20th May: Join Friends of the Holy Land for Historic Ecumenical Service Online to mark 1700th Anniversary of Council of Nicaea in London and Jerusalem

Brendan Metcalfe, CEO of Friends of the Holy Land writes: 

It has been a very painful Holy Week and Easter for our brothers and sisters in the Holy Land; so, we ask you to show you care and seek for an end to this escalating war by joining us online in an historic ecumenical service to pray for a lasting peace during this time of brokenness and conflict.

This special ecumenical service will take place in Temple Church, London, on Tuesday 20th May. The event will feature a simulcast broadcast from the Co-Cathedral of the Most Holy Name of Jesus in the Latin complex, Jerusalem. The service will commence at 12pm BST in London and 2pm IDT in Jerusalem.

“This event marks the 1700th anniversary of the opening day of the Council of Nicaea (325 AD) and will bring together Christian leaders and communities for a profound moment of unity and prayer for peace, during this time of brokenness and conflict.” The Revd Robin Griffith-Jones, Master of the Temple

His Beatitude Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa will lead the service in Jerusalem along with Archbishop Hosam Naoum of the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem, with invitations extended to the other leaders in the Holy City. In London, Cardinal Vincent Nichols will lead along with Bishop Christopher Chessun, leaders from the Orthodox Churches and from Churches Together in England.

HB Cardinal Pizzaballa in his Easter Homily said: “Following Jesus, even in our difficult trials, is as compelling as it gets. So let us not forget that the Gospel speaks of an overturned stone. Therefore, even though there are so many problems and difficulties that beset us, let us affirm with serene confidence and clear determination that nothing keeps us trapped in our tombs, that we are a living Church that does not give up in the face of the stones that lie before us.”

Please share the online joining details with your friends and family so they will be able to join us on this special occasion. The service can be watched either live or within 48 hours.

Join online here: www.youtube.com/live/tCwQG1TPvJk

Friends of the Holy Land

Bishop Nicholas Hudson Reflects on the Ongoing Conflict in the Holy Land

Image: Mazur/cbcew.org.uk

Source: CBCEW

Ahead of the Sacred Triduum, when we contemplate Christ’s passion, death and resurrection, Bishop Nicholas Hudson, Chair of the International Affairs department of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, offers this reflection on the Holy Land.

Reflection

In this holiest of weeks, our hearts turn naturally to the Holy Land, the land in which Christ died and rose for the redemption of humankind. Our hearts are deeply saddened to witness the immense suffering borne still by so many of its inhabitants.

Of the 251 Israelis taken hostage in the 7 October Hamas attack, 59 remain unaccounted for. Of these, just 24 are believed to be alive. We hold firmly in our prayers their relatives and all who mourn these dead hostages. We hold just as firmly in our prayers the families of the tens of thousands of Palestinians – countless women and children among them – killed by the ensuing disproportionate bombardment. It is with profound distress that we witness the continuing suffering of countless innocent civilians. We pray the Spirit released by Christ on the evening that he rose from the dead (cf. John 20, 22) might be released anew in these lands to bestow on them the just peace for which so many of its inhabitants yearn.

We are profoundly concerned that, despite extensive multilateral efforts to secure a lasting ceasefire and bring an end to hostilities, there remains no sign of peace. Pope Francis constantly reminds us: “War is a human defeat. War does not solve problems; war is evil; war destroys.” (Pope Francis, General Audience, 4 December 2024) Peace benefits all; it is a sign of God’s kingdom on earth and enables us all to flourish.

We call on the international community to recognise that all the people of these lands have the right to live in safety and peace. These are not mere aspirations – they are inalienable rights grounded in the dignity of every person; rights that must be upheld. We particularly pray for the West Bank Christians and their neighbours, where many are deeply fearful for their future, as they see their homes encircled by new and rapidly expanding settlements and their freedom of movement drastically restricted.

In his Lenten message, Cardinal Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, reminds us that hope is the daughter of faith. It is with hope in our hearts that we sing at our Easter Vigil, “at night there are tears but joy comes with dawn” (Psalm 30): as Christ’s body is laid in the earth, we await with hope his Resurrection from the dead. Our heartfelt prayer this Holy Week is that there rise up in these lands a renewed desire and yearning on all sides for the cessation of hostilities and the finding of ways to a just peace which honours the humanity redeemed by Christ.

Palestinian Olive Oil Blessed at Chrism Mass

Olive harvest in Palestine. Photo – Zaytoun UK

Source: Ann Farr, Pax Christi

In Holy Week our thoughts and prayers are very much on the Holy Land and particularly on the last days of Jesus, as he approached Jerusalem.

