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So you first moved to The Holy Land in 1996 Correct. Yep. As a nun. How are Christians doing in The Holy Land? it's become a very difficult time for them there. Basically, the Christians are in the same situation as the Muslims being a Palestinian. So there's two different things. If you live in Israel, you're a citizen, and so they are can live there and work, but there's sort of some petty grievances that people might have. But if you're a Christian in Palestine, which is where most of activities of the life of Christ are Bethlehem, Jerusalem, the Mount Of Olives, Jericho, Jacob's Well, that's all within Palestine. That's the predominance of the Christian population there, and they're treated with the effects of the occupation.

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The Shefa Hospital in Gaza is under attack by Israeli forces, leaving thousands of innocent people trapped without food, water, or medical care. Dr. Muhammad al Nunu was executed for staying to care for his patients despite the dire conditions. Additionally, civilians waiting for humanitarian aid were shot and killed. The situation in Gaza is dire, with people starving and dying due to the ongoing violence.

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Gaza uncovered mass graves at Nasser Hospital with over 400 murdered Palestinians. Bodies were mutilated and decapitated, mothers struggle to identify remains. Israel destroyed hospitals during a 3-month invasion. US media is not covering these war crimes, as it conflicts with the narrative of supporting Israel. Israel is targeting hospitals to make survival impossible for Palestinians while playing the victim.

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In Gaza, an inhabitant documents the living conditions of the population since October 7, 2023, amidst continuous Israeli bombardments. Entire areas, including homes, schools, universities, and roads, have been destroyed, making it difficult for rescue teams to reach targeted locations. The journalist uses two phones, charged in a hospital powered by generators, to show the daily life of Palestinians. However, due to fuel and electricity shortages, she may soon be unable to report on the situation. Over 263,000 Palestinians have been forced to leave their homes to escape the bombings.

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Over 7,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, are missing in Gaza due to Israel's ongoing assault. The blockade on fuel prevents efficient rescue efforts, leaving many buried under rubble. Israel has bombed and cut off all communications, leaving Palestinians stranded and unable to alert their families. Israel has also illegally taken hundreds of Palestinians captive, subjecting them to torture and abuse. Palestinians need a permanent ceasefire to mourn the dead and reunite with the living. It is crucial to speak out and demand a ceasefire now.

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In the past week, Palestinians have experienced multiple tragedies that would normally cause global outrage. Hospitals, churches, and apartment buildings have been attacked, resulting in the loss of innocent lives. It is important to acknowledge these events and open our eyes to the truth.

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In Gaza, there is a severe humanitarian crisis with displaced Palestinians struggling to find food and water. The northern part of Gaza is experiencing a famine, forcing people to eat animal food just to survive. The lack of essential nutrients is particularly affecting children, newborns, and those with health complications. Many believe that food is being used as a weapon, with a blockade on humanitarian aid and even a United Nations convoy being shot at. This deliberate prevention of aid is part of a plan to push people out and prevent them from staying alive.

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Civilians in Palestine were given pamphlets with safe routes to flee, but they were bombed while following the evacuation order. The sight of dead children on a truck is deeply disturbing. People who have spent time in Palestine say it has made them cry for weeks. The horrors faced by Palestinians are heartbreaking. Israel is denying them basic necessities like food, water, and electricity. Palestinian civilians are being killed, and it seems like no one is paying attention. Supporting Palestinians doesn't require being Muslim, just being human. The ongoing genocide in Palestine is being witnessed on TV, yet no action is being taken.

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In Israel, babies wake up peacefully, sleep soundly, and play with their pets. However, in Gaza, babies wake up to a different reality, sleep in difficult conditions, and children have a strained relationship with their mothers. In just 7 days, Israeli occupation forces have caused immense destruction, resulting in the deaths of 2,750 Palestinian civilians, including over 700 babies, children, and infants. Israel is accused of paying large sums to manipulate news and hide the truth about Hamas' actions towards Israeli children. The evidence presented raises the question: which side will you support?

