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Latino evangelical leaders meet in Jerusalem for summit on Israel

Jerusalem
RNS

In mid-May, one year after the United States relocated its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, nearly 200 evangelical Latino leaders from the US, Latin America and the Caribbean attended a festive rooftop ceremony in the Old City of Jerusalem.

They were joined by Jewish leaders from Israel and abroad.

Israel Jerusalem

The Western Wall, bottom, and Dome of the Rock, top, in Jerusalem’s Old City on 13th March. The former temple area is considered sacred by the Abrahamic faiths. PICTURE: Emily McFarlan Miller/RNS

Although it was hot enough on that roof to fry an egg, the leaders – dressed in business attire for the occasion – took solace in the heart-stopping view of the Temple Mount a mere 90 metres away.

Below it, the Western Wall was crowded with worshippers.

On a mission organised by the Latino Coalition for Israel, the participants listened intently as speakers described the Jews’ “return to the Land of Israel” and musicians played The Star-Spangled Banner and Hatikva (the Hope), Israel’s national anthem.

The bilingual English-Spanish mission culminated in a daylong summit attended by US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman. The summit was the latest expression of the American evangelical Latino community’s support for Israel and its warming ties with Diaspora Jewish communities.

As the number of evangelical Christians has swelled within the Latino community in the United States, so too has the community’s support for Israel and Jews around the world.

Its leaders believe Israel’s creation is the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy and Biblical passages that call for blessing the Jewish people.

“It is a miracle to see the return of Israel after 2,000 years of exile and Christian persecution,” said Rev Mario Bramnick, LCI’s president, who noted “an unprecedented rise of anti-Semitism” in the US.

Like many evangelical Christians, Bramnick, pastor of New Wine Ministries Church in Cooper City, Florida, believes that US President Donald Trump’s support of Israel, and especially his decision to bring the US Embassy to Jerusalem, was divinely inspired.

“It is a miracle that God appointed Donald Trump to be a modern Cyrus,” Bramnick said, referring to Cyrus the Great, the first king of the Persian Empire, who in the Hebrew Bible allows Jews to return to Jerusalem from Babylon. Some evangelicals see Trump as a Cyrus-like figure, who comes to the aid of God’s people – even though he is not particularly religious.

Successive Israeli governments have reached out to the Latino community in the hopes of fostering not only trade relations but political support for the Jewish state.

“One of the first things I did was instruct our consulates to hire Hispanics specifically to bring together Israel