If the incident is not ameliorated by cooler heads it could be like a runaway train. Extremists must never make policy especially when dealing with pilgrimages.
My husband and I don’t make a habit of visiting Christian churches but, if you’re in Roma, Firenze, Venezia . . . or a number of great European cities, there they are, great monuments to European art and architecture . . .
One thing we do, however, is avoid times when there’s collective worship going on. Partly it’s that going to Christian places of worship isn’t exactly appropriate for a Jewish family but, to a considerable extent, I think it’s awareness that, at such times, they really do belong to those people for whom they are places of religious commitment, historic meaning and
awe. They certainly don’t need a noisy Jewish family arguing the merits or demerits of the Renaissance or Baroque.
There is a problem with ‘musts’ and it’s that they conflict – some Christians may say that Jews
must behave in a particular way, some Jews may say that Christians
must behave in a particular way. That’s a wonderful way of achieving impasse and spiralling annoyance and allegation, a marvellous way of affirming stereotypes.
The thing is that we ‘ought’ to behave in various ways that honor each other’s religious meanings and emotional investment. Banning the bishops from wearing crosses was, I’d say, inappropriate (that’s particularly easy for a Jewess living in, largely secular, Western Europe to say, of course). On the other hand it’s inappropriate to forget the emotional investment Jews have with the Wall and the fact that some may be rather touchy about the Cross, associated by many with centuries of persecution, being displayed there.
Please remember, Christians have hundreds of Cathedrals that celebrate your religious commitment and history, what do we have?
Jerusalem MUST be an Open City. Pope John paul firmly advocated that it be so and his advocacy is proven to be very farsighted.
The policies and politics of Israel are not one of my ‘subjects’ on message boards.
Shalom !
Aleichem Shalom