2019 Living Stones Pilgrimage Registration is open!

Join Pilgrims of Ibillin to meet today’s Peacemakers in 2019
in Palestine and Israel! View a sample itinerary.

Mar Elias High School English class, teacher, and pilgrimage guests
  • If you’re more interested in meeting people than exploring ancient ruins (though you’ll do both);
  • if you want to walk where Jesus walked but also meet descendants of his neighbors and relatives;
  • if you want behind-the-scenes exposure to the Israeli/Palestinian situation, beyond what you see in mainstream media coverage; PLEASE JOIN US!

Click here for full itinerary and registration information for May 13-26 trip,

and click here for October 15-28 info and registration. Register now for  Living Stones Pilgrimages.

This tour is active and strenuous, and the schedule keeps us busy. Participants should be comfortable walking on uneven walkways with lots of hills, sometimes for an hour or more. (Use of walking poles or canes is fine, but be prepared for a few times when rest stops might be an hour apart.)

Questions? Please email or call or text Joan Deming, the tour leader: jdeming7@gmail.com or 608-235-1046.

After 4 Weeks, the Christian School Strike Ends!

NEWS FLASH: The Strike was settled on Sunday, 27 September. Classes in all Christian Schools start for the new school year on Monday, 28 September. Teachers and students are excited and ready. Watch for another blog entry soon updating the situation, but here is one of today’s articles with the basic information: http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/christian-school-strike-israel-end-34077495

26 September 2015, just before the end of the strike:
A Message from Archbishop Emeritus Elias Chacour

after returning home to Ibillin from a speaking tour September 12-20 in Grosse Pointe, Ann Arbor, Adrian, Tecumseh, and Holland, MI; and in Fort Wayne and Indianapolis, IN.

“The people I met in the many places where I spoke are for me part of the extremely beautiful face of America. These represent to me peace­ builders, which means they are children of God.

At home, I found everyimage4one still very concerned about the school strike. We hate the strike and want our children back in school. Nonetheless, this strike revealed to us the very strong solidarity from our Muslim brothers and sisters in Israel. Had it not been for their outspoken solidarity, we would have been left on the side.

It’s also heart warming to see a very large segment of the Jewish society expressing their full solidarity with our Christian schools. We are harvesting what we have sown in tears and passion. Indeed, we don’t want to strike against Israel or to mar the picture of this country; we want to do anything possible to build a real democratic and just society. Our strike went on because we were hurting deeply. We were cornered by the Ministry of Education to shout enough is enough.

We risk the danger of becoming unable to fulfill our mission of justice and charity towards reconciliation within Israeli society. Our mission and our responsibility are only education. It means, we need to create a unity of the citizens within the vast diversity of affiliations, whether religious, political, racial, or any other legitimate diversity.

I urge you never to give up, what we are doing is of a unique importance. Be happy and proud and continue the way on.

Abuna signature

Abuna Elias Chacour

Melkite Catholic Archbishop em. of Galilee, Israel

 

Abuna Chacour asks solidarity during Christian Schools strike

Thank you for your care for the Living Stones of Israel/Palestine!

English class, Mariam Bawardi Elementary School
Instead of having classrooms busy like this one, Mar Elias buildings are empty as Christian Schools strike.

The first of September should have been the first day of school for 2015-16 at Mar Elias High School, Mariam Bawardi Elementary School, and the Mariam Bawardi Kindergarten in Ibillin. Instead, the teachers and students from all the Christian Schools in Israel and East Jerusalem are out on strike. Since two years ago, drastic budget cuts from the Israeli Ministry of Education and restrictive rules disproportionately affecting the Christian schools have put them all in an untenable situation in which their very survival is at stake.

Negotiations have been going on for a year and a half, but the Israeli Ministry of Education and the government have not budged. Israeli President Reuven Rivlen hosted a meeting on August 24 between Christian School leadership and the Minister of Education, hoping for a breakthrough, but no real relief was offered.

This strike involves 33,000 students and 3,000 teachers. Almost 3,000 of those affected attend or teach at Mar Elias.

On the eve of the strike, Abuna wrote: “September 1st is the day on which all Israeli schools, among them our Mar Elias Schools, begin the scholastic year. Unfortunately, in the light of tight and unreasonable restrictions that the Ministry of Education has for years been implementing and imposing on our Christian schools, we have collectively decided not to open our schools unless we reach a fair agreement through which to grant our students their rights to study fully and equally as their Jewish peers. Please share this sad news all around in the hope that it would reach people with authority.”

