Israel vandals hit mosque, church as Christians threatened

Israel vandals hit mosque, church as Christians threatened

JERUSALEM - Agence France-Presse

Police were also investigating vandalism at Tabgha church on the shores of the Sea of Galilee. AFP Photo

Vandals suspected of being Jewish extremists hit a mosque and a church in Israel, police said Tuesday, in the latest of a string of racist and religious attacks.
 
Separately, police arrested an Israeli man after he threatened the Roman Catholic bishop of Nazareth and demanded that Catholics leave the country or face God's wrath.
 
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told AFP vandals had scrawled "Close mosques and not yeshivas" (Jewish seminaries) on the outer wall of a mosque in the small Arab town of Fureidis, near the northern port city of Haifa.
 
The tyres of several nearby cars had been slashed.
 
Police were also investigating vandalism at Tabgha church on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, which was built on the site where Christians believe Jesus performed the miracle of the loaves and fishes.     Church officials said a group of religious Jews in their early teens had damaged crosses there and attacked clergy.    

And in Nazareth, also in northern Israel, police arrested a Jewish man in his 40s for threatening Roman Catholic Bishop Giacinto-Boulos Marcuzzo and members of his faith.
 
"A suspect arrived at (Marcuzzo's) house and delivered a threatening letter" on Sunday, Rosenfeld told AFP, saying the man was arrested in the nearby town of Safed.    

In the letter, the suspect said all Christians, "except Protestants and Anglicans," should leave Israel by May 5 and said that if Marcuzzo and his community did not comply, they would all be "killed by the heavens" -- a term for God.
 
There are also other Christian communities in Israel, such as the Eastern Orthodox, Armenians and Copts.
 
The letter, which was signed by "the Messiah, Son of David," quoted Jewish sources who hold that Christianity is a form of idolatry and should be banned.    

The suspect said the message must be distributed to the community through the media by 1700 GMT Tuesday, saying every hour of delay would "cost the lives of 100 Christian souls."  

Reacting to the vandalism, police spokesman Rosenfeld said "crimes committed for nationalist motives are extremely serious."  

Justice Minister Tzipi Livni also condemned the incidents.
 
"Whoever did these deeds is not part of my people," she wrote on her Facebook page, pledging to "catch and punish" those responsible.    

Speaking for the Catholic church, Wadie Abu Nassar criticised the attacks as "very dangerous" and the Israeli establishment for its "lack of will" to act against those inciting them -- "especially radical rabbis and preachers."    

"The security establishment is not acting sufficiently" to arrest and indict those responsible, he told AFP.    

Politically motivated acts of vandalism with their trademark Hebrew graffiti are euphemistically known as "price tag" attacks.
 
Carried out by suspected Jewish extremists, thought to be predominantly teenagers, the attacks initially targeted Palestinians and their property. They have since grown in scope to include Christian sites and anyone opposed to the settlements.