By The Associated Press
The Archbishop of Canterbury and Israel's chief rabbis issued a joint
declaration Tuesday calling on religious communities worldwide to take
responsibility for protecting all holy sites.
In their second meeting this year, the head of the Anglican church,
Archbishop Rowan Williams, and Israel's Chief Rabbis Shlomo Amar and
Yonah Metzger said the desecration of any holy site is a setback for
all religious people.
"Every holy place, for example, synagogue, church or mosque that belong
to religious people, keep it as a holy place," Metzger said. "We hope
that people will hear it and will keep our decision."
The religious leaders have planned to meet annually while a separate
delegation of religious leaders and academics will meet twice a year.
The
annual meetings and the Anglican-Jewish commission are designed to
foster an understanding between the religions.
Jerusalem itself is one of the most explosively contested religious
centers in the world. A hilltop in the Old City, where the Al-Aqsa
Mosque compound was built over the ruins of the biblical Jewish
temples, is claimed by both Israelis and Palestinians. Each side has
often charged the other with desecrating the site, and outbreaks of
violence over the allegations have killed thousands.
Tuesday, however, the religious leaders avoided referring to the
contentious issue in public.
"I'm not here primarily to discuss the political situation," Williams
said. "Our prayers are, as they always are, for peace and justice in
this region, and we are to share our perspectives with one another in
private."
Williams also called on fighters not to use holy sites to launch
attacks,
something he described as akin to using religious language to justify
violence.
At a meeting earlier this year, the religious leaders focused on a
peaceful resolution between Israel and the Palestinians. They also said
suicide and homicide in the name of religion is blasphemous.
While Williams is the worldwide leader of the Anglican church, the
chief rabbis are recognized as the source of religious authority by
only part of Israel's Jews, and even that is split between Amar and
Metzger. Amar
represents Jews of African and Middle Eastern origin, while Metzger
leads Jews of European origin. But secular and less observant Jews do
not turn to them for rulings, and neither do ultra-Orthodox sects, who
have their own rabbis.
Original
Source
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