In an act of deep symbolism and solidarity a number of Catholic and Anglican Dioceses have again chosen Palestinian Olive Oil as the base for their Holy Oils. These include the Catholic Dioceses of Arundel and Brighton, Birmingham, Liverpool, Nottingham, Southwark and Westminster and the Anglican Dioceses of Coventry, Leicester, Rochester, Sheffield and Southwark.

Each year, during the Chrism Mass, the local bishop blesses new oils for the diocese. The holy oils are then taken to each parish, where they are used for Sacramental anointing throughout the year.

This year we are again deeply shocked and saddened by all we see and hear from our friends and partners living in the Holy Land.

Palestinians are living in vastly increased poverty as unemployment rises to unprecedented levels and freedom of movement is denied throughout the occupied West Bank. As well as Palestinian olive trees being burst, cut down or uprooted throughout the year, gathering the harvest last Autumn proved to be a greater challenge than normal with extreme violence from the Israeli Military and Israeli settlers. Many families were refused access to their lands and their olives were stolen. We received terrible stories were during this time and sadly one woman farmer, Hanan Abu Salameh, was shot by an Israeli soldier while harvesting olives in Faqua, near Jenin.

Never has our solidarity and support for the Holy Land been needed more and this Easter it’s good to know that we are linked in such a special way to the Palestinian families who have produced the oil that will be used throughout the year in the Sacraments of the Sick, Baptism and Holy Orders and in the anointing of new bishops.

Canon Rob Esdaile, a priest of Arundel & Brighton Diocese, who has long been active in work for peace and justice, says: “The olive tree has long been a symbol of the heritage of the inhabitants of the Holy Land. 

“Psalm 133 uses the vivid image of olive oil running down a man’s beard as a symbol of peace in the community and of ‘brothers dwelling in unity’, while the same oil was used by Samuel to anoint both King Saul and King David.

“It is beyond tragic that Zionist settlers systematically and deliberately destroy Palestinian olive groves, while the annual olive harvest (always a communal effort in Palestinian settlements) in the face of military blockades and the theft of land has become a symbol of resistance and hope. Our liturgical use of Palestinian olive oil is both an act of solidarity and a very physical prayer for the peace of Jerusalem and of the whole Holy Land.”

While we take part in the services of Holy Week, we remember that many Palestinians have been refused permits from the Israeli Authorities to enable them to worship in Jerusalem. We are asked to keep them in our prayers as we hope for a Just Peace for all in the Holy Land.

Find out more about Palestinian Olive Oil at https://zaytoun.uk 

Ann Farr is a member of the Pax Christi International Working Group for a Just Peace in Palestine and Israel

Jerusalem Bishop William Shomali Addresses Ecumenical Gathering in London

Bishop William Shomali (l) with Bishop Jim Curry. Photo: ICN

Source: Jo Siedlecka, ICN

Bishop William Shomali, Patriarchal Vicar for Jerusalem and Palestine, gave a moving account on the situation of Christians in the Holy Land at Bloomsbury Baptist Church in London on Monday. The ecumenical event was attended by representatives from many denominations, including Bishop Jim Curry from RC Diocese of Westminster and Bishop Mike Royal, General Secretary of Churches Together.

Bishop Shomali began with a summary of the history of the Holy Land, which he said has been suffering from a “devastating conflict for the past hundred years.” While the Jewish people, based on their interpretation of the Bible claim the land is theirs given to Abraham and his descendants by God, the Palestinians assert that their roots date back to the Canaanites who lived there 3000 years BC. Thus he said: “There are two narratives, two claims and two perspectives on the history and geography of the land.”

“My intention is not to advocate for one side against the other or to discuss the injustices and crimes committed in this land called Holy” Bishop Shomali said. “Instead I aim to present the situation from a humanitarian perspective and delve into the condition of the Christian community which has lived there for 2000 years without interruption…”

Fr Dominic Robinson SJ (Chair) and Colette Joyce (Co-ordinator) also attended the event on behalf of Westminster Justice and Peace.

Continue reading on Independent Catholic News

Westminster Holy Land Roundtable

The Westminster Holy Land Roundtable is an open discussion forum where anyone with a connection to the Diocese can come and share news, events and ideas to help formulate a common response to the war in Gaza. The next meeting takes place Saturday 5 April 2025, 4-6pm, at Farm Street Arrupe Hall. Bishop Jim Curry will be speaking about his recent visit to the Holy Land. New participants welcome

Westminster Holy Land Roundtable

Friends of the Holy Land

Names released of over 50,000 people killed in Gaza

Prayer for a Ceasefire in Gaza in Mount Street Gardens

Source: Independent Catholic News

The names and ID numbers of more than 50,000 people killed by Israel in Gaza in the last 18 months have been published by Iraq Body Count (IBC) a database of official statistics complied from hospital, morgue, NGO and other official records. (It does not count many thousands more people reported missing whose remains are under the rubble.)