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In the village of Sarada, the speaker asserts that the church has been absolutely desecrated by Israeli forces. The scene described includes graffiti on the wall, which is noted but deemed less offensive than other damage observed inside the church. The speaker highlights that pews have been arranged as if for soldiers to sleep there. There is trash scattered on the floor, including toilet paper, water bottles, and various condiments. Among the most offensive findings, the speaker emphasizes the desecration of religious figurines. Jesus is described as having his head cut off, with residents telling the speaker that this appearance seems intentional and not the result of an explosion or fighting in the village. The Virgin Mary is noted with her face seemingly cut off as well. Additionally, Baby Jesus is described as having his arm cut off. Throughout the account, residents’ impressions are used to characterize the acts as deliberate desecrations tied to the reported presence or actions of Israeli forces, alongside the described graffiti, trash, and the use of the pews for soldiers.

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- Speaker 0: Since Israel began strikes on Gaza after Hamas’ surprise attack on October 7, it has targeted residential buildings. The UN says nearly 200,000 structures have been destroyed or damaged. With so many fleeing attacks, Palestinians packed into makeshift shelters, many of them UN run schools, but they were not safe. More than 1,000 schools have been bombed, and Israel has destroyed most of Gaza's hospitals, including Al Shifa, where more than 400 Palestinians were killed in a raid in March 2024. - Speaker 1: We make the best weapons in the world, and we’ve got a lot of them. And we’ve given a lot to Israel, frankly. And I mean, Bibi would call me so many times, can you get me this weapon, that weapon, that weapon. Some of them I never heard of, baby, and I made them. But we’d get them here, wouldn’t we? And they are the best. They are the best. And you but you used them well. It also takes people that know how to use them, and you obviously used them very well. But so many that Israel became strong and powerful, which ultimately led to peace. That’s what led to peace. So as we celebrate today, let us remember how this nightmare of depravity and death all began. - Speaker 2: In 1948, when the land of Palestine was officially stolen and given to a group of rabid Zionists who murdered over 10,000 Palestinians. This crime against humanity was decided as early as 1917 with the Balfour Declaration, the British Crown, and Lord Rothschild of the Rothschild banking dynasty, otherwise known as the Bank of England, who when it’s all said and done, will have control over hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Palestinian oil and gas reserves. As Michael Roverero famously said, all wars are bankers’ wars. According to Benjamin Franklin, the primary catalyst for the American Revolution was the Bank of England’s Currency Act. After the revolution, a value based economy with no interest being paid to any central bank was created. But it didn’t last long. The first bank of the United States was chartered in 1791 and favored foreign stockholders over Americans. The charter ended in January 1811 followed by the war of eighteen twelve and the establishment of the second bank of the United States in 1816, which gave more power to the Bank of England. Andrew Jackson successfully killed the bank’s renewal and shortly after became the first US president targeted for assassination when Richard Lawrence drew pistols on him outside The US capital, but misfired. Laws were passed in the early eighteen sixties for the US government to issue its own currency in a value based economy as opposed to the debt based system imposed by central banks. According to an 1864 edition of the London Times, this would have made America the wealthiest nation of the world. The article warned that if a government creates its own money, it will be without debt. It will become prosperous without precedent in the history of the world and therefore must be destroyed. In 1865, president Lincoln was assassinated, and the economy was quickly phased back to the central bank’s debt enslavement model. In 1913, the tyrannical Federal Reserve Bank and federal income tax was born. The two world wars brought Germany under the heel of the central banking cartel. Western banking institutions financed the Bolshevik revolution. In 2000, Iraq stopped selling its oil and Federal Reserve notes. In 2003, Iraq was illegally invaded by The United States and dollar based oil sales were reinstated. In Libya, Muammar Gaddafi’s gold dinar currency was making the nation rich. In 2011, The US invaded and reverted Libya’s oil sales to dollars. The Bank for International Settlements recently proposed efforts under the guise of anti money laundering that would provide scores to tokens and digital wallets including stablecoins. Digital ID, social credit scores, and a carbon tax is what the bankers are up to now. And everything else is a distraction. Today’s war is mostly psychological, and it’s being waged upon you. Greg Reese reporting. The Reiss report is now fully funded by my Substack subscribers. Subscribe today and support my work at gregreiss.substack.com.

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Terrorists attacked Israel, impacting Orthodox Christians deeply as Gaza is considered the holy land. The alliance between Israel and the United States raises concerns, especially given the perception of Jesus Christ by many in America. My church is filled with immigrants who were displaced from the Holy Land in 1948 and again two decades later. Jewish soldiers forcibly entered their homes, threatening them with violence if they remained.

