UNESCO Denies Biblical Christian & Jewish Heritage
Hebron Vote: UNESCO Denies Biblical Christian & Jewish Heritage
GENEVA,
July 7, 2017 – UN Watch, an independent non-governmental
organization based in Geneva, condemned the “cynical,
divisive, and politicized hijacking of UNESCO’s mission to
protect world cultural heritage” by Arab states, after the
agency’s 21-nation world heritage committee voted 12-3,
with 6 abstentions, to accept a Palestinian motion
registering the Biblical city of Hebron—including the Cave
of the Patriarchs which is revered as the burial place of
Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Leah, Jacob and Rebecca—as a
Palestinian heritage site endangered by Israel. The resolution was introduced by Lebanon,
Kuwait, and
Tunisia.
Following is the
comment issued today by Mr. Hillel Neuer, executive director
of UN Watch:
UN Watch is alarmed that the
world body to protect cultural heritage was hijacked for the
second time this week by a cynical, divisive and politicized
campaign waged by the Palestinians, backed by the Arab bloc,
Cuba, Zimbabwe and other dictatorships.
Moreover, UN
Watch deeply regrets that, as the numbers suggest, the
EU’s four member states on the committee, who had the
power to block the resolution, refused to do so. Nor did any
EU country take the floor to oppose today's provocative
action, as did the U.S., Canada and Australia.
The
resolution dismisses the Jewish and Christian heritage of
the Biblical city of Hebron, and falsely claims that Israel
is endangering the holy sites.
Just as it would be
inconceivable for UNESCO to deny the Islamic character of
Medina, it is outrageous for the wold body to do the same to
Judaism’s second holiest site.
The world body
should have instead recognized that Israel has preserved the
cultural heritage and freedom of religion of all faiths in
Hebron by allowing Muslim, Christians and Jews to pray at
the Tomb of the Patriarchs. By contrast, Palestinians
massacred and expelled the city’s Jewish population in
1929, while Jordan barred Jews from praying in Hebron from
1948 to 1967.
Like with its earlier targeting of Israel
this week over Jerusalem, the UNESCO committee has allowed
its work to become tainted by politicization.
By
today’s vote, the committee failed to take into account
its own expert advice, which opposed the Palestinian
nomination for failing to properly recognize Hebron’s
Jewish and Christian heritage. (See
below.)
This week’s cynical
and inflammatory decisions on Hebron and Jerusalem do
nothing to advance the peace process for Israelis and
Palestinians, and only further pull them apart.
The
resolutions threaten to alter the delicate status quo at
Jewish, Christian and Islamic holy places in the region,
instead of preserving the outstanding universal value of
these sites, which is UNESCO's mission.
Moreover, the
resolutions harm UNESCO and its world heritage committee,
and cast a shadow upon the reputation of the United Nations
as a whole.
We urge the Palestinians and the Arab states,
and UNESCO's committees, to refrain from further provocative
actions and statements that hurt the the people in the
region, as well as the United Nations itself.
Founded in
1945 to combat the doctrine of the inequality of men and
races, UNESCO today has sadly become a serial perpetrator of
inequality. The U.S. under President Obama cut funding as a
result of such actions. This week’s provocative actions
are liable to push the U.S. to eventually withdraw from
UNESCO for good.
UNESCO’s actions send a message to bad
actors in the Middle East, pouring fuel on the fires of
incitement to terror.
Background: Expert
International Advisors Opposed Palestinian
Request
All nominations for the
World Heritage List are examined by the International
Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS), which provides an
expert opinion. ICOMOS opposed the Palestinian nomination,
noting that it failed to highlight the “association of the
wider town of Hebron with Jewish and Christian as well as
Islamic culture… even though extensive remains testify to
these links.” The experts also noted that the nomination
failed to include “a clearer focus on sites relating to
Jewish heritage.”
ICOMOS concluded that it “considers
that the comparative analysis has not so far justified
consideration of this property for the World Heritage
List” and rejected that the nomination meets any of the
three criteria. Click here for the ICOMOS Report.
www.unwatch.org