Because of your care for Mar Elias, we wanted you to know. To read the full statement about the strike and its background from the Office of Christian Schools in Israel, please visit the “Come and See” website. In addition, I’ll post articles on our Pilgrims of Ibillin Facebook page or check back here on our website blog page as I find more resources to help those of us “outside the loop” understand the situation.

Additional resources:

Thanks for your prayers and care! In solidarity and still with great hope,

Joan Deming
Pilgrims of Ibillin Executive Director
joan@pilgrimsofibillin.org

Please Come! Hear Archbishop Elias Chacour in MI and IN, Sept. 13-20

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SEPTEMBER 14-20, 2015 UNITED STATES SPEAKING TOUR

Abuna in office 1You’re invited to hear Peace Advocate and author Archbishop Elias Chacour, speaking at special events in Michigan and Indiana almost daily between September 13 and 20, 2015.

All are welcome at all events. Admission is free unless otherwise noted, and a free-will offering will be received to support scholarships to help low-income students attend the Mar Elias Educational Institutions, founded by Abuna starting in 1982.

At each event, copies of Abuna’s books will be available for sale and for autographing.

Now retired from serving as the Archbishop of the Melkite Catholic Church in Akko, Haifa, Nazareth, and all Galilee, Abuna Chacour lives in Ibillin on the campus of the schools he founded, the Mar Elias Educational Institutions. Today those schools have more than 3,000 students and faculty, including Muslims, Christians, Druze, and Jews. Students come from a 50 mile radius around Ibillin, often bypassing closer schools, in order to participate in the diverse and wonderful Mar Elias family where daily, Peace is Built on Desktops.

Abuna has worked tirelessly for reconciliation between Arabs and Jews in the Middle East and is author of several books, including Blood Brothers and We Belong to the Land. He is a recipient of the World Methodist Peace Award and the Niwano Peace Prize for his work in education and peace-building.

Questions? Contact Joan Deming or L. Michael Spath  (Check back for updates on times/locations)[/vc_column_text][vc_facebook][vc_googleplus][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Christmas Letter from Abuna Elias Chacour

lbillin, December 2014

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Pilgrims of Ibillin,

While I served as Archbishop in Galilee, I always sent an Annual Christmas Greeting; it was always a feeling of communion and of deep gratitude. This year it is somehow different; I am writing to you as a retired Archbishop. Indeed, I decided over a year and a half ago to retire and go back to my natural milieu. In fact I am most privileged to be back at Mar Elias Educational Institutions, where one never gets older but we mature constantly. I was pleased and grateful to give up the honor of serving as Archbishop.

Now every morning when I open the entrance door of my residence, I see the trees, I see the small mountain behind the church, and I see also the arrival of the students, and I pray Thank you Lord for this day”. That is why I am writing to you, to say thank you, brothers and sisters, for your solidarity and, very specially, for your prayers.

You have been and are still an important factor in my faith in peace. Among my dear dreams would be to see you again in Galilee. We always have a place for you. Our students are most happy to meet with you personally and have an exchange about the present and the future. In case it is difficult for you to come over, I would be most delighted to have a possibility to see you again, whether in Europe or in America or in Australia or in Africa. Wherever you live, you contributed to form my dream, and for that, I say “Thank You”.

As a retired Archbishop, I have full control over my days, which is not to say I am jobless. My office is open to anybody who comes, and many do come individually or in groups. I make sure that I have enough time to pray and read. How could you want a happier life for me? It is much more that I deserve. Imagine me standing at the entrance of my residence, watching literally hundreds of cars coming every day, and very intensely so when there is a parents’ meeting. In fact, we create a travel jam that goes as far as the center of the village. For me, it is not merely a car phenomenon, but it is so many hundreds of parents, Christians and Muslims, Jews and Druze, who stream to the school. We are grateful, happy and concerned to give these people the best image of themselves being all alike: Born babies in the image and the likeness of God himself.

Isn’t that the main message of Christmas: Be not afraid, I bring you good tidings of great joy, a savior has been born to you”? This is what I wish to remind you very humbly.

My dear brothers and sisters, do not stop witnessing the birth of “The Prince of Peace”, and please pray for us, here in the Holy Land, to hear the calling of the angels: “Glory be to God in the highest and peace on earth to men and women on whom His favor rests” (Luke 2:14).

“Christ is born – do praise him, Christ has come to our world – do glorify him”.

Sincerely,

Abuna Signature

 

Ahuna Elias Chacour Archbishop em. Of Galilee

A Summer Letter from Abuna Chacour to Pilgrims of Ibillin Friends

 A Letter to all Pilgrims of Ibillin from Abuna Elias Chacour 

Archbishop Emeritus of the Melkite Catholic Church of Akko, Haifa, Nazareth, and all Galilee

                                                                                                                                                        6 July 2014

Friends, Brothers and Sisters.

