Craig and Suzanne Kuehn
Our Family and Travels
Israel and the West Bank
Craig was able to go to the Holy Land in 2010 on a clergy familiarization trip. We both went in 2013. It is a wonder to be at the same places where so many Bible stories came from. Being there has a feeling that is hard to put into words. It is a true privilege to have visited there.
Unfortunately, this particular place on earth we call holy is also a place of violence. In ancient times, it was in between ancient superpowers. So many battles were fought there, some of which had nothing to do with the local residents. The Holy Land is in the fertile crescent and was and is valuable for food. There has never been much in the way of natural resources there, except for salt. Its location made it a trading route between empires and civilizations elsewhere. Egypt was to the southwest. The Mesopatamium empires were to the north and northeast. Then Persia came from the east. Later the Greeks came from the north. Later still, Rome took it all.
Today, the Jews seek their ancient homeland (the Romans kicked them out centuries ago). But to return, they displaced the current residents without compensation. That resettlement has yet to be fully settled. The Israeli government controls the West Bank limiting Palestinian freedom. A wall was built separating Israel from the West Bank for protection (there is a peace between the Palestinian state and Israel) causing economic hardship on the West Bank. Israel cannot annex the West Bank without making the Palestinians citizens, greatly reducing the Jewish population percentage. At the same time, they are reluctant to agree to a Palestinian state without dealing with possible World Court issues with their treatment of the Palestinians. But the big impediment to a settlement is water. Water is a precious resource in the Middle East and Israel does not want to give up access to the Jordan River. In the meantime, we can hope and pray that some kind of agreement can be reached.
After the church became legitimate after the Pact of Milan, many churches were built in the Holy Land using state funds of the Roman Empire. Earthquakes destroyed many churches that were later rebuilt during the Byzantine Empire or by the Crusaders. Some churches are of recent construction. Christians in the Holy Land are Palestinians. Because life there is so oppressive, Christians are resettling in Europe and other places. It is possible that soon there will be no Christians left in the Holy Land to attend all those churches.