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Cardinal Pizzaballa intervenes after alleged IDF attempt to halt Marian festival in West Bank

Cardinal Pizzaballa intervenes after alleged IDF attempt to halt Marian festival in West Bank

Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa has reportedly intervened with Israeli authorities after military personnel allegedly attempted to halt a Marian festival in Taybeh, the last entirely Christian Palestinian town in the West Bank Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa has intervened after the Israeli Defence Force personnel allegedly attempted to halt a Catholic Marian festival in the Christian West Bank village of Taybeh on Friday. Representatives of the Vulnerable People Project (VPP), an organisation that seeks to protect vulnerable people around the world from violence, said they were present in the village when Israeli military vehicles entered Taybeh early in the morning and ordered organisers preparing for the annual celebration in honour of the Blessed Virgin Mary to leave the area. The parish priest overseeing the festival immediately contacted Church authorities, and the matter was escalated to Cardinal Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem. According to VPP, the cardinal subsequently spoke with Israeli authorities and secured permission for the event to proceed. The incident took place in Taybeh, regarded as the last entirely Christian Palestinian town in the West Bank. Jason Jones, founder and president of the Vulnerable People Project, told this publication that the events highlighted the precarious position of Christian communities throughout the region. “Christians with influence and power in the United States may be the last line of defence between vulnerable Christian communities and the forces driving them from their ancestral homelands,” he said. “From Gaza to the West Bank and Lebanon, ancient Christian communities are under immense pressure. If they are erased and we remained silent, we will share responsibility for that loss.” The president of VPP added: “The disruption of a Marian festival by the IDF is not just an attack on a celebration; it is another warning sign that the Christian presence in the Holy Land is in peril. “At the Vulnerable People Project, we launched Save West Bank Christians because we believe the descendants of the first Christians have the right to remain where Christianity was born. The time for solidarity is now.” A spokesman for the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem declined to comment. Lex Pouliot, manager of Middle East projects for the Vulnerable People Project, who witnessed the events, told AdVaticanum that organisers had initially feared disruption from Israeli settlers. “Our fear this morning was that radical settlers would disrupt preparations for the Marian Festival,” she said. “Instead, it was far more disturbing to watch the Israeli military intervene. Hearing a stun grenade explode as Christians prepared for a permitted religious celebration brought into sharp focus the countless stories I have heard throughout my time in the West Bank. “What we witnessed today should concern Christians around the world.” The allegations follow months of complaints from Church leaders and residents over increasing pressure on the Christian community in Taybeh. In March, Fr Bashar Fawadleh appealed for international attention after reporting that settlers had taken over privately owned land belonging to village residents. In April, Cardinal Pizzaballa and other heads of Churches in Jerusalem lodged a formal complaint with the authorities over alleged encroachments on Church-owned property in the area. During Holy Week, Cardinal Pizzaballa and Father Francesco Ielpo OFM, Custos of the Holy Land, were blocked from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to celebrate Holy Mass, marking the first time in centuries that Mass had not been celebrated inside the church on Palm Sunday. The clerics later issued a joint statement describing the incident as a “grave precedent” that disregarded “the sensibilities of billions of people around the world who, during this week, look to Jerusalem”. The latest incident also follows reports that Israeli soldiers entered a brewery compound in Taybeh on Thursday. According to VPP, troops prevented the owner from accessing parts of the property while members of the organisation were interviewing local workers. Taybeh, identified with the biblical Ephraim, is the last remaining entirely Christian Palestinian town in the West Bank. Home to about 1,000 residents, the village has become increasingly vocal about pressure from nearby settler activity in recent years. Neither the Israel Defense Forces nor Israeli authorities had publicly responded to the allegations at the time of publication.

Niwa Limbu

May 30, 2026