The Vatican Slams Israel’s Right to Life

Giulio Meotti
The writer, an Italian journalist with Il Foglio, writes a twice-weekly column for Arutz Sheva. He is the author of the book "A New Shoah", that researched the personal stories of Israel's terror victims, published by Encounter. His writing has appeared in publications, such as the Wall Street Journal, Frontpage and Commentary. He is at work on a book about the Vatican and Israel.“Mandated by the Vatican, a special delegation of Catholic bishops from Europe and North America pledged to press their governments to act against the “injustice” of “Israel’s West Bank separation barrier”.
In fact, the bigger truth ignored by the Western press and the Churches is that Israel’s barrier helped restore calm and security not just in Israel, but also in Bethlehem. The Church of the Nativity, which terrorists defiled in 2002 to escape from the Israeli army, is now filled again with tourists from around the world.
But only Israel’s barriers have been condemned by the Vatican, only Israel’s fences have received round-the-clock coverage on Catholic media and front page stories on L'Osservatore Romano (the Vatican official newspaper) and only Israel’s checkpoints are turned into the meccas of Christian activists.
While foreign fences keep out refugees from neighboring countries, only Israel’s fences and checkpoints have a truly humanitarian reason: to secure the civilian population’s right to life. Only in Israel barbed wire, patrol roads, sand tracking paths, cameras and electronic sensors are used to prevent a restaurant, a shopping mall or a hotelfrom being turned into carpets of human bodies. Jewish bodies.
None of the other fenced countries have infiltrators with the “holy” purpose of killing people. Tijuana, the symbol of the wall dividing US and Mexico, is not Qalqilya, a Palestinian Arab city 15 kilometers from Tel Aviv, ringed by a fence. It’s Qalqilya, not Tijuana, that has been called the “Paradise Hotel”, because the city was used by suicide terrorists as the jumping off point into Israel. It’s from Qalqilya, not Tijuana, that terrorists can bomb Tel Aviv’s Azrieli towers, which can be seen from the city’s hills.
There are 63 crossing points along the barrier known as “gates”, and “obstructions”, such as roadblocks, piles of dirt, iron gates and trenches. Palestinian Arab terrorists found it difficult to obtain weapons when the army encircles every town.
The Vatican “ignores” that there have been numerous incidents involving terrorists in the Bethlehem region and a number of suicide bombers have come from the area. That’s why Israel needs to build a fence. That’s why the IDF said that it considers the fence and the hill essential as an “observation point”. The barrier near Cremisan shields the Israeli community of Gilo.
Gilo is a special symbol of the Jewish resistance during the Intifada, when Arab snipers fired at Jews from Beit Jala, mainly populated by Christians. Gilo was turned into another Ireland. Jewish residents began to evacuate. Fear and rage dominated streets and homes. Belatedly, the Israeli government provided barriers and bullet-proof glass to protect the neighborhood’s residents. Gilo was the laboratory where terrorists sought to discover whether they could force Jews into abandoning their homes. They failed. Now the Vatican is reviving this goal by “peaceful” means.
Without checkpoints, fences and roadblocks, Israel would never be able to exist. If the Arabs disarm, there will be “peace”; but if Israel disarms, there will be a new genocide. Is this what the Vatican wants? Another looming Holocaust?
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