Are you still able to bear with me despite my long period of silence? I know, you would certainly say yes…

In fact, I am still here.  I am coming back to a normal way of life after eight long years of church administration. Instead of being a man of prayer and of spiritual concern, as Archbishop I was cornered to become an administrator. To make a long story short, now I am retired because I have reached 75 years of age. I am supposed to be a jobless man but the reality is that I became busier than before (but no more in administration).

I spend my time reading – an average of at least five hours a day – and writing as much as I can concentrate.  I started writing a book on The Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount about Jesus Christ, the Man from Galilee. I keep learning more about him. I relate to him as being one among my many parishioners from Galilee. It was an honor to have Him as a member of my community but I tell you he is not easy to deal with. He would never budge.  To accompany Him means to follow him, not to invite him to follow us. Since he is the light of the world, If we insisted to go first, we would be following our own shadow and he would be waiting for us to adjust, as the Father in the Parable of the Prodigal Son waited for his wayward son to come to his senses.

My experience as the Archbishop of Galilee taught me that in order to say anything about The Man from Galilee, Jesus Christ, one has to plunge into the active silence of prayer and meditation. This is what I do abundantly since I retired and came home to Ibillin. I think it is impossible to write anything meaningful about Christ that is not the fruit of a special relation with him. That we can obtain only with prayer and fasting.  It is so marvelous that I wish every one of you Pilgrims of Ibillin to be given this unique experience of the presence of the Lord in your own life. It is possible. The way to that privilege is to pray to the Heavenly Father to reveal himself to you. You will start discovering God’s presence on the face of your neighbors. Until our own dignity shines on the face of our neighbor, we would never see our own dignity.

In Ibillin, I restarted living as a human being. I have time to walk around the campus and to receive guests, including many groups from overseas. In addition, I must care somehow for the Mar Elias Schools. The new generation of MEEI directors face deep challenges, but they bring vision and wisdom to their complex task.  As a gift to MEEI in my retirement, I hope to build a museum for the schools in the village Ibillin. We want to document the history of MEEI, making it the first school in the country to have a museum for itself. In fact, the school has a story and a history to tell the wider community.

Presently the school is doing as fine as things could be fine. However, we face the very serious problem of drastic cuts in the meager subsidy from the State of Israel. This year the cuts amounted to 19% of the MEEI budget. This makes things extremely complicated as we try to pay the monthly salaries for teachers. This cut leaves us with a monthly deficit of at least 250 thousand shekels (almost $75,000). The only ways to manage this situation seem to be either to raise the tuition that parents must pay, or to reduce the hours of learning in the school.

This is a complex situation.  If we raise tuition, parents will have a problem paying the tuition we imposed on them, and many among the parents would become our enemies. Why should we allow ourselves to become the enemies of those we try to help?  However, if we make the school day shorter to save money we would send the children home around eleven in the morning. Meanwhile their mates at the governmental (public) schools are given enough subsidies to keep the children until 2:30 PM.  We are confused about what to do!  This is not a unique problem to MEEI but affects all the Christian schools alike in Galilee. As leaders of the Christian schools contemplate the problems together, we are even considering whether to go on strike or to close some schools. There is yet no final resolution what to do.  We will be grateful for your prayers as we struggle with this difficult challenge.

I am living in Ibillin as I was before I accepted to become the archbishop of Galilee. I am still the archbishop emeritus of the same diocese of Galilee. My e-mail address is still the same: chacoure@netvision.net.il

My telephone at the office is 972 4 8432108 my cell is 054 771 72 90.

The way to my heart – you  know it well – is always wide opened and welcoming.

Yours sincerely

Abuna Signature

Abuna Elias Chacour

PS – A note from Pilgrims of Ibillin:  If you can consider an extra donation to Pilgrims of Ibillin at this time for the purpose of helping provide scholarships for low-income students at Mar Elias, you can truly offer help and hope. Click here to make a secure donation by credit card. Or send your check, made out to Pilgrims of Ibillin, ℅ Cho Kwan, CPA; 311 Oak St, Suite 111; Oakland, CA 94607-4602.

Examples of tuition needs:

  • $34 provides a month of high school tuition or $68 provides a month of elementary tuition
  • $340 provides one student’s full h.s. tuition for a year or $680 provides a year for an elementary student.
  • $500 provides half the cost of a new up-to-date computer with specialized software
  • $1500 provides salary for a teacher to work with 15 students for a semester in extra-curricular exam prep tutoring.

