Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06TELAVIV189
2006-01-13 05:12:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Tel Aviv
Cable title:  

AMERICAN PASTOR ASSAULTED IN RELIGIOUS

Tags:  CASC PHUM IS KIRF ISRAELI SOCIETY 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 000189 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: CASC PHUM IS KIRF ISRAELI SOCIETY
SUBJECT: AMERICAN PASTOR ASSAULTED IN RELIGIOUS
PROTEST THAT TURNED VIOLENT

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 000189

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: CASC PHUM IS KIRF ISRAELI SOCIETY
SUBJECT: AMERICAN PASTOR ASSAULTED IN RELIGIOUS
PROTEST THAT TURNED VIOLENT


1. SUMMARY: Amcit Howard Mitchell Bass (25-Jan-1950 VA)
told Conoff on January 4 that on December 24, 2005, he and
his Messianic Christian congregation were physically
assaulted by ultra-Orthodox Jewish protestors in Beer
Sheva, who apparently believed and spread rumors that
"busloads" of Jews were to be baptized that day. His
reports have been corroborated by other sources. Bass
claimed that this level of violence is rare. He said that
most Messianic Christian congregations experience some form
of harassment from time to time from groups like Yad
L'Achim, but in general they are thankful for the degree of
freedom they generally enjoy. End summary.


2. Howard Bass, who introduced himself as the pastor of
Kehilat Nachalat Yeshua, a "Messianic Christian"
congregation, said that he moved to Israel in 1982 and that
his wife and three children are also American citizens.
According to Bass, the majority of his 120 congregants are
Israeli citizens, including around 25 American citizens who
regularly attend services. Bass said that on the morning
of December 24 two women were scheduled to be baptized.
According to him, Yad L'Achim, to which he referred as an
"anti-missionary" ultra-orthodox Jewish organization, heard
about the planned baptisms and publicized on their website
that "10 busloads of Jews" from all over the Negev Desert
were to be baptized. Bass said that the Yad L'Achim
website encouraged a vigorous response to the alleged mass
baptisms, comparing it to the Jewish Macabbees' resistance
against Greek religion in the second century B.C.


3. According to Bass, a handful of protestors came
early to the service and were welcomed in with the
understanding that they would not be disruptive. By
10 a.m., however, Bass continued, several hundred
protestors had gathered outside and the police were
called to ensure that the protest remained peaceful.
The city's chief Sephardic rabbi, Bass claimed,
oversaw the events and appeared to be the protestors'
leader. As the crowd grew, Bass reported, the
protestors broke into the church past the police
line, and began to destroy the property of the
church, overturning and throwing tables and chairs,
breaking the overhead projector, spitting on
congregants, and throwing objects into the baptismal
pool. At this point, Bass claimed, he himself was

assaulted, punched, slapped and ultimately thrown
into the baptismal pool himself. Including his
broken glasses and the broken overhead projector, he
estimated damage to the building and to church
property to be several thousand dollars.


4. Independent corroboration of the events includes a
website with video clips (www.ha-makom.com),and the
account of an official American, the Beer Sheva staff
member of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, who was
present to attend services that day. This U.S.
citizen told Conoff on January 4 that he supports
what Bass' account, adding that he himself was spit
upon numerous times and hit with a stone. He said
that he also saw police vehicles being vandalized
during the protest. This Amcit said that his wife's
Bible was torn from her hands and thrown into the
mud. He speculated that the majority of the crowd
was there simply because their rabbis told them to be
there, and that only a minority became violent. As
to whether he believes that this type of violent
protest was supported by Israeli society as a whole,
he said that most Beer Sheva residents were disgusted
with what happened, and that he subsequently received
numerous calls from Israeli friends who expressed
their outrage and sorrow over what happened. He also
said that the police were very proactive in trying to
protect the church and were firm with the crowd.


5. Another American citizen present at the scene, an
engineer for Lockheed Martin, said in a January 1
email to the Regional Security Office that an angry
mob surrounded his car, spitting on it, rocking it
from side to side, tearing off a side mirror, and
denting and scratching it. No media reports appeared
about the event, save for one December 28 op-ed piece
written by Bass himself, published by the Jerusalem
Post. Bass asserted to Conoff that had a synagogue
been invaded, and a rabbi assaulted by a mob, it
would have been front-page news, and he charged thatt
the near-total media silence demonstrates that
religious liberty for non-Jewish faiths in Israel is
simply not a priority for the Israeli government. He
claimed that no arrests were made at the scene
despite the damage done to church property and the
physical violence against him and other members of
the church.


6. The Beer Sheva police spokesman confirmed to
Conasst on January 4 that the incident occurred
largely as described by Bass, but he said that four
people were later arrested. While he would not say
with which crimes they were charged, he said that an
investigation into the incident in ongoing.


7. Bass claimed that while events like this do occur
in Israel, this level of violence is rare. He said
that most Messianic Christian congregations
experience some form of harassment from time to time
from groups like Yad L'Achim, but in general they are
thankful for the degree of freedom they generally
enjoy. He claimed that seven years ago, another
rumor was circulated that his church was kidnapping
Jewish children and baptizing them, and though a
crowd of around 1,000 showed up to protest, it did
not turn violent. He also claimed (in an event that
has gained some press coverage) that a church in the
Negev Desert city of Arad has been the object of
regular demonstrations, and that the business of one
of the congregants burned down under as-of-yet
unexplained circumstances. He added that, in light
of what he described as the inaction of the police,
he is considering legal action, possibly against Yad
L'Achim or the head Sephardic rabbi of Beer Sheva.

JONES