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Winkler, Edgar meet with Palestinian President Abbas

 


Winkler, Edgar meet with Palestinian President Abbas

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Jim Winkler
May 27, 2005

A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom*

Two United Methodists were among the religious leaders who met May 26 with Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, after his White House Rose Garden press conference with President Bush in Washington.

During that press conference, Bush "warmly praised" Abbas and his commitment to democracy, according to The New York Times, and announced that the United States would direct $50 million to the Palestinian Authority to build housing in Gaza after the Israeli withdrawal there.

"It was clear he (Abbas) felt his trip here had been quite successful," said James Winkler, chief executive of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society.

Winkler, a board member of Churches for Middle East Peace, and the Rev. Robert Edgar, chief executive of the National Council of Churches, attended the meeting with Abbas at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Georgetown. Other denominations and organizations represented included the Armenian Orthodox, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Mennonites, Church of the Brethren, Roman Catholics, Episcopalians and World Vision.

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The Rev. Robert Edgar
Edgar noted that the Palestinian leader's optimism about the U.S. visit was not just because of the $50 million in aid but "the warm reception by the president and the White House that has really helped solidify the administration's commitment to peacemaking."

That optimism was in contrast to the experiences of Winkler and Edgar during an official NCC delegation to the Middle East earlier this year. Both had felt discouraged by the effect of the separation wall being erected by Israel and its profound impact on Palestinian life.

Edgar, who had first toured the region as a young congressman in 1977, characterized it as his "saddest" visit yet. "We ought to be building bridges of peace and reconciliation as opposed to walls that divide," he told Abbas.

Winkler said the Palestinian leader acknowledged the support of U.S. churches over the years for Palestinian self-determination and a peaceful solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

"When we go to the Middle East, political leaders and religious leaders there know who we are, and they know what our churches have said and done," Winkler told United Methodist News Service.

After the NCC's most recent visit to the Middle East, the ecumenical body wrote to both Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, asking for a meeting to discuss the issues of peace, security and justice in the Holy Land.

On May 24, the NCC's governing board also issued a letter to Abbas and Sharon expressing "deep concern" for the well-being of Israeli and Palestinian people as well as hope for a peaceful and just solution to the conflict. Edgar delivered copies of the letter to Abbas and to the Israeli Embassy.

"We continue to see a viable two-state solution as the only equitable resolution to this conflict," the letter said. "And we continue to condemn any and all violence that prevents the attainment of this goal.

Noting a "glimmer of hope," the letter supports "Palestinian leadership in calling for an end to suicide bombings against Israeli citizens, and we applaud Israeli disengagement from Gaza, as first steps toward such a resolution."

"Those with political authority and those in positions of religious leadership have a special responsibility to work for peace with justice," the letter concluded. "May God strengthen us all to live up to this responsibility, for the sake of all Jews, Christians, Muslims and people of other faiths who live in the Holy Land."

*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.

News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

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