you know, decorations and things, and knock them over
in the middle of town or pull their bulldozer and smash a car. But again, that same resiliency
of the Palestinians, the Samud, I have a photograph.
He's actually the father of one of the priests now in Bethlehem,
and he's sitting on his car that had been smashed by the Israelis,
just with a smile, kind of like, you're not going to stop us.
We're going to carry, you know, you did this to me, but I'm going to carry on.
There were people shot inside the church in the TV.
Yeah, the bell ringer there was shot dead, yeah.
And I know monks were there.
Of course, yeah, yeah.
So that was the moment.
And Christians were shot outside the church.
I don't know if it was exactly.
during those 40 days, but a young 16-year-old boy who had an altar boy of the church,
you know, there were curfews going on. And they had tanks all around the city, circling them.
And he was out with his 70-year-old cousin, I think it was, and they were just kicking a soccer ball.
He was shot dead by a sniper, 16-year-old Johnny Talgea.
You remember his name.
Of course. And also there was another, Christine Sada. Her father was the principal of the Orthodox school in Betzahur, Shepherds Field.
They were driving and the Israeli soldiers who, that is area A, right?
If you want to talk about the politics of it, technically that means it was under full
Palestinian control.
They should have their police and everything.
No, Israeli jeeps were there and they mistakenly thought that was a car of some militants.
So they shot up the car.
His wife was injured, he was injured as well, and his 12-year-old daughter, Christine, was killed.
What did they do wrong?
they thought the Israelis thought that was somebody that was going to do something bad
was anyone ever punished for it of course not of course not i had an incident in front of our
school where they had put us on curfew and our girls the bedroom of the border girls were on
the main street and i look out it was curfew time but i saw and there were soldiers sort of marching
up and down the street a handful of them not like a brigade and um there was a man walking up to
the soldier. And I thought, oh my goodness, that's a Palestinian man. It turned out he was deaf
mute and he wasn't from Bethany. He was from Hebron, but he had relatives there. He didn't
understand what was going on because they call curfew anytime and then you got to get
off the street. So the soldier shot him in the, the guy, the man's a deaf mute and he ended up
getting shot in the eye. He survived, but he was shot in the eye right outside our door.
And for all, for a couple of years, we had a tank in front of the school. And often I had to
Why was, were the girls dangerous at the school?
Well, the Palestinians are dangerous.
All Palestinians, yeah, yeah, five-year-old girls are dangerous.
But what was danger to us is Mount of Olives.
This was before the, or while the process of the wall being built,
there had been a situation where some settlers,
probably the followers of Ben-Gavir,
they had taken a little truck and they had explosives.
And they had gone in front of a high school on,
on the top of the Mount of Islands.
Owls. Fortunately, it was stopped before they blew it up. So every day, I remember for at least
six months, because they'd also done something similar near us near the Malayatamian settlement,
I would actually go, we had a fairly large property, and there's like gates on either side
where the girls would come in. Every morning, I'd be up at six in the morning and go make sure
that I didn't see like a little bomb someplace, because that was what was going on. And totally
was intended. You worried the settlers would bomb the school?
they attempted to they attempted to why there were complications Palestinians but kids doesn't matter
it's it doesn't matter at all I remember thinking in 2002 when the bell ringer was shot
in the church on the site where Jesus was born so it's kind of the center of Christianity
that in the church of the holy sepulch where he was buried um remember thinking like are
Are American Christians in the United States whose weapons, literally they were using AR-15 platforms for this, American rifles, American ammunition,
Caterpillar double-dozers, American bulldozers. Are they really going to put up with this?
Was there any pushback from the United States?
The problem is, is the lack of awareness.
I worked at CNN at the time. And I interviewed Benjamin Netanyahu about this at the time.
I'll never forget it.
And what was his response?
terrorists like we do we have to do no apologies but i said but that's our church and it's also
propaganda nothing to do with this so what are you doing and it was like shut up anti-semit but i remember
thinking maybe i mean i'm just some like semi agnostic news douche from cnn but like where are the
ministers on this the church i think a lot of times they didn't want to get involved it's it was the same fear that
mainstream media seems to have is that we don't want to rock the boat. And also to be fair,
because the mainstream media doesn't do its job fully, people are given a very distorted picture
of events, so they don't know what's happened or going on. This is a kind of a minor example,
but at that time period, my brother was coming up for a job at ABC News, and there was a story
on the page 6, New York Post. George's crazy, my name at that time was Maria, George's crazy
sister Maria. And what they said, it was like the drug report and said that came from that kind of
thing, that I had said that Israeli soldiers were raping women in Bethlehem. Point of fact,
someone had contacted me about that in an email from America and said, did you hear anything
about anything going on like that? And I said, no, you know, we have a lot of difficulties. I do know
where they've gone into doctors clinics and they've like broken the sonogram machine and they've
put graffiti on,
went to the bathroom on there.
The same kind of things that they're doing in Gaza
they were doing it in the early 2000s,
raiding people's homes to have a vantage point
and then steal the things in there
and heard the family into one room.
And so I said, but, you know, I said,
well, let me check it out.
I haven't heard any stories like that.
