Gus Dur condemns Palestinian suicide bombings
Gus Dur condemns Palestinian suicide bombings
Laurie Copans, Associated Press, Jerusalem
Former Indonesian president Abdurrahman Wahid condemned
Palestinian suicide bombings on Sunday at an interfaith gathering
in Jerusalem designed to push the people of the region toward
peace.
Abdurrahman joined Native Americans, Israeli lawmakers, imams,
American Baptists and former world leaders on Sunday to kick off
a peace mission to the Holy Land of about 3,000 members of a
U.S.-based peace group sponsored by the founder of the
Unification Church.
Started in 1999 by Korean-American evangelist Rev. Sun Myung-
moon, the Interreligious and International Federation for World
Peace (IIFWP) has founded chapters in 154 countries, encouraging
peace recognizing the common points shared by religions.
About 30 members of the IIFWP opened a news conference with a
peace song to the tune of a popular Israeli melody. The group -
many from the American Clergy Leadership Conference - swayed and
clapped in a scene reminiscent of a religious revival.
Participants called for an end to three years of violence that
has taken the lives of more than 2,500 people on the Palestinian
side - most in Israeli military operations - and nearly 900 on
the Israeli side - half in Palestinian suicide bomb attacks.
Abdurrahman, a member of the federation's advisory board and
an imam himself, said Palestinians who have committed suicide
bombings in the name of Islam during more than three years of
fighting with Israel have misinterpreted the religion.
"All my life I have called on Muslims to ... be on good terms
with others," said Abdurrahman who ruled the most populous Muslim
country for a year and a half, until July 2001. "It's natural for
us to condemn terrorism and ... suicide bombings." Abdurrahman, a
moderate, is a longtime supporter of peace with Israel.
Indonesia has been hard hit by extremist Islamic attackers. On
Oct. 12, 2002, bombers blew up a night club on the island of
Bali, killing 202 people. On Aug. 5, an Islamic suicide bomber
killed 11 bystanders at a hotel in Jakarta.
The federation did not present any Mideast peace proposals or
religious statements but said members had met with several
Palestinian clerics and Israeli rabbis who agreed with their
cause, including Israeli Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar. They want to
infuse current political efforts with a peaceful spirit, they
said.
Most of the group at the news conference on Sunday was
American, including state legislators from Maine, New Hampshire,
Arizona and Georgia. Organizers said they expect at least 3,000
members of the IIFWP, most of them Americans, to take part in a
peace march at holy sites in Jerusalem's Old City on Monday.
"I'm here to tell people that there are people from all over
the world who are pulling for them, praying for them," said Lois
Snowe-Mello, a Republican state representative from Maine.