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| First
Presbyterian Church - Archbishop Chacour's Visit - March 2006
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Father Elias Chacour, the noted theologian and
peace activist, founder of the Mar
Elias Schools in northern Israel, and now Archibishop of Galilee,
visited the Wheaton, Illinois, area the weekend of March 23-26,
2006. He spoke at a Pilgrim's Breakfast here at First Presbyterian
on Saturday morning, March 25, attended by about 275 people. |
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| Archbishop Chacour's breakfast presentation was called "Israelis
and Palestinians: A Look to the Future by Looking Back."
Archbishop Chacour, a Melkite Catholic priest, has received numerous
awards for his educational and peace efforts in Israel and Palestine,
including three Nobel Peace Prize nominations. His trip was sponsored
by the Olive Branch of the Pilgrims of Ibillin at First Presbyterian
Church of Wheaton. There are now 16 chapters of the Pilgrims of
Ibillin in the United States, and the Wheaton chapter is among
the most active.
Archbishop Elias Chacour was born to a Palestinian Christian
family in the village of Biram in Galilee in 1939. At the age
of eight he was evicted from the area by the Israeli government,
along with his family and the rest of the people in the town.
He was granted Israeli citizenship when the state of Israel was
created in 1948. In 1965 as a young priest he was assigned to
a church in Ibillin, Galilee, where, after six years and with
the help of the U.S. government, he founded Mar Elias Schools.
These unique schools admit Christians, Druze, Muslims, and Jews
and started with four faculty members. Now these Christian-run
schools have more than 290 faculty members, including Christians,
Jews, and Muslims, and over 5,000 children of all faiths.
Archbishop Chacour preaches love and friendship. He emphasized
that he is working for the civil rights of Palestinians but not
if it means hating Jews. He pointed out that for centuries Jews
and Palestinians lived together in peace and that they are blood
brothers. He is the author of two books, Blood Brother
and We Belong to the Land.
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| Members of First Presbyterian Church of Wheaton visited the
Holy Land in 1995 and met Father Elias Chacour at that time.
Since then he has visited Wheaton four times, most recently in
May 2003, when a Middle
Eastern Feast was held in our church. |
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Caroline Landrey, Elias Chacour,
and Jerry Landry |
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Susan Drinan, Elias Chacour,
and Greg Drinan |
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John Herndon, Elias Chacour,
and Ann Herndon |
Cerena Fischer, Elias Chacour,
and Rudy Fischer |
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Archbishop Elias Chacour also spoke at a benefit dinner
on Friday, March 24, at The Lodge at McDonald's Corporate Headquarters
in Oak Brook. He continues to believe that peace in the Middle
East depends upon the education of the children.
He worries about the future of the Christians in the Holy Land.
When he is asked when people there became Christians, he explains
that his forefathers, the Palestinian Christians, "converted
to Christianity 2000 years ago, the day of the Pentecost."
They are the people who "went all over the world preaching
the Good News" and that it is because of what they preached
and wrote in the Gospels that the people of the western world
came to know about Jesus Christ and the Christian faith.
"We need to survive," he said. "The Arab Palestinians
are 1.2 million. Among them is a very small Christian minority,
146,000 Palestinian Christians. We are threatened by the ongoing
migration. ... And the Christians are leaving because we don't
find a welcome. ... What we want to prove to Israel is that it
is possible to have a unity within the diversity."
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| Greg Drinan and Archbishop Chacour read the winners
of the raffle at the benefit dinner. |
Archbishop Chacour's schools are the only ones
in Israel where Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Druze learn side
by side. Peace, as Father Chacour reminded us, will be built on
the desktops of children. |
Archbishop Chacour was also the guest of honor at A Biblical Feast
at 7:00 p.m. on March 25 at Hurley Hall at St. Matthew Catholic
Church, 1555 Glen Ellyn Road, Glendale Heights. This event included
Middle Eastern foods, the kind that would have been served at
the wedding in Cana mentioned in the New Testament. |
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| Archbishop Chacour talked about the stories behind the Bible
stories and the early Palestinian Christians. |
Live music was enjoyed at the Biblical feast, along with authentic
dancing. |
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Archbishop Chacour also spoke on Thursday evening, March
23, at North Park University and at the 8:30, 10:00, and 11:30
a.m. services on Sunday, March 26, at Christ Church of Oak Brook.
On Sunday evening, March 26, he did a presentation at Chicago
Temple.
Thanks to the members of Pilgrims of Ibillin and all their
hard work, Archbishop Elias Chacour spoke and preached to nearly
4000 people at 12 different events. Through the generosity of
people who came to listen to him, 39 desks were dedicated, enough
to fill a classroom, along with a computer, library and reference
books, and elementary school kits. $10,000 was raised for the
Archbishop’s Scholarship fund so the neediest children can be
helped. In all, over $50,000 in gross revenues were raised at
all these events. Archbishop Chacour came to the Chicago area
to speak about injustice and to find support for his schools and
accomplished both of his goals glowingly.
In the meantime several other churches asked how they could
put on a Biblical Feast and other churches asked how they could
make Archbishop Chacour part of their mission program and others
asked how they could visit his schools in the Holy Land. This
wouldn’t have happened without the people who made the Pilgrim's
Breakfast, the Biblical Feast, and the Benefit dinner such outstanding
successes.
Donations to the Mar Elias Educational Institutions (MEEI)
can be made online at their Pilgrims of Ibillin website - http://www.princetonfusion.net/ibillin/content/view/13/30/.
You can also help Palestinian Christians by purchasing beautiful
hand-carved olive wood items that come directly from Bethlehem
and Beit Sahour - the town of the Shepherd’s Field next to Bethlehem.
Proceeds go directly to Palestinian Christians to provide employment
and education for the children at Mar Elias Elementary School,
founded by Father Elias Chacour. For more information or to purchase
these beautiful items, which were on display at our November
2005 Christmas Festival, contact Cerena Fischer at 630-289-4942
or by email at bethlehemimport2@aol.com.
You can also view photos and obtain more information on the Bethlehem
Imports website - http://www.bethlehemimports.org.
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