And I contacted friends in Beth.
I said, no, no.
The Christian said, no, nothing like that has happened.
And I wrote back to that person and said that.
But it didn't matter.
They put it, that's what comes out on the news
is what they want to come out in the news.
So this was someone trying to keep your brother from getting a job at ABC News.
Either to keep it or to keep him in line, right?
You don't want to step out and say anything against Israel.
Did you talk to your brother about it?
It's a difficult conversation, and I think it's probably better for him to say why.
He does.
I think it's not his problem.
I think it's a problem in all of mainstream media.
And it's certainly a great problem right now.
I mean, you know, and even with this, we're dealing,
now it's becoming a lot of publicity on the star
even though it is being distorted.
I actually watched the news this morning
and James DeVrides is on
and he's talking about it's all Hamas
and they show the emaciated hostage
and as if, you know, everything would be okay
if only Hamas would release the hostage
and that's the starvation.
When it's taking place,
millions of people are being starved.
Babies are dying there and we're focused.
God, I hope the hostage gets freed.
He should get freed and he should get freed
and Israel should remove themselves from Gaza
and allow the food to get in.
And Christians should be pushing for that.
And I think we are seeing that to some degree now,
but it's still obscuring the main point.
Like I said, the unspoken thing
when I talk to all my friends on the West Bank now
is that they know we're next that it's going to happen.
And it will happen.
Maybe we'll go back to that time
where it'll be more like, they play a long game.
You know, even with this settlement building,
we'll build.
And then if America gives a little,
bit of pushback, okay, we stop for a while and then we start again. So maybe even in the West Bank for
now, if there's hopefully will be some resolution with a ceasefire and bringing food into Gaza,
that in the West Bank that they'll step back for a little while. But that doesn't mean that
in another few months, there'll be some provocation. Like I said, they've already wiped out
thousands of people from refugee camps until Kardom and Janine. They're making life very difficult.
in many towns in Taiba, in Bethlehem,
water is not given to the city
so you don't have water unless you have your water tanks
and there's no rain.
You know, when I first moved to Jerusalem
and you do your laundry, you hang it outside,
and I came there in May,
there don't rain until October, if you're lucky.
So those water tanks aren't getting filled
during the summertime.
And Israel controls the access to the water
to the Palestinian towns.
So if they decide,
do you only get it once a week?
You only get it once a week.
While they have swimming pools
and their settlements and green plush grass
that Christian Zionists are paying for.
Have you,
you know a lot of Christians in the Holy Land,
how many support the government of Israel
do you know?
The Palestinians within Israel?
Yeah, Christians support the government of Israel.
I can't, I don't know that they would be,
any that really would.
Any, what's the, especially now.
Any.
I mean, they're literally throwing out Palestinian
in the representatives.
So in the U.S., there's a sense that Christians support this program.
Of course not.
And to the, you know, when I first moved there in 98, there was hope for peace.
And there was a much stronger peace movement within Israel, people who recognize not just
a cold peace, but that we can live together.
And we should work towards that.
But that's certainly been abolished.
It's just so strict.
I lived in D.C. for all this.
But like at the, you know, the final decade of the Cold War, there were a lot of
Jews in the Soviet Union who were being persecuted.
Well, everyone in the Sovietians being persecuted, including the Jews.
And they came to Israel?
Yeah, they came to Israel.
They came to the United States.
And there were Jewish groups in the U.S. and in Israel that I supported then,
and I support now, who said, we've got to get our people out of there and help them.
They're called refusenics.
Right.
And my dad worked in this, actually.
And I thought that was great.
Sure.
You don't see that with any Christian group with Christians in the Middle East.
There's no Christian group in the United States that I'm aware of.
It's like, hey, those are our people.
Maybe we should help them.
They are.
In fact, there was just a conference down in Atlanta.
There's something called churches for Middle East peace.
And they're the group, like Telos Group.
There's Christians for a free Palestine.
But they're very small and they're not so much part of the institute, you know, the hierarchy of the church.
But to us we had Pope Francis did speak out.
And I think certainly the Catholic Church in America has to do a lot more as an institution.
I mean, we should have a Christian APAC group.
Yeah, of course, yeah, going on.
Like you're not allowed to shoot up the church of the nativity, sorry.
I mean, even if you're agnostic on the politics after or whatever, which is fine, maybe preferable, but you can't do that to Christians.
How about no?
I agree 100%.
So we have to move to that.
But again, to be that gets back to the thing, though, is that people don't always see the whole story.
And we're just flooded with this message that those terrorists are coming to get.
us next, which is absurd. Has any member of Hamas or anybody of a Palestinian come and threatened
America as an American? No, that's not what they're about. The thing is that, but that's the tactic
that's used is that we have to plaster them as being these jihadists when they're nothing like
that. Are they, I mean, I'm sure you've dealt with Hamas or no people who are, right? Are they religious
fanatics? Are they jihadis?
Not the people that I know.
Like I said, when I was again at the school, we had a couple teachers, Muslim men, and there were some elections going on.
And it wasn't Hamas then.
It was the social party or something, but it was definitely a Muslim religious party.