The 981 page list makes chilling reading. One researcher said: “Reading out of names of the Gaza dead is a very spiritual ritual. Though at 10 names per minute it would take 83 hours non stop to read them all out. Even just reading out the 876 names of babies killed under the age of one would take 90 minutes.”

John Sloboda, a Roman Catholic who is a member of the Westminster Justice and Peace Holy Land Roundtable and a co-founder of Iraq Body Count, told ICN:

“Naming those killed is the most basic way of recognising and honouring their dignity as individuals. Contemplating unimaginably large numbers can freeze us into helpless immobility, or lock us into abstractions…” Continue reading on ICN

The next meeting of the Westminster Holy Land Roundtable takes place on Saturday 5th April, 4-6pm, at Farm Street Church, 114 Mount Street, London, W1K 3AH and is facilitated by Colette Joyce, the Westminster Justice and Peace Co-ordinator.

Westminster Holy Land Roundtable, 5th April, 4-6pm: Register with Eventbrite

Read the list here: www.iraqbodycount.org/pal/moh_2025-03-23.pdf

Record numbers attend 24th National March for Palestine

Jo Siedlecka (l) at National March for Palestine. Photo: ICN

Report by Jo Siedlecka, Independent Catholic News

More than 175,000 people of all faiths and none took part in the 24th March for Palestine in London on Saturday, 15 February.

The Christian Bloc gathered for prayers at St Matthew’s Church Westminster, before joining the main body of the march in Parliament Square to walk to the US Embassy.

The short service of hymns, readings and prayers opened with a call to worship written by Palestinian women for the World Day of Prayer 2024: “Let us praise God who brings us together to worship in love and unity – Unity in the Triune God, transcending difference in views and theological interpretations. Let us remember these essential qualities of people of faith: humility gentlest ness , patience and love.”

Another prayer written by Palestinian Christians was an appeal:

“God of Compassion, for nearly 80 years Palestinian people have endured dispossession and loss. From Gaza to the West Bank the weight of impression continues to bear down on our hearts.. We grieve the pain of those who have lived through generations of injustice …. Grant peace to the afflicted, comfort the grieving and strength to the oppressed. Embolden the world to put an end to the cycle of violence and injustice.”

After singing the final hymn: – ‘We Are Marching’ – participants began to file out with banners including: ‘Quakers For Peace’, ‘Christians For Palestine’ ‘Palestinian Lives Matter – Break the Chains of Injustice.’

We were soon swept up in the huge demo – Continue Reading on Independent Catholic News

LINKS

To receive updates from Christians for Palestine please register for their mailing list:
email – ChristiansForPalestineUK@gmail.com

Follow Christians for Palestine Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61555041637853

See more pictures (scrolling down) on the ICN Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064591363750&ref=bookmarks#

National Justice and Peace Network Rejects President Trump’s Plan for Gaza

The NJPN have issued the following response to President Trump’s announcement that he plans to evict the entire population of Gaza and redevelop it.

The National Justice and Peace Network of England and Wales rejects completely the proposal of the President of the United States for the ‘takeover’ of Gaza and the obscene plan to create yet another playground for the wealthy. The proposal violates international humanitarian and human rights law and blatantly disregards the basic rights of the Palestinian people.

To suggest that movement of the population of Gaza will be voluntary, when the area has been deliberately rendered uninhabitable, is contemptible.

There is no concern for Palestinian people who have no wish to leave their homeland? Where are they expected to go?

As pilgrims of hope in this Jubilee year, where is the hope for the people of the land called ‘Holy’? Hope is to be found in the countless displaced Gazans as they trek back to their homes in the desecrated neighbourhoods of Gaza. NJPN applauds their courage and supports them in their right to be agents of their own future in a Palestinian homeland.

As people of faith, we are called to speak and act with truth and integrity and to condemn injustice and any failures to recognise the innate dignity of all our sisters and brothers, who have the right to live in a land of their choosing.

We call on our elected leaders, and our faith leaders, to listen to the voices of those who condemn such an outrage, to speak out and to actively stand against the proposal from the United States, in solidarity with the people of Palestine. To remain passive is to collude in crimes against humanity. We must ALL speak out for a sustainable peace that is built on justice and on the recognition of the equal rights and dignity of all people.

Anne Peacey, on behalf of NJPN Executive

LINK

National Justice and Peace Network: www.justice-and-peace.org.uk/

15th February,12.30pm – Join the Christian Bloc on the National March for Gaza

All are welcome to join Christians for Palestine in the Christian Bloc at the Ceasefire Now rally for Gaza on Saturday 15th February 2025.