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As a Christian, I follow Jesus, a Palestinian who fled to Egypt as a child due to violence against innocent children. He was a Palestinian refugee. To my fellow Christians, please do not speak of making room for Jesus in your heart if you cannot also make room for Palestinians in need of help and safety today.

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In Gaza, the death toll has surpassed 1,000 in just 5 days, with many children among the victims. Israel claims to be targeting Hamas leaders, but the cost is high. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has imposed a complete blockade on Gaza, worsening the suffering of the 2 million people living there. Over half of them are children who had no involvement in Hamas' actions. Despite being urged to evacuate, residents are trapped with no way out. The situation is described as genocide, with the intense sorrow causing physical collapse. The future remains uncertain for the people of Gaza.

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In Gaza, 100% of the population is experiencing severe food insecurity, a first in history. The United Nations states that the entire population requires humanitarian aid.

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Palestinians are a diverse group, encompassing followers of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. They have coexisted for generations in Palestine, where you can find synagogues, churches (such as the Church of Nativity), and mosques (like Masrud Al Aqsa). It is crucial to understand that religion and ethnicity are distinct, as one can practice multiple religions within a particular ethnicity or nationality. Recognizing this is essential in comprehending the situation in Palestine, which is not a religious conflict but rather a genocide.

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The Abu Sofia family cultivated one of Gaza's last orchards facing the Israeli buffer zone. Despite hardships, their orchards thrived until Israel's military campaign in 2023 destroyed them. Satellite imagery shows the farm demolished, replaced by Israeli fortifications and a new road, turning it into a military outpost.

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In this discussion, the central thread is that Christian communities across the Middle East have borne the brunt of foreign and domestic policies, particularly under U.S. and Israeli actions, while Christian voices in the West have often been quiet or polarized by political loyalties. Key points raised by Speaker 0 include: - A long-standing pattern in American foreign policy where Christians suffer disproportionately in wars the U.S. funds or supports, with Iraq’s ancient Christian community devastated (nine out of ten Christians fled or were killed as a result of the occupation). Similar silences surrounded Christian killings in Syria and, more recently, the treatment of Christians in Ukraine, Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel. - In Ukraine, the U.S. government sent more than $100 billion; in Gaza and the broader Middle East, Christian communities have faced severe hardship. A Greek Orthodox church in Gaza was hit by an airstrike in October, with at least 17 dead that day. The broader pattern includes earlier violence such as the destruction around the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem and the lack of vocal Christian clergy in the U.S. who spoke up at the time. - The use of humanitarian aid or policy toward the Middle East is perceived as biased by many Christian communities in the region, who feel their own suffering is being ignored if it does not align with American political aims or with Evangelical support for Israel. Reverend Munther Ishak, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bethlehem, provides on-the-ground perspective: - The Christian communities in the West Bank, Gaza, and Israel proper are facing unprecedented fragmentation and decline. In Gaza, eight to 100 Palestinian Christians remain in the territory, with any death impacting the community deeply. Members of Ishak’s church have family in Gaza who cannot visit due to restrictions, and Bethlehem’s Christian population is shrinking as relatives move abroad for safety and livelihoods. - Ishak describes American political dynamics as problematic: some U.S. lawmakers—reflecting the religious right or certain partisan positions—express views that directly affect Palestinians, including Christian communities. He cites examples of pastors advocating destruction of Gaza and questions whether such calls align with Christian ethics, noting the harm to Christian witnesses in the region. - He emphasizes that much of the money flowing from churches to the region funds Israeli military actions and settlement-building on land confiscated from Palestinians, including Palestinian Christians. This financial support, he argues, undermines humanitarian efforts and peace initiatives, and damages the Christian presence in the Holy Land. - The reality of life under Israeli occupation is harsh in both Gaza and the West Bank, with land seizures, travel restrictions, and a fragile, often dangerous existence for Palestinian Christians. In East Jerusalem, Christians face repeated, sometimes violent incitement; evangelism is restricted, and some churches feel a systematic effort to “empty Jerusalem of Christians.” - Ishak argues for recognizing the humanity and political rights of Palestinians, including Palestinian Christians, and for a two-state or other peace solution. He criticizes the conflation of biblical chosenness with unconditional political support for Israel, warning that such stance compromises Christian witness and undermines the possibility of peaceful coexistence. - He calls on American Christian leaders to listen to Palestinian Christian voices, to advocate for peace and justice, and to avoid simplistic, polarizing positions. He contends that war does not align with the teachings of Jesus and urges Christians to pursue nonviolent, principled paths to end the occupation and to protect Christian communities in the Holy Land. The overall message is a plea for attentive, principled engagement from American Christian leaders and policymakers: listen to Palestinian Christians, reassess unconditional support for political allies, and pursue peaceful, just solutions that protect all communities and sustain Christian witness in the region.

