ROME,
MARCH 28, 2011 (Zenit.org).- When politics is at a
standstill, the "languages" of violence and mistrust enter the conversation,
according to the Franciscan custos of the Holy Land.
Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa shared this reflection with Vatican Radio, in
response to the new increase in tensions between Israelis and
Palestinians.
A terrorist bombing March 23 at a bus
stop in Jerusalem killed one person and wounded more than
50 others; such an event has not occurred in Jerusalem
since 2008, when a Palestinian extremist entered a rabbinical school
and killed eight students.
The Israeli air force launched attacks
against three sites in the Gaza Strip the next day,
as at least 11 rockets were fired into Southern Israel.
"I hope that it´s not a going back and
a reopening of a strategy of terror, as we saw
in recent years," Father Pizzaballa said. "I hope it will
remain an isolated incident. Nevertheless, it´s true that there has
been a sort of deterioration, first of all in political
relations and then, consequently, in everything else."
The Franciscan
characterized political leaders as seemingly "paralyzed."
"From my point of
view, they are afraid, or at least, they don´t have
the strength to take big decisions, because courage is necessary
on both sides, and this creates a climate of ever
greater mistrust, with reciprocal accusations, which then creates a situation,
I´m not saying of barbarization, but of deterioration," he said.
Speaking of the situation in Gaza, the priest noted
how the increased violence is "something which, unfortunately, we have
already seen in the past and which seems to be
acute again at this moment."
"Let´s hope it is
a parenthesis and not, in fact, a going back," Father
Pizzaballa stated.
In regard to the question of the Gaza Strip
and of the settlements of colonists in the West Bank,
Father Pizzaballa suggested that this "is the decisive question, which
the political authorities, on both sides but above all Israel,
must take in hand sooner or later. Perhaps the conditions
don´t exist; I don´t know, I do not wish to
enter into refine political questions."
Spiral
Meanwhile the
apostolic nuncio in Israel, Archbishop Antonio Franco, lamented the "innocent
victims of situations that can certainly be resolved and that
call for a commitment for their solution, but which certainly
are not resolved with violence and the death of innocents."
He told a weekly program produced by the Custody
that such events are admonitions and calls. "My prayer goes
first of all to the victims, but it also goes
to the Lord, that he will illumine, so that there
won´t be a new spiral of violence, which leads also
to more serious tragedies and sufferings," the nuncio added.
Archbishop Franco said yielding to discouragement is useless. Rather "the
reality imposes a commitment and it imposes it according to
the responsibility of each one."
"Situations of injustice, of
tension, of difficulty cannot last for long," he said, "because
every now and then there is one who thinks of
giving a signal, a message, using mistaken methods."
To
find solutions, the nuncio added, "what is needed is the
good will of all parts that are implicated and one
needs the effort and the commitment of all. And the
one that is directly involved is the international community."