We gather for prayers at 12.30pm at St Matthew’s Church Westminster, 20 Great Peter St, London SW1P 2BU before joining the main body of the march to walk to the US Embassy.

To receive future updates on all actions with Christians for Palestine please register for the mailing list: ChristiansForPalestineUK@gmail.com

Christians for Palestine Facebook Page

Bishop Nicholas Hudson in the Holy Land

Source: CBCEW

Having touched down in the Holy Land to the news that a ceasefire had been brokered between Hamas and Israel in Gaza to come into effect from Sunday, 19 January, Bishop Nicholas Hudson greeted the news with cautious optimism.

On his first day in the Holy Land, Bishop Hudson, moderator of the annual Holy Land Co-ordination meeting, brought his prayers for a lasting and sustained peace to the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.

“It was a sad privilege, in a way, to go down into the grotto where Christ came into the world over 2,000 years ago, but it offered the consolation that we were able to pray deeply.

“I prayed there for peace, and as I knelt before the star – the star of hope that marks the place of Jesus’s birth – I prayed so deeply to the Prince of Peace that He might help this ceasefire to hold… I prayed as well for the families on either side that they might be reunited. I prayed that aid might now be allowed to flow into Gaza – poor, beleaguered Gaza – and that people on both sides of the conflict might now be able to rebuild their lives.”

The Holy Land Coordination, organised by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales through its Department for International Affairs, is an annual meeting of bishops from around the world that is defined by four Ps – presence, prayer, pilgrimage, and pressure. Bishop James Curry, an auxiliary Bishop of Westminster, is joining the group for the first time. The Co-ordination runs from 18-23 January.

On Thursday, Bishop Hudson and Bishop Curry alongside staff from the Bishops’ Conference, visited two projects in Bethlehem. The first stop was St Martha’s House, a day-care centre for elderly Christian ladies, mostly widows, who enjoy companionship and therapies provided by specialist staff and volunteers, including healthcare checks, haircare, podiatry, arts and crafts, and more. The group were the first visitors since October 2023 and there were smiles, tears and even dancing – almost a distraction from the suffering and difficulties that had come before.

Bishop Hudson led a small group to visit the Bethlehem Care and Hospice Trust, a Catholic charity registered in England and Wales, and Scotland, set up to bring compassionate care to those with life-limiting illness in the West Bank.

“The Bethlehem Care and Hospice Trust is a wonderful Christian initiative, with a number of Muslim volunteers and staff coming alongside them in their care for those who have terminal illnesses. It’s a model of palliative care, which I describe a bit like ‘hospice at home’, because it’s our hospice model from Western Europe adapted to a Middle East conviction that people who have terminal illnesses should be able to be looked after at home right until they die.

“We met the palliative team and went out with them to two different families to visit two elderly people who were dying, and I was able to bless them.”

Bishop Hudson’s final observation focussed on the obvious lack of pilgrims on the streets of both Jerusalem and Bethlehem:

“It brought home to me how hard it has been for places like Bethlehem these last 15 months, to not have pilgrims come to be with them, to not be able to support them economically – whether in cafés or shops – or to support St Martha’s House, or the hospice team. They were all saying the same thing, ‘You’re the first people who have come for such a long time. Thank you for coming. We need you to come more often.’ In a sense, it touched on one of our other Ps, the ‘P’ of pilgrimage, which we’ll be talking about more often during this Holy Land Co-ordination. We need to find ways of coming to be ‘present’ on pilgrimage now in the Holy Land – especially now that the ceasefire has been signed.”

The Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land, the local Church leaders, issued a declaration on the ceasefire in Gaza on 16 January 2025.

November 26, 3.30pm: Invitation to Hear from Christians in Gaza

Join Pax Christi England and Wales, the Passionist Community, and Pax Christi International for an event aimed at amplifying the voices of the Christian community in the Holy Land, on Tuesday, 26th November at 3.30pm GMT (UK) / 5.30 PM Palestine Time.

Speakers:

Fr Gabriel Romanelli, IVE, Parish Priest of the Holy Family Parish, Gaza

Sami Al-Yousef, Chief Executive Officer, Latin Patriarchate, Jerusalem

As the war reaches its 416th day, Christians in the region face unimaginable hardships. Yet their unwavering faith remains a beacon of hope. This gathering provides us with the opportunity to hear directly from those enduring these harrowing times, as they share their struggles, hopes, and resilience.

Through the testimonies of Fr Gabriel Romanelli and Sami Al-Yousef, we will bear witness to the profound humanitarian and spiritual crisis affecting the Christian community in Gaza.

This event is more than a call to awareness: it is an invitation to act, to pray, and to stand in solidarity with those who continue to endure, love, and hope against all odds.

To register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwuf-GprjIqHdV1H-JscRszv_uYSJeL5Jgz#/registration