A Play: We Belong to the Land

Click here to watch the play “We Belong to the Land” on Vimeo. 

This video captures a performance on Thursday April 4, 2013 in Madison, WI of a one man play–We Belong to the Land–based on the life of world-renowned Palestinian peacemaker, Elias Chacour. The Archbishop of Galilee of the Malkite Greek Catholic Church, Chacour is also a founder of the nonprofit “Pilgrims of Ibillin,” which works to advance understandings about persons of all faiths living in Israel. Its projects include the Mar Elias Educational Institutions in Ibillin (a small village located just east of Haifa in what is now northern Israel), where Christians, Jews, Muslims and Druze are educated without regard to religion or ethnic background. Much of the work of the program is made possible by support from American churches and other institutions and individuals, several of them in greater Madison.

The play tells a remarkable story of peace and reconciliation in the face of a life that began at the time of the disruption of Palestinian lives that coincided with the birth of Israel. Born in the village of Kafr Bir’im in Upper Galilee to a Palestinian Christian family, Elisa Chacour’s family was forced to take refuge in the neighboring village of Jish after Bir’im was occupied by occupying forces for Israeli independence. Chacour and his family became Israeli citizens in 1948, shortly after the establishment of the Israeli state.

An advocate of non-violence, Chacour travels often between the Middle East and other countries around the world. In addition, many visitors, fact-finding missions, and pilgrims have come to Ibillin. In recognition of his humanitarian efforts he has received honors including the World Methodist Peace Award, the Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur, and the Niwano Peace Prize (Japan) as well as honorary doctorates from five universities including Duke and Emory. In 2001 Chacour was named “Man of the Year” in Israel. Chacour is the author of two best selling books, Blood Brothers and We Belong to the Land.

The play was co-sponsored by “Pilgrims of Ibillin,” and “The Crossing,” an interfaith campus ministry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, which also provided the venue. Members of “The Crossing” have supported Chacour’s work and the Pilgrims of Ibillin for more than a decade. See crossingministries.org/.

Further background on the show was provided on WORT’s A Public Affair (hosted by videographer John Quinlan) the previous Monday. That show is archived at wortfm.org/we-belong-to-the-land/ .

For more information, please go to pilgrimsofibillin.org or contact Programs of Ibillin Executive Director Joan Deming at 608-235-1046 or via email at jdeming7@gmail.com .

Merry Christmas from Abuna Elias Chacour

 

Abuna Elias Chacour at Christmas

Christmas Newsletter 2013

Dear Friends, Pilgrims and Friends of MEEI,

It is indeed difficult to express my admiration for your long-lasting fidelity and friendship to Mar Elias Educational Institutions in Ibillin, Galilee. With this message I want to wish you All a very happy Christmas and a thoroughly joyful New Year.

What you have done through Pilgrims of Ibillin was far more than a sign of solidarity, since it was indeed an act preserving life and allowing progress and development. We have gone through extremely complicated and cruel circumstances. Had we been left alone we might have given up on most, if not on everything. Your constant generosity sustained us and encouraged everyone at the school to persevere. You helped us serve hundreds of young men and women, planting in their hearts the seed of hope, or rather awakening this hope, despite the fact that many factors around us try to kill hope in our youth.

Because of you and of your friendship and your generosity we continue with a unique power to believe that only unity within the present diversity can bring peace and justice to us all. Education is the best tool to achieve such a goal. We shall overcome. Our vision will become a reality. Children – Jewish and Palestinian – will learn together one day in the near future.

For this Christmas season we organized an inter-schools competition for children of our Melkite schools and it was broadcast on the ‘Voice of Israel’ radio every Wednesday afternoon through December 18th. This was the very first time that such extra-curricular activity was organized. Maybe the fact that the ‘Voice of Israel’ agreed to broadcast directly each one-and-a-half hour session is in itself a sign of real hope for religious plurality inside the state of Israel. Very much has still to be done, but we are present to act and to witness for this great vision of ours.

Soon we will be celebrating the birth of Christ: Christmas and the New Year. We will be praying for you and thanking God for putting you on our way toward the Kingdom of Heaven. Thank you. Thanks so very much for your friendship and for your prayers, which I cherish so dearly, but also thank God and thank you for your continued commitment and generosity.

Yours sincerely,

 

Abuna Elias Chacour
Archbishop of the Melkite Church in Galilee

PS – Click here to give a gift supporting the Mar Elias Schools founded by Abuna Chacour.   65% of MEEI students  need financial aid. Your gifts provide the opportunities of a top-flight education and strong leadership development training.  Thank you!