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      Hundreds of New Testaments torched in Israel
 http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/05/28/bible.burning/index.html
 
 (CNN) -- Police in Israel are investigating the burning of hundreds
 of New Testaments in a city near Tel Aviv, an incident that has
 alarmed advocates of religious freedom.
 
 Investigators plan to review photographs and footage showing "a
 fairly large" number of New Testaments being torched this month in
 the city of Or-Yehuda, a police spokesman, Micky Rosenfeld, said
 Wednesday.
 
 News accounts in Israel have quoted Uzi Aharon, the deputy mayor of
 Or-Yehuda, as saying he organized students who burned several hundred
 copies of the New Testament. The deputy mayor gave interviews to
 Israeli radio and television stations after word of the incident
 surfaced about two weeks ago.
 
 Soon he was talking with Russian, Italian and French television
 stations, "explaining to their highly offended audiences back home
 how he had not meant for the Bibles to be burned, and trying to undo
 the damage caused by the news (and photographs) of Jews burning New
 Testaments," The Jerusalem Post reported.
 
 Aharon told CNN on Wednesday that he collected New Testaments and
 other "Messianic propaganda" that had been handed out in the city but
 that he did not plan or organize a burning. Instead, he said, three
 teenagers set fire to a pile of New Testaments while he was not
 present. Once he learned what was going on, he said, he stopped the
 burning.
 
 The episode has worried defenders of Israel's minority population of
 Messianic Jews, who consider themselves Jewish but believe in the
 divinity of Jesus, as do Christians. It also has concerned
 evangelical Christians in North America, Europe and Asia, who visit
 Israel by the hundreds of thousands.
 
 Calev Myers, an attorney for Messianic Jews in Israel, told CNN he
 plans to file a formal complaint Thursday with the national police at
 the request of the United Christian Council in Israel, an umbrella
 organization for a few dozen Christian organizations outside Israel.
 
 "I hope the people who are responsible for breaking the law will be
 indicted and prosecuted," he said.
 
 About 200 New Testaments were burned, Aharon said, but he saved
 another 200.
 
 His goal was to stop attempts to distribute Christian literature in
 the city, he said.
 
 Myers, however, said he doubts that Messianic Jewish missionaries
 distributed the New Testaments. He said it's not clear how the
 volumes found their way into homes in Or-Yehuda.
 
 The deputy mayor told CNN he respects the New Testament and would not
 do what has been done to the Jews in the past -- a reference to Nazi
 burning of Jewish and other books in the 1930s, and other occasions
 when Jewish texts, including sacred ones, were burned.
 
 Myers said his complaint will ask the authorities to investigate
 possible violations of two Israeli laws. One forbids the destruction
 or desecration of any religious icon or item that a group holds
 sacred. Another bans people from speaking publicly in a way that
 offends or humiliates a certain religion.
 
 Both laws are meant to prevent people from inciting religious
 violence, he said.
 
 The burning controversy has unfolded against the backdrop of other
 instances that Myers cited as examples of discrimination against
 Messianic Jews in Israel.
 
 About two months ago, the teenage son of a Messianic pastor was
 severely injured when a package delivered to his home exploded, Myers
 said. In addition, several rabbis urged students to boycott further
 participation in a Bible competition after they learned that one
 winner -- a high-school student in Israel -- was a Messianic Jew, he
 said.
 
 Groups such as the Anti-Defamation League have sharply criticized the
 burning of New Testaments.
 
 "We condemn this heinous act as a violation of the basic Jewish
 principles and values," said Rabbi Eric J. Greenburg, director of
 interfaith policy for the Anti-Defamation League. "It is essential
 that we respect the sacred texts of other faiths. The Jewish people
 can never forget the tragic burning of sacred Jewish volumes at many
 points in history."
 
 "While there may be legitimate concerns of proselytizing, these
 matters must be addressed through the proper legal channels,"
 Greenburg said in a statement. "It is unacceptable and not legitimate
 to burn someone else's sacred texts."
 
 
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