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In the past 24 hours in Palestine, over 20,000 hostages were taken by the Israeli occupation, with heavy airstrikes causing injuries and deaths in Gaza. Palestinians mourned loved ones killed in the attacks, while children were injured in bombings. In the West Bank, Israeli settlers and soldiers attacked worshipers at Al Aqsa Mosque.

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In one of the deadliest days of the war, numerous casualties have occurred, including the destruction of educational infrastructure in Gaza. Over 350 schools and most universities in the north of Gaza have been intentionally destroyed, along with museums, historic and religious sites, and archival buildings. This systematic destruction aims to displace the population and make Gaza uninhabitable. The education system has been severely impacted, depriving hundreds of thousands of school children and university students of access to education. The killing of academics further exacerbates the loss of educated individuals who could contribute to rebuilding after the war. This destruction and loss of educational opportunities will hinder the future prospects and quality of life for the people of Gaza.

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On the third day of the conflict, the Israeli Defense Council made a decision. They announced a complete siege on Gaza, cutting off electricity, food, water, and gas. Everything is closed. The two million Palestinians living in Gaza, a territory under Israeli blockade since 2007, are now deprived of everything.

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Gaza's death toll and civilian injuries continue to rise as airstrikes persist. In the Al Shateh refugee camp, people desperately dig through rubble to save loved ones. Over 440 children have been killed by Israeli airstrikes, according to Gaza's health ministry. Israel claims to target Hamas, but medical facilities, schools, and residential areas have been affected. Displaced individuals, including 47% children, seek refuge in UN-run schools. However, Gaza now faces a complete siege, with no access to water for drinking or hygiene. Schools have been bombed, and many innocent lives lost. The people of Gaza question why they are suffering.

