Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire holds promise for people of faith
By ERIN CURRY
Baptist Press
Published February 17, 2005
SHARM EL-SHEIK, Egypt (BP)A new opportunity for peace in
the Middle East emerged Feb. 8 when Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas reached
a verbal cease-fire agreement.
The two parties, meeting at a summit in Sharm El-Sheik, Egypt,
vowed to stop all military or violent activity against each other
in an effort to end the four-year cycle of violence and resume
peace talks, according to the Associated Press.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Jordans King
Abdullah II hosted the summit and were optimistic that both
Sharon and Abbas took the agreement seriously.
The challenges today are large and deep, but the mission
is not impossible, Mubarak said. If the road is long,
we today took the first step.
Details of the agreement were not disclosed, but Abbas and
Sharon made brief statements following the peace talks.
We have agreed with Prime Minister Sharon to cease all
violence against the Israelis and against the Palestinians,
wherever they are, Abbas said.
If Palestinians end their violence against Israelis, Sharon
said Israel will end its military operations in all locations.
We really hope this day will be the day that marks the
relaunching of the process for a better future that will lead us
towards mutual respect and peace in the Middle East, Sharon
said.
The summit marked the first meeting between Sharon and Abbas
since Abbas election as president of the Palestinian
Authority following the death of Yasser Arafat last November. The
Bush administration had refused to deal directly with Arafat, and
peace negotiations had stalled. But in light of the new cease-fire
agreement, President Bush has invited both sides to meet
separately with him at the White House this spring. His last
joint meeting with the two leaders was in Jordan in June 2003.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called the agreement
the most promising moment for progress between Palestinians
and Israelis in recent years, but she cautioned that the
road to peace would be long and would depend strongly on
cooperation from other nations in the region.
Jim Sibley, coordinator of Jewish ministries for the North
American Mission Board, told Baptist Press the cease-fire may
provide more secure conditions for disseminating the Gospel in
the region.
While many Christians are not optimistic about long-term
peace in the region, I am certain that Southern Baptist
representatives and Jewish and Arab believers welcome any
cessation of hostilities and yearn for peace, Sibley said.
Of course, this is true for humanitarian reasons but also
because peaceful conditions make ministry so much easier and
safer. Ultimately, peace will not break out in the Middle East
until the Prince of Peace reigns in the hearts of Jew and Arab
alike.
Samuel Shahid, professor of missions at Southwestern and a
native of Lebanon, told Baptist Press his main concern about the
agreement is that some factions on both sides may reject the
truce and act against it.
However, if both sides are able to control these
elements or convince them to give the cease-fire a chance and
then develop a more permanent agreement, then that would help
stabilize the situation in that part of the world, Shahid
said.
Palestinians are likely to be interested in peace because
their economy is suffering, Shahid added, but they would want
their own state implemented with dignity and honor, not
submission and humiliation.
The worst thing that could happen would be to impose
something on them that would hurt their dignity and affect their
right to their own country, he said. It seems that
this agreementapparently with no conditions attached to itis
taking Palestinian dignity into account, according to what we are
hearing. In the past there have always been conditions. Maybe
this is goodwill from Israel that indicates their trust in the
new leadership, but we dont know for sure.
The road map to peace in the Middle East sponsored
by the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United
Nations calls for a Palestinian state with temporary borders and
a permanent state to follow. It requires of the Palestinians an
immediate cessation of violence against Israel, the dismantling
of terrorist organizations and the recognition of Israels
right to exist in peace.
Of Israel, it requires the destruction of Jewish settlements
constructed in the West Bank since March 2001 and the freezing of
all settlement activity; an end to attacks on Palestinians and
the destruction of their homes; and withdrawal to the borders in
place before Israel gained new territories in the 1967 war.
Critics of the plan say it would result in the division of
Jerusalem between Palestinians and Israelis.
[With Baptist Press reporting by Brent Thompson.]