I would have voted for those guys because they weren't corrupt.
They wanted to serve their people.
And that's what it was about.
So I'm not saying it doesn't happen anywhere.
I'm not totally ingrained in the community,
but the vibe there isn't one of wanting everybody to convert to Islam
and forcing it upon them at all, at all.
And the purpose of Hamas is primarily to resist and to protect their people and their land.
It's not just Palestine and Israel where the Christian population has shrunk.
It seems like throughout the Levant.
Yes.
And I think that's part of the whole greater.
Israel project. You know, isn't it so ironic that they've made such a big thing?
Targeting Christians. Targeting Christians, yeah. Well, targeting it, to make control for Israel,
for example, in Syria. I went to Syria in 2004, and I went to the place, the convent of St.
Declah, where outside of Damascus in Malula, where the nuns were kidnapped by ISIS, right?
And the population is over 10% Christian, and you have ancient Christian sites, as well as vibrant
monastic communities there in vibrant churches and hospitals that were run by the church in Syria
and Lebanon, right? And now what have we done? And so Assad wasn't perfect. Saddam Hussein wasn't
perfect. But the Middle East is not the United States. And we tried to impose ourselves there
and get rid of these governments who, for all the repression, also kept the people to get allowed
minorities to survive there. Including Christians. Including Christians. Yeah. And Christians.
And just recently, and so I find it mind-boggling
that now we take sanctions off after Assad is gone
and we put in place someone who was Daesh, who was part of ISIS.
Does a leopard change its spots?
And how are the Christians in Syria doing that?
Well, we had the bombing.
We had the actually very, if you may, I'd like to look for the statement
from Patriarch John of Antioch,
whose brother was a bishop and was kidnapped in 2010
and presumed to be dead now.
And in June
There was a bombing
A suicide bombing
In the church in Damascus
Mar-Elias
And Patriarch John, he didn't pull any punches
He came and he said to the
He gave a eulogy
But he also called out the government
Because they didn't really condemn the act at all
The ISIS government
And he says
Apostle Paul in his epistle to the Romans
For whether we live
We live to the Lord
And whether we die
we die to the Lord.
The rock of our faith is the Lord
who rose from the dead
and the martyrs who live
who lie before us today
are children of the resurrection.
They dwell in the divine light.
They did not die.
They are alive.
They have passed on,
even if in this horrific way,
to the one whom they loved.
He's living like we're supposed to live
as Christians, is talking at it.
The Christians there.
But then he says,
but I will say boldly, Mr. President,
Abu Jilani, Ashara,
the former head of HDS,
head of the ISIS group.
We deeply regret, Mr. President,
that in the immediate aftermath of the crime,
not a single government or state official
was present at the scene
except for Mrs. Hind Kabawat, a Christian.
We regret that deeply.
We are an integral component of this nation,
and we are here to stay.
Let me remind you the two archbishops
of Aleppo, Bulus, and Yohanna were kidnapped,
and much was said at the time.
The Malula nuns were also kidnapped,
And here we still are.
This heinous crime was committed the day before yesterday, and we will remain here.
We appeal to you, Mr. President, for a government that does not get distracted by issuing unnecessary decisions unworthy of mention from the sacred royal door.
We call for a government that takes responsibility and shares in the suffering of its people.
Mr. President, the people are hungry.
If some have not told you, I am telling you, honorable, come and take care of your people.
I think that's pretty bold
for a guy who had his brother kidnapped
just had a number of practitioners
bombed and he's telling someone
who has been known to be a terrorist
calling him out.
That's pretty bold.
It's pretty bold. I would say that's pretty bold.
So the government of Syria now,
the government run by the former ISIS leader,
is pro-Israel.
Yeah. I mean, I think that's the whole plan.
And, you know, when you get to it,
they talked about
from the river to the sea, right?
Where did that statement come from?
Look at the Charter of Lukud, the party of Netanyahu.
They very clearly say from the Jordan to the Mediterranean is going to be Israel.
And really from the Nile to the Euphrates,
which means going into Iraq, into the edges of Egypt and up to Islam.
So that's why we had the war in Iraq.
Why did our young people have to die?
Why did we have to spend so much money on a war?
I was supposed to visit Iraq in early 2000s.
Our school secretary, her father was born in Mosul,
and he was an Assyrian Christian.
And so this is an opportunity to go and visit him,
and that's when they started chopping off the heads and doing things,
so we thought better of making that part of the trip.
But how many Christians were displaced from Iraq during that time?
Almost all of them.
And now in Syria you're seeing the same thing.
which in 2004, I saw vibrant communities.
I saw people who could live, even under Assad as Christians.
Now they're in fear for what's going to happen to them.
I mean, it's hard to see this as an accident.
So West Bank, Gaza, Iraq, some sort of plan.
Syria, Lebanon, all places where U.S. foreign policy chutzers at the behest of Israel
see the destruction of Christian communities.
I'm guessing that's like not an accident.
No, not at all. It's definitely part of a plan. But the thing is, why should we be supporting that plan? And also, you know, we're focusing on the Christians, but I said we had students who were Russian background who lived in the cities of Israel. And what you've seen in the last 20 years, too, instead of that nascent peace movement, instead of people who tolerated their neighbor and could live with their neighbor, it's become a totally militant society. The girls I know that are there now, it's a lot of aggression.
and a lot of hatred.
