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 Remembering Grace by Debunking Christian Zionism
	 By Eileen Fleming Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 14, 2012 
 The New York Times obituary for Journalist Grace Halsell, notes 
	her curiosity about ''a wider world” led her to experience life on society's 
	fringes by disguising herself as women of different races.
 She wrote official statements for President Lyndon B. Johnson, but after 
	the 1968 assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Ms. Halsell 
	left the White House to ''embrace the Other. I wanted to strip myself to see 
	who I was, to see if there was anything there.”In her 1969 book, “Soul 
	Sister” she described the anonymity and degradation of being a black 
	domestic in a world of white employers. In 1973 she wrote ''Bessie 
	Yellowhair,'' based on her life on a Navajo reservation and as an American 
	Indian nanny for a Los Angeles family. In 1978 in ''The Illegals,'' she 
	wrote of crossing the border with a group of Mexican immigrants. In the 
	1980's she lived undercover with a group of Christian fundamentalists.
 
 In 1981 she published "Journey to Jerusalem" which took a close look at 
	Israeli torture, Israel’s illegal settlements and the oppressed lives 
	Palestinians were forced to lead under occupation. She was dropped by 
	mainstream publishers and her lectures were sabotaged.
 
 Grace wrote, 
	"despite obstacles to prevent it, the presses had started rolling. After its 
	publication in 1980, I was invited to speak in a number of churches. 
	Christians generally reacted with disbelief. Back then, there was little or 
	no coverage of Israeli land confiscation, demolition of Palestinian homes, 
	wanton arrests and torture of Palestinian civilians."
 Halsell died on 
	August 16, 2000, but her work continues to inspire and Grace was an 
	inspiration for the character Terese in my first book, from which I excerpt:
 A CONFRONTATIONAL CONVERSATION 
 “Father Paul, you cannot possibly 
	be telling me that an Episcopal priest has been taken in by fundamentalist 
	theology?” Terese incredulously asked the new assistant to the rector at St. 
	Joan of Arc Episcopal Church in Orlando, who also served at the noon mass 
	every Wednesday.
 
 Father Paul Hendricks was a passionate evangelist 
	on a mission to convert every Jew he encountered to become a Christian. 
	Terese had kept her silence for the first six months she had been listening 
	to his Wednesday noon sermons, but finally broke her silence after the rest 
	of the parishioners had departed.
 
 Paul sighed and shook his head. 
	“Look, Mrs. Hunter, I read your op/ed in the newspaper about Israel and 
	Palestine, and we both agree we want peace; we just go about it 
	differently.”
 
 “Father, let me say that the fastest growing cult in 
	the U.S.A. is the cult of Christian Zionism. Approximately 25 million U.S. 
	Christians believe as you do, and I am most depressed to see that the simple 
	answers of fundamentalism have reached their tentacles into the thinking 
	man’s church. You just preached for thirteen minutes on Genesis 12:3--‘I 
	will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse: and 
	in you all the families of the world are blessed’--as if God meant blessings 
	to be political power and military might!
 
 “Father, surely you 
	understand that the belief of the ancient Israelites, who held that they 
	were chosen, as if they were somehow special from others, as if God esteemed 
	them above others, is just basic primitive nationalism. Come on, Father, 
	looking down on one’s enemies to foster one’s own tribal interest and 
	praying to God to smite one’s enemies is what the ancients did. Isn’t it 
	about time we moved beyond that limited thinking?”
 Father Paul clenched his fists and held them behind his back, as he 
	suppressed a simmering rage. He stood nine inches above Terese’s upturned 
	head, and with a slick smile and condescending tone told her, “Mrs. Hunter, 
	you are very misled. The text is understood to mean a blessing to Abraham’s 
	lineage--” 
 Terese cut in. “Agreed! And Genesis 12:3 was promised 
	even before Ishmael, the father of the Arab nation, and Isaac, the Jew, were 
	born! And what about the very first mention of Israel? Jacob was renamed 
	Israel for having wrestled and struggled with God. That is how I understand 
	Israel; everyone who struggles and wrestles with God is Israel, too. Israel 
	means more than a geographical location, Father Paul.”
 
 “Mrs. Hunter, 
	the modern state of Israel is the fulfillment of the prophetic scriptures, 
	and God’s covenant with Israel is eternal, exclusive, and will not be 
	abrogated. I refer you to Genesis 12:1-7, 15:4-7, 17:1-8; Leviticus 
	26:44-45; and Deuteronomy 7:7:8.”
 
 “And Father, I refer you to 
	Matthew 5:43-45, which does not only critique Genesis 12:3; it blows it 
	apart, for Christ commanded, ‘Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, 
	do good to them that hate you, and pray for them that despite-fully use you, 
	that you maybe children of your Father.’”
 
 The two had reached Paul’s 
	SUV and he silently prayed he could make a swift escape, but Terese had 
	positioned herself at the driver’s door, and if he were to open it swiftly, 
	she could be easily moved aside. Father Paul entertained the thought for 
	more than a moment, but remained mute and still, as the tiny woman exploded 
	with a torrent of words.
 
 "Look, blind allegiance to the Israeli 
	government has allowed them to become a big bully, and isn’t God always on 
	the side of the oppressed? My sense is that you Zionists see the political 
	state of Israel as a replacement for Christ, at the center of the Christian 
	faith, and that certainly is not Christianity!
 
 "How do you take 
	Genesis 12:3 to literally mean that blessings equal land and political 
	power, yet ignore God’s promise in Genesis 21:17-20 to ‘make a great nation 
	out of Ishmael’s descendants and that ‘God was with the boy.’ Yet your way 
	of thinking allows the growing apartheid wall to continue, and supports 
	occupation and oppression of people that God also made promises too.”
 
 “Mrs. Hunter, why don’t you make an appointment and we can discuss this 
	further? I really have to go.”
 
 “Okay, I can take a hint, but let me 
	leave you with this: when religion and politics are in bed together, 
	everybody gets screwed! The Israeli government is using you Zionists as 
	apologists in support of their agenda of illegal occupation and settlements 
	in the West bank, Golan, and Gaza, on literal biblical grounds taken out of 
	context. Your blind allegiance to every act of Israel, understood as being 
	orchestrated by God and which should therefore be condoned, supported, and 
	even praised, makes me want to puke! And I wonder about the true motives of 
	Christians who actually relish the idea of Armageddon and love to speculate 
	on who gets ‘left behind.’ Christ was very clear that there will be a lot of 
	wailing and gnashing of teeth by those who were so sure they were in, but 
	get left out. God has always been on the side of the oppressed, and your 
	uncritical endorsement and justification for Israel’s racist and apartheid 
	policies are an abomination.”
 The stunned and silent priest watched in relief as Terese turned, flipped 
	her braid, and walked away. 
 PS-Dear Reader: This chapter is based on 
	an actual email conversation I had with an Episcopal priest. He gave up 
	talking to me after my third email to him. I have been informed that he is 
	now in Jerusalem connected with the Holocaust Memorial.
 LEARN MORE: 
 John Hagee CUFI
 conference in Miami
 
 I am Eileen Fleming for US 
	HOUSE and I approve of all of my messages.
 
 
 
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