Israel-Palestine: For Human Values in the Absence of a Just Peace
Israel-Palestine: For Human Values in the Absence of a Just Peace
Israel-Palestine: For Human Values in the Absence of a Just Peace
In fulfillment of its assignment from the 221st General Assembly (2014) to review the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s support for the “two-state” solution to the IsraeliPalestinian conflict, the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy recommends that the
222nd General Assembly (2016) adopt the following summary assessment (I) and requested
recommendations (II), and receive the supporting study and policy review (III). These
sections together constitute a report with actions appropriate to a situation of moral
urgency entitled, Israel-Palestine: For Human Values in the Absence of a Just Peace. The
sections are:
I. While the Door Closes: A Summary Assessment
II. Acting on Christian and Universal Values: Recommendations
III. The Two State Approach from a Values Perspective: A Brief Study
I.
While the Door Closes
This report focuses on the actual situation of Palestinians and Israelis in the land they share
and on the values that need support from all people seeking a just peace. Faithful to the
General Assembly’s assignment, the report resists simple formulas. It understands the
responsibility of a single church based in the US to contribute to a larger ecumenical and
interfaith conversation about basic moral expectations and to take informed actions of
integrity, witness, and solidarity.
The Presbyterian Church [PC(USA)] has had a deep concern for Israel-Palestine for
many reasons, including its place in Christian self-understanding and the prominent role
the United States has taken there. Since 1949, the Church has taken public positions on the
situation, supporting Israel as a safe homeland for Jews but also calling for just treatment
for Palestinians, including Palestinian refugees. In 1974, the General Assembly called for
“The right and power of Palestinian people to self-determination by political expression,
based upon full civil liberties for all… If the Palestinians choose to organize a permanent
political structure, then provisions should be made to determine its jurisdiction, assure its
security, and support its development.”i
In 1982, the Assembly first called for “the establishment of a national sovereign
state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as an expression of self-determination of the
Palestinian people.”ii Subsequent Presbyterian statements have affirmed United Nations
Resolution 242, of November 1967, calling for Israel’s withdrawal from the territories it had
just begun to occupy, and have lifted up the Palestine National Council’s 1988 decision to
recognize Israel within the boundaries that had held from 1949 to the 1967 war. That
implicit ceding of 78% of British Mandate Palestine to Israel supported the possibility of a
two-state solution and, with the largely nonviolent first Intifada, opened the path to the Oslo
accords.iii
The most recent comprehensive statement by the Church on Israel-Palestine within
its Middle Eastern context, Breaking Down the Walls (2010), provides the starting point of
principles and policy for this study. That 2010 report examines the “contest of traumas”
caused by past suffering on both Jewish Israelis and Palestinians, with fears of antiSemitism and fears of a continuing Nakhba (or catastrophe of dispossession) hindering
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