And how many Israelis have done?
You're having big problems in Greece now.
I don't know if you've seen the Dem, I'm a Greek, right?
Yeah.
People are parading through the straits because Israelis have left Israel,
even though they're the ones that have all the defense, right?
All the protection.
Even what kind of a country is Netanyahu trying to have?
Do you really want to live in a militarized country that's always in fear
and always thinking that they should, they're under attack when they don't have to be?
You say it's more hostile.
You see these videos of Christians priests with crucifixes around their necks getting spit on in Jerusalem.
Are those real?
Yes.
And I mean, that's happened before, you know, even from the first days that I would do.
There'd be occasionally something like that.
And occasionally there were graffiti put on walls and, yeah, sprayed on Jesus a monkey, 2013.
Jesus is a monkey.
Yeah, that was right.
In Topka, where the multiplication of the loaves and the fish, a Catholic.
community, graffiti there, talking about getting rid of the idols or something like that,
some sort of Old Testament statement, and burning, burning a statue of the Virgin Mary in parts
of the monastery there.
So, but that was a small segment.
Like even at that time, Ben Gavir and Smotrich were like sort of outcast in Israel.
They weren't the prominent members of Israeli society and what they represented in those
religious zealots of it.
But now they are in power, and they're dominating everything.
And, you know, they say sometimes that if the Israelis didn't have the Palestinians, there'd be a civil war between the secular and the religious Jews, which is true.
That's what happened.
Oh, there's enormous tension.
Yeah. Yeah.
Enormous.
Yeah.
Do you know anyone who's been spit on?
Any Christians have been spit on?
Me?
You've been spit on?
Of course.
Of course.
Of course.
Of course.
That's disgusting.
Yeah.
Well, but that's the least of it.
That's the least of it.
But again, I'm saying this as a perspective, from the perspective of someone who lives in a majority Christian country that's paying for all of this.
Right. So that's kind of the...
That's the mentality. Or I'll tell you a story. My father is a priest, right?
A Greek Orthodox, and he was wearing a collar suit. He visited one time, and we visited the town of...
We visited the town of Taiba.
And there was a checkpoint before you enter into the town.
Can you give his perspective? Where is Taiba?
Taiba is biblical Ephraim.
It's when Christ, after he raised Lazarus from the dead,
he went about 10 miles to the northeast of Jerusalem, Bethany area,
to prepare himself before he would come back to Jerusalem for his crucifixion.
Ephraim is known as the town of compassion, of solace.
Even in the time of Saladin, they came.
They actually was called Ephraim.
It's now called Taiba, which means the good or the beautiful.
So it sort of had that reputation.
So he went there to prepare himself for his crucifixion,
20 miles, not even 20 miles from Jerusalem.
Interesting. So with your father who was...
My dad, yeah. A priest. An American priest. Yeah. Dressed as a priest. And my mom was there too.
So we were going to drive it. So there's a checkpoint sort of at the entrance of the town.
And then you have many olive groves, which by the way, I was just talking to someone the other day.
They have about 8,000 acres of land, let's say, and over a quarter of it has been confiscated
either by settlers and the army allowing them to take their olive groves.
and they have no recourse.
Who owns the land?
The Palestinian Christian families.
And it's been confiscated from Christian families.
Well, confiscate, what do you do when they have guns and you don't?
I don't know.
You call your patron church in the West and you say, raise a stink, call Ted Cruz.
Well, we called Mike Cuckabee.
Mike Cuccaby came, right?
And then the only thing the...
So what did Mike Cuccobee is the U.S. ambassador to Israel?
He said he was very concerned because it.
the also had happened, which they didn't, there's three churches in, in Taiba, an Orthodox, Greek
Catholic and Catholic. And there's also the ruins of a fourth century church that still partially
stands and people will still go there sometime, not full services, but just to be at the spot.
It's a place that was built by St. Helen in the fourth century, Church of St. George.
Settlers burned the brush, and also there's a cemetery right next to it burned that area.
They burned the cemetery?
everything's stone there
so nothing burns
but they burn
the area around there
so you have grass
and brush
that was burned
and not only that
I was shocked
when I saw
how much
they've infiltrated
it's one thing
the entrance of town
and you've taken
the open land
the olive grows
they have
in that town
there's a beer factory
a distillery
a hotel
and Bedouins
are living
have been forced
off their land
around there
and are no living
with
allowance of the Christians
to be there
because they have
no place
else to go and no one to protect them. So Ambassador Huckabee comes and he's very concerned
because an attack on a church. And also that same week, a Palestinian American had been shot dead
by settlers or beaten to death, Saif, Musilat, not even a couple miles away. And he was going to
address that as a Palestinian American to see that Israel would investigate. Nobody's been arrested
or done. Is an American citizen? Yes, he's from Florida. He's often, just like,
Like, I'm a Greek.
American citizen was beaten to death?
By settlers.
And no one was arrested?
No, never happens.