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In a field report from the Holy Land, Tucker Carlson and his team explore the lived experience of Christians in a region where religion, politics, and funding intertwine. The segment frames Christendom’s presence as both historical and fragile, shaped by borders, custodianship, and shifting demographics. - The setting and question: Carlson pulses between Nazareth and Jerusalem-adjacent areas, noting that the Holy Land lies within Jordan—a predominantly Muslim monarchy that funds much of the region’s religious and cultural life. The central question is how Christians are faring: thriving or suffering? The host asserts that in Israel, Christians are not thriving; their numbers are shrinking in absolute terms and as a share of the population, especially since the Gaza War and the rise of extremism. Clips circulating online purportedly show Christian clergy in Jerusalem spat upon by Jewish extremists, raising concerns about anti-Christian hostility that US funding seems to overlook or deny. - The Archbishop of Jerusalem (born in Nazareth) speaks frankly about decline and exposure to oppression: he says Christians in the Holy Land have been here for two thousand years, but today they are in a period of decline. Since 1948, many Christians fled or were expelled; the Christian population halved, with subsequent declines after 1967. He emphasizes Jerusalem as the spiritual capital of the Christian faith, but notes the thinning presence and the difficulties of sustaining communities, particularly in Nazareth and the Galilee, where emigration has increased in two recent decades. - Refugees and the Christian presence: The Archbishop notes that many Palestinian refugees from the 1948 creation of Israel were Christians, contradicting the stereotype that Palestinian refugees are predominantly Muslim. He gives an example of Beirut’s All Saints Anglican community, which is 90% Palestinian Christians from Galilee, illustrating long-standing Christian diaspora within the region. Bethlehem is highlighted as a site of economic and religious pressure due to the separation wall and movement restrictions; the Christian population in Bethlehem has fallen from about 100,000 to under 30,000. He attributes some of these declines to limited aid, both domestically and from Western churches, and to concerns that donations can end up in the wrong hands. - Aid and funding dynamics: The Archbishop argues that while Western churches provide some support through bodies like the American Friends of the Diocese of Jerusalem, a disproportionately large share of Western Christian aid flows to Jewish settlements rather than to Nazareth or Bethlehem. He contends that money from the West can be linked to settlement expansion and land confiscation in Christian areas, creating moral tension for Western Christians who fund the region. He cites Jordan’s King Abdullah as a donor who has funded repairs to sacred sites such as the Nativity and the Holy Sepulchre, illustrating a different model of custodianship and interfaith stewardship. - Custodianship and Jerusalem’s status quo: The Jordanian king is described as the custodian of holy sites in Jerusalem, including Al Aqsa and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a framework the Archbishop says maintains a shared space for Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. He argues that handing custodianship entirely to the Israeli government would produce exclusivity and degrade the three-faith balance that has historically preserved access to sacred sites. - Practical realities for worship and safety: The Archbishop details routine security constraints around the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, especially on Holy Saturday during Holy Fire, where Israeli police restrict attendance and limit pilgrims, sometimes to a fraction of typical numbers for “safety reasons.” He notes that similar restrictions affect other holy sites and events across Israel and neighboring areas, including Orthodox and Jewish observances. He references efforts to engage U.S. diplomats, like Ambassador Mike Huckabee, to address these access limits, though without consistent success. - Everyday threats and incidents: The Archbishop describes spitting at clergy as a recurring, if not constant, problem in Jerusalem, tied to fringe groups and to a broader climate of secular or religious animus. There is talk of vandalism and intimidation directed at Christian sites, with limited legal recourse because spitting and harassment are not consistently criminalized in the way the clergy and authorities would hope. - The West Bank and Jordan as a model: The Jordanian Christian interlocutor (Speaker 3) frames Jordan as a regional model for coexistence, arguing that Christians in Jordan feel integrated with Muslims and receive constitutional protection and equal rights. He highlights three pillars of Jordan’s Christian flourishing: constitutional equality, political and social stability, and Hashemite leadership that prioritizes interfaith dialogue, meritocracy, and mercy. He notes Christian representation across government and business, suggesting that, despite being a minority (roughly 3%), Christians are disproportionately represented in leadership roles, which he sees as evidence of a functioning model for minority resilience. - Refugees as a regional test: The Jordanian interlocutor emphasizes Jordan’s long history of hosting refugees from Jerusalem, Gaza, Syria, and Iraq, framing Jordan as a nation built on refugee experience and humanitarian responsibility. He stresses that stability in Jordan—economic, political, and social—depends on leadership, constitutional rights, and the willingness of the international community to sustain support, particularly given donor fatigue and shifting attention from the US and other partners. - A plea to Western Christians: The interview closes with a call for American Christians to engage directly with ancient Christian communities in the Holy Land, to listen to their experiences, and to support stability and coexistence without reducing faith to political slogans or demonizing one group. The Archbishop concludes with a hopeful vision: Jerusalem should belong to all people, a sacred center for Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike. In sum, the conversation juxtaposes narratives of Christian decline and resilience, heavily weighted by political context, funding flows, and interfaith custodianship. It presents Jordan as a contrasting, stabilizing model for minority Christian life in the Middle East while insisting that Western Christian communities rethink their engagement and support for Christian communities in the Holy Land.

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The Israeli military has acknowledged entering a cemetery in search of Israeli hostages' remains, but an investigation has revealed that 16 cemeteries in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed. CNN's analysis found that the Israeli military has deliberately targeted cemeteries, turning some into military outposts and bulldozing others. International law protects cemeteries as civilian sites, and their intentional destruction is a violation. The Israeli military claims that some cemeteries were used by Hamas for military purposes, but experts argue that this systematic desecration shows a lack of respect for the dead and cultural heritage. The destruction of cemeteries could be seen as evidence of Israel's intent.

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In Gaza, 3 mass graves with 210 Palestinian bodies were found at the Ras al medical Complex. They were kidnapped, executed by Israeli forces during an offensive. 500 civilians are missing, possibly buried under rubble. 2,000 Palestinians are forcibly disappeared due to repeated attacks in Gaza.
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