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Catholic church in Israel badly damaged by possible arson attack Catholic church in Israel badly damaged by suspected arson attack
(about 1 hour later)
A Catholic church near the Sea of Galilee in Israel frequented by religious pilgrims and tourists was heavily damaged by fire on Thursday in a possible attack by Jewish extremists. A fire ripped through one of the most famous Catholic churches in Israel on Thursday, damaging the roof and burning prayer books in what authorities believe was an attack by Jewish extremists.
A fire broke out at the Church of the Multiplication in the middle of the night, causing extensive damage to the inside and outside of the building, said an Israeli police spokesman. The fire broke out at the Church of the Multiplication in the middle of the night, causing extensive damage to the inside and outside of the building, said an Israeli police spokesman.
The modern building is built on the remains of a fifth-century Byzantine church. A Byzantine mosaic floor was left unharmed by the fire. The church, which marks the traditional spot of Jesus’s miracle of the loaves and fish, is located in Tabgha on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel and is one of the most popular stops for Christian pilgrims visiting the Holy Land.
Father Gregory Collins, head of the Order of Saint Benedict in Israel, which maintains the site, said more than 5,000 people visit the church daily. He said it would be closed for the next three days due to the fire damage.
“It’s deplorable, absolutely deplorable. I consider such an attack to be not just an attack on a religious site, on a sanctuary, but also on one of the most visited places in Israel,” he said. “It is also an attack on freedom of speech, democracy and the right to live here.”
Father Matthias Karl, a German monk at the church, said a souvenir shop, an office for pilgrims and a meeting room were badly damaged, and bibles and prayer books were destroyed. “The fire was very active,” he said, but added that the prayer area of the church was unaffected. A monk and a church volunteer were taken to hospital to be treated for smoke inhalation , he said.
A passage from a Jewish prayer, calling for the elimination of idol worship, was found sprayed in red paint on a wall outside the church.A passage from a Jewish prayer, calling for the elimination of idol worship, was found sprayed in red paint on a wall outside the church.
The nationalist crimes unit of the Israeli police’s West Bank settlement division is investigating the incident. Police said they initially arrested 16 youths, all religious Jewish seminary students from West Bank settlements, but released them shortly after. Their lawyer, Itamar Ben Gvir, told Israeli army radio the police had no evidence against the youths and that they were under suspicion simply for looking like young settlers. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, condemned the incident and ordered the head of Israel’s Shin Bet internal security agency to “conduct a full and speedy investigation”.
Father Matthias Karl, a German monk from the church, said a souvenir shop, an office for pilgrims and a meeting room were badly damaged, and bibles and prayer books were destroyed in the fire. “This morning’s outrageous arson attack on a church is an attack on us all. In Israel freedom of worship is one of our core values and is guaranteed under the law,” Netanyahu said. “Those responsible for this despicable crime will face the full force of the law. Hate and intolerance have no place in our society.”
A monk and a church volunteer were hospitalised because of smoke inhalation, but the prayer area of the church was unaffected by the fire, he said. The Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, said authorities would make every effort to apprehend those responsible. “Such terrible desecration of an ancient and holy place of prayer is an attack on the very fabric of life in our country, where people of different faiths seek to live together in harmony and mutual tolerance and respect,” he said.
In recent years, mosques and churches have been targeted by vandals in similar attacks. They are often attributed to Jewish extremists in West Bank settlements. Police said they initially arrested 16 youths, all religious Jewish seminary students from West Bank settlements, but released them shortly thereafter. Their lawyer, Itamar Ben Gvir, told Israeli Army Radio the police had no evidence against the youths and that they were under suspicion simply for looking like young settlers.
Such attacks are widely condemned across the political spectrum in Israel. President Reuven Rivlin said Israeli authorities would make every effort to apprehend those responsible. In recent years, mosques and churches have been targeted by vandals in similar attacks. They are often attributed to extremist Jews from West Bank settlements. Such attacks have been widely condemned across the political spectrum in Israel, though few arrests have been made.
“Such terrible desecration of an ancient and holy place of prayer is an attack on the very fabric of life in our country, where people of different faiths seek to live together in harmony and mutual tolerance and respect,” Rivlin said. Last year, a group of mostly Jewish youths attacked the Church of the Multiplication’s outdoor prayer area along the Sea of Galilee, pelting worshippers with stones, destroying a cross and throwing benches into the lake, Karl said. Nahum Weisfish, a rabbi from Jerusalem, went to the church with an interfaith delegation to express sympathy and condemn the attack.
Last year, a group of mostly Jewish youth attacked the Church of the Multiplication’s outdoor prayer area along the Sea of Galilee, Father Matthias said, pelting worshippers with stones, destroying a cross and throwing benches into the lake. He said the site might have been targeted because it housed a synagogue some 2,000 years ago. “But either way it is forbidden for this to be done like this. We came to condemn this,” he said.
The church, also known as the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish, is modern but built on the remains of a fifth-century Byzantine church, and it features a Byzantine mosaic floor. The church marks the traditional spot of Jesus’s miracle of the loaves and fish, and is located in Tabgha on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel.
Father Gregory Collins, head of the Order of Saint Benedict in Israel, said more than 5,000 people visit the church daily. He said the church would be closed for the next three days due to the fire damage.