Down in Hebron, just there.
And the concern, my concern in talking to you.
And we're sure that happened.
We're absolutely sure that happened.
How can an American citizen be beaten to death in an Israeli controlled area paid for by
the United States and nobody does anything about it?
Well, this is our problem, isn't it?
I'm sorry, I keep stepping on your story.
So Ambassador Huck could be sure.
He shows up. He shows up and he says, you know, he's very concerned about what happened and we're going to check it, you know, the next day, settlers were there with cows marching through the town with their cows. So it shows that they are in control. And not only that, just a couple days ago, this is a week after he's been there. You know, in the Bible, there's the story of Ruth. One of the women in Taiba is married to a, but she's a Greek American, married, they met in school in.
Boston. He was going to business school her husband. He came back to Palestine to establish the
business. She goes with her husband, becomes Palestinian, you know, going to care for the people
of his nation. She got a Ph.D. at Harvard. She's written books about the Holy Land. And with
the sales of those books, little by little, she visited parishes in America, and she raised
money so that they could build 30 homes for Orthodox people.
Those homes were cars of the people in those homes were burned the other day.
And there's graffiti again on the wall.
And it says, it names another village and it says, you're going to regret this.
And the rest, I talked to two Israelis, people who are from Israel and they couldn't even decipher the top part.
So, you know, because it's very interesting.
A lot of the settlers are actually people from Brooklyn, New York.
Yeah.
They have dual citizenship.
And they go back and forth between us freely.
They can go to Ben-Gurian airport, go through Tel Aviv to come to the settlements in the West Bank.
But those people in Taiba, who are actually American citizens as well, they can't go through Ben-Gurian airport.
How is it that an American citizen can't go through Ben-Gurian airport?
Because he's also a Palestinian.
Are you sure?
I'm absolutely sure.
Yes.
They have to go through Jordan.
And right now, through a border that is controlled on one side.
by Israel. And right now it's so difficult. They only open for, I've been told, from eight to
one or two, and you've got thousands of people trying to come through, right? So you could be there
for hours and you may not get through that day. People make plans to, you know, the only way
Palestinians can do anything to be free is to go to another country. I mean, even for a vacation
or something. You don't feel free in your own country. I used to feel that when I was living there
in the summertime. That's why I would travel to different countries because within Israel and
Palestine, you feel like you're in prison. You can't.
can't feel like a person. And so if you have the opportunity to go away, to breathe a little bit,
you do that. Since you are an American and you obviously know people in positions of authority,
when you come back to the U.S. and tell these stories at dinner, what do people say?
At dinner, they show concern when you tell the story. But again, maybe it seems too distant for people.
Or I have also, you know what, since I've talked to people in our churches,
I'm trying really not a focus on organizing because people say, how can we help?
Now they're really seeing the gross things that are going on.
Where do we send money?
What do we do?
Yes, people need money, but what we really need is political change.
So I'm sort of bordering on three different congressional districts.
And we've tried to set up appointments with our congressmen.
They've thrown us off.
I'm talking about middle-aged women trying to go see their congressmen.
When you tell them what you want to talk about, they don't want to make an appointment for you,
able to educate them.
And then I wrote a letter to my congressman, Nicholas Langworthy,
it writes back an Israeli bullet point, an APAC bullet point reply,
basically saying, you know, Hamas is the problem.
And, you know, it's okay to send weapons over there.
So, but little by little, we have to go and keep education.
If enough people keep knocking on the doors and saying, we don't like what we're doing,
why are we sending billions of dollars to Israel?
And then we're cutting Medicaid, we're cutting, people don't have.
jobs in his district. In fact, I was listening in. He did a phone town meeting or whatever.
And most of the people were concerned because they didn't have enough money for groceries
or, you know, what was going to be done with their health care in the coming months and years.
And then no question about, he didn't take my question on the thing. I wanted to ask about Israel
and why we were sending more offensive weapons. We're not talking about, don't play this game,
nothing wrong with the Iron Dome and protecting yourself. You're in a tough,
neighborhood. I'm talking about assault rifles, which was just passed again to give assault rifles
that Ben Gavir then just gives into the settlers who then kill the Palestinians in the West Bank.
And we're financing that. So some of the people, have you not had enough? You really want this done
in your name. But the politicians make it hard too. They don't want to hear it. And I understand
When I lived there in the early 2000s, Congressman Darylisa and Carolyn Maloney was still in office at the time.
They were there on an Israeli junket.
I think it was a 60th anniversary of something.
But they were willing to come and see me.
But they wouldn't come to Bethany because that was over the wall or the wall was being built then.
That was in the West Bank.
So we met on the Mount of Olives.
And they came with me and they saw the wall was being constructed then.
And they saw how people were passing through the rocks.
And they had not good things to say about Israel.
But do you think their vote would have changed?
No.
Not going to happen.
Not going to happen.
I once again threw you off track when you were explaining visiting with your parents.
Right.
So we're heading into Taiba and the soldiers, the reason the soldiers are there are because
just outside of Taiba, on one side you have the settlement of Rimonim, swimming pools and
beautiful homes, and the other direction, the huge settlement of Ofra.
So these are in the West Bank
in areas that are supposed to be Palestinian
and so the soldiers there are supposedly
protecting them but they block
the entrance to Taiba or
check who's going in and out
and you're going so we
they first weren't going to let us go they said no no no
you can't come through this way you got to go around
Oprah go like 20 miles and come back
another road to get into Taiba. I said no no
they're only in the country for a couple weeks
they're only here for a few hours we're going in this way
finally they let us in
and then when we go and we said we're only going to be
couple hours. We're visiting families there and we'll come back out. When we come back out,
the same game. The soldiers just standing there. They play this game to show that they're in
control. There was no other car is behind us. They just said, no, they wouldn't let us pass. They're just
going to wait for a while. And finally, my father, temperamental Greek, got out of the car and went
up to the soldier and said, what is this? I'm an American citizen. We would just want to go back to
Jerusalem. And they basically just laughed in his face. Eventually, we were able to move. But the
scorn they have for Americans is really something else. They scorn for America? That's not the
only incident where I've seen something like that. They mock America.
Mock America. America pays for the whole thing. Well, thank you very much.
But there's no love for America? Well, look, I have seen, sadly to say, during that time,
American soldiers, veterans that would be at the checkpoints and they'd be sort of joking with the
soldiers. So there was probably some camaraderie with certain people who were probably
Christian scientists or of that mentality. So they were pro-Israel. If you have that view, then it's
okay. But in general, no, they don't have any love for Americans. Really? Yeah, well, that was
my perception. I think most Americans would be surprised to learn that. Yeah. It's about time that
it changes. Why do you think
they're scorn for Americans in a country
supported by Israel?
I mean, supported by America. I think that's just
a part of the arrogance of the country.
They think they're due
for everything. There's not
much gratitude.
We're past that time.
You know, you're bringing up something now
when I think about it, the time period
when Joe Biden was a young politician
and there was that warm feeling towards Israel
and it was sort of the underdog.
But we're way beyond that time now.
You know, so that's where the sense of before, but there might have been a sense we're thankful to America.
But over the years, as this whole progression of the greater land of Israel and the dominance of another people and having the power to do it, there's no more of that gratitude.
Have you been attacked for saying things like this?
In which way?
In the United States.
Well, like that little slander then.
I mean, I'm sure I will see what happens after this.
I'm sure.
I actually come to think of it, you know, we talked before about in the early 2000s.
My father was a priest at a large church in New York City, and there was a gathering of a few hundred people, and I talked about the situation in Palestine.
And everybody was receptive, but then there was a newspaper that I believe was controlled by John Katsam Tidis.
He was a big fellow in New York City.
They reported what I said, but they also watered it down a lot.
There's like this idea we don't want to go too far and say anything negative about Israel.
And that was back then.
That's 15 years ago, 20 years ago, yeah.
So it's not being attacked necessarily, but it's not letting you be truthful about things.
Do you think Christians in other Arab countries are treated better than Christians in Israel and Palestine?
Well, I can only go from my times of being there in Lebanon, too, at the time I was there.
there were churches
and they were part of the society
so there was nothing wrong with being a Christian
and in Syria when I would now
now who knows what's going to happen but certainly the time
when I was there
well Israel controls those countries now
well they're trying to make inroads
yeah yeah yeah well what do they
do first they bombed after Assad went down
they get rid of all the military
so what is the point of
Abu Jalani being there now
the ISIS head without
who is he serving
is he serving the Syrian people
or the Israeli people?
What's the answer?
Right now, it looks like he's serving Israel.
What's so surprising is that you think of, or in the United States, people think of Israel
as like this foothold of Western civilization in the Middle East, and so you would imagine
the Christians would do a lot better under Israeli control than they would under Assad's control.
No, that's not the case at all.
Definitely not the case at all.
I'd like to talk a little bit more about the Palestinians themselves
and their form of resistance because I think one of the reasons I was grateful to be able to come on
is to really give a picture of them and the people as they are.
And one thing that's really struck me, I know Muslims, I know Bedouins, I know all during this time
where they've really been suffering, what I really get sense from them is their real belief in God
and that their life is in God's hands.
And there's such a humility and obedience to their creator
and an understanding that this life is not the only one.
And there's a real beauty to that
that I think so much of the world is missing.
And I think even sort of there's a deeper sense
to all that's even going on right now, right?
We're in the heart of Jerusalem,
the heart of where Christ came.
There was a reason for that.
And now we have a situation where the people
who were the closest to God
are being destroyed
in a simple sense
I live next to the Mount of Olives
and when you go down the Mount of Olives
it's where they said Hosanna in the highest
here comes Christ
and often I've gone to
parish churches in Palestine
and the whole community is
they know all the service
and they're singing it themselves
and it reminds me
as those people that were on the Mount
of Olives greeting the Creator
greeting the Messiah who is coming for their
salvation and honoring him. And that's what they're doing to this day. And what we're doing instead
is destroying that. And what does that mean for the world when we let that go? The last time I was
there, I went through Amman, not through Tel Aviv. So I had to go through the border. And then I
spent a night. And in the early morning, I was being driven to the airport from Madaba, where there's
a mosaic from the sixth century that shows you the places in the Holy Land, the map in Madaba.
And Madaba is not a very big city.
And as I'm going out of it, you very quickly, before you get to the airport, come to lands that are still being grazed by shepherds.
And I started to weep because to me that's so emblematic of what the Lord really wanted us to be like in touch with the land, recognizing that our life depends on what we grow and what we produce and what we do.
And those kind of people are the ones who I hear from now who say they're suffering.
They're literally going to be killed, but they have so much more courage and faith than you find in so much of America and in the West, which we've lost.
And to me it's sort of like this whole war is in a way we're killing the Christ message.
and that message you can whatever your theology is is one of compassion and tolerance and love
and the world is becoming smaller in that way and I think people sense that right
how we how we act to each other and to our neighbor there's so and and the very fact that
people, politicians and people can listen to doctors listen to what's going on and still
somehow have a blank face and think it's okay how did we come to such a point of
darkness. Well, I mean, it does seem like part of the broader spiritual war. Yes, absolutely. I think so.
What happens to the two million people who live in Gaza? Well, I can't say that I'm a Trump fan,
but he's a wheeler dealer. He wants to get that Nobel Peace Prize. He's got people with a lot of money
in Saudi Arabia and Qatar that have his ear. We don't have to build a Riviera, build it for the
Palestinians. They go and rebuild the area and reconstruct for a Palestinian nation.
Why is that such an outrageous idea? Why does Israel think that the people of Palestine have
to be their enemy? They say, go to Jordan, go to Egypt. What's the difference another 20 kilometers
in? That's really what we're talking about. The difference between Amman and Tel Aviv is 20 miles at the most
to drive between the two?
So what are the difference between the people that live in Palestine,
that live in Jericho and Bethlehem and someone who lives in Amman?
And what's the difference between someone who lives in Gaza?
So give them a defined border and have the people of other countries,
the Arabs too, should support the rebuilding of Gaza
and have Israel remove their military from there
and let Gaza have their freedom to be able to develop.
Those people, there are some of the most educated people in Gaza.
I mean, how many of us have read, I hope, the stories of Mosab Abu Toha or Refat, who was killed, the poet, beautiful, graceful people, Bissan Oda now, who's on every day on, maybe not everybody sees, they're not in the mainstream media, but these are beautiful young Palestinians who are still trying to live and have joy and see something beautiful in the midst of all their suffering.
So there's no reason that the money can be there.
And if Trump, he's not a politician, he's a businessman.
Work it out.
I mean, it's a, I don't know that that's going to happen.
But our politicians certainly haven't done it.
What's the current plan for those people?
It's probably not to raise a trillion dollars and rebuild them a model society.
No, but I mean, so what is a plan?
Are we in such a world where we can look on live TV that too many people are just slowly going to die now?
Or are you going to transfer them?
And why should they be transferred?
Why should they have to leave their land that they've been in for centuries?
And in Gaza, you know, Gaza is as much as the West Bank, Gaza, the St. Porphyria's Church from the 3rd century was bombed.
We also have in the Orthodox...
How did the Christian church get bombed?
Because it's part of Palestinians.
I've been there before.
And basically, it's the Holy Family Church and the Baptist Church.
they're all pretty much in the same area.
So you can't make a mistake.
And Christians through...
But you don't think that was an accident?
No, nothing's an accident.
I mean, occasionally I shall might go off, but no.
And certainly the last time with the one where they pointed at the cross.
You don't miss that.
Well, at the Holy Family Church, the cross didn't topple, but literally inches from it.
And I have, you know, in Nablis at Jacob's Well, there's a large church now, and there's
crosses on the front face in circles.
And the monk always points out to us when I go there.
There's a tank shell that was aimed at that cross.
You can still see it from an earlier confrontation in Naples.
So don't tell me these soldiers make mistakes.
You could, the church in Gaza, as, you know, it's pointed and the cross is there in the
middle of it, by itself.
So it's hard to believe that it wasn't.
So what would you say?
What would you say to Ted Cruz, the self-proclaimed Christian, supporting tank shells fired at crosses?
Like, what is that?
Well, I would say, you know, again, it's to disabuse of the notion.
It's those same talking points that the congressman gave.
Well, but Hamas is the problem.
And their terrorists, well, Hamas is not the problem.
So don't use that as an excuse anymore.
And we have to defend Christian values, American values.
And dignity, freedom for people.
and that what we're all about, having their rights?
What happens on the Temple Mount?
What is the Temple Mount? Can you explain what that is?
Well, the Temple Mount is the area where the temple existed at the time of Christ.
In Jerusalem.
In Jerusalem, right?
Directly, I lived in the convent of St. Mary Magdalene on the Mount of Olives.
Directly in front of me is the Dome of the Rock, and there's the old walls, the walls of the old, the walls of the old.
city and within that is the area where the temple was had been existed right there was also a
Byzantine church at one point in the fifth century and that because where the dome of the rock is
is where Abraham sacrificed or was going to sacrifice his son Isaac yeah so it's a holy to all
monotheistic traditions yes and so on the left side if you're looking from the convent where is that is the
wailing wall that's a portion of the temple that still exists a wall and so some just like the
Christian Zionist. The Jews want the temple rebuilt. So I know Christians who have been there who
will take a sign and go take the crescent off the dome and say we'll put a cross on there.
It's natural. It's all of them to do. So there is this movement to rebuild the temple. All the time
I was there, I heard about that. And there were a small movement of it. But there's a mosque where
the temple was. Yeah. Now it's Alaskamask a mosque. It's the third holiest site for Muslims in the world.
And a lot of confrontations you have is because Israel will control getting in and out being able to go there.
So, or they'll say only men over 50 can go to the mosque today.
And there's a lot of confrontations there and people have been killed.
So it is a mosque.
Yeah, there's a functioning Alaskamaskamask is there.
But so you can't build the temple with a mosque there.
No.
And they say that they have the plans for rebuilding the temple and everything.
And people like Ben Gavir, the.
the minister who's a religious zealot, have gone on the temple mount.
It's a provocation.
The area is controlled by religiously by Jordan, but there's an organization that's responsible
for that area.
Okay, so you hear people say we're going to rebuild the temple, the third temple, but there's a
mosque there, so what's the plan for the mosque?
Well, I guess it would be to blow it up.
And then you just said that's the third holiest site in Islam, of course.
This would be a dark day for anybody.
So then what would happen if you blew up the third holiest sight?
Well, you could probably answer that better than me.
It certainly would ignite a great conflict in the world.
I just want to say this out loud because people sort of blithely talk about it.
Oh, what we're really coming to.
And I think that's the problem with the Christian Zionist is that what is your end game here?
Well, their belief tells them that's okay.
we want to have this third world war because we're going to be taken away
and we'll be okay and we'll come back later after all the fighting's done
that's sort of basically what their theology tells them
and in the meantime all the Jews are supposed to convert
to their brand of Christianity or die in the consecration
and so I'm asking you this because you're a nun right
that's not a Christian that's not a it's not a Christian belief no
or preceptance yeah
Any idea where that came from, that idea?
The rapture?
Yeah.
Well, like I said,
originally the idea of having the thousand-year kingdom is a heresy that was in the early church.
But the real push of all that becomes from the 1830s,
James Darby, Schofield, or John Darby, Schofield.
So it's a new theology that has no basis in the foundations of Christianity.
It has nothing to do with it.
How do you think this story ends?
It depends on us.
And that's why, you know, maybe I, part of me wants to have that message of that we have to do something politically.
The Christians have to wake up and tell they're, because it's all in the hands of the United States.
It doesn't matter what any of the country in the world does.
If the U.S. protects Israel, this will continue.
And we will get to that conclusion of the denouement, which will lead to a third world war or something of that sort, for sure.
So, but also in a spiritual sense, then we also have to recognize.
what do we want to be as people?
Do we want to follow the way of Christ
or do we want to follow the way of
a Christ who leads us to a better world?
We live in this world as best we can
in order to prepare for the world to come.
Christ came and said,
My kingdom is not of this world.
So if you're truly a believing Christian,
you want to do all the things
that will put you in good graces with God
when it comes to judgment day.
right and that doesn't mean rebuilding the temple it means living like a christian and and trying to
build a society that lives by christian principles and your government acting as one that acts by
christian principles and so that doesn't mean slaughtering other people and leading to their
to their cleansing i really appreciate you taking this time i think that there's a lot
i appreciate you i i hope it does a little bit to open people's eyes and i just want to end with
one thing? Of course. I think the only way, you know, there was the writer Tanahisi Coates,
who you may have differences, opinion, on other things, but what really opened his eyes,
he went with a writer's group to the West Bank and went and saw how the Palestinians were living
and what the reality of the occupation was. And that got him to understand, we have to make some
changes. And there have been changes in the black church communities, definitely reaching out.
I would like one, I think that we have to have many more people come and see and not go on,
an APAC junket, but really go. And as Christians, tell your communities we want to go and we want to go
and visit our Palestinian Christian communities. And this might be a little, you could decide what you
want to do with it. My dream thing would be to have a trip, perhaps have you come on the trip,
perhaps have Mel Gibson, Kat Stevens. It's a funny type of thing, but he's a guy who was born in
the Greek church and is now a Muslim. And Zoran and Brad Landers,
and try to give the idea
and Marjorie Taylor Green.
The point is we have to expose
what's going on. I want to go to that dinner.
All right? Not just a dinner. You're going to come visit
with my friends in the, in Janine,
okay? And in Bethlehem.
And then you're going to go tell the world what's going on there
because you're all much better communicators than I am
and the world really has.
Aren't we horrified by the idea?
Aren't you as a media person horrified?
Why can't reporters go into Gaza?
And reporters are not allowed in large portions of the West Bank now.
They call them military zones.
What kind of press freedom is that?
And what are they trying to hide?
So the only way that's going to break that is by enough of us saying,
enough influencers going over there and saying,
I want to see what's going on and then report back.
And I thank you for giving me at least this little opportunity.
I hope moves things in the right direction.
Thank you.
All right. Thank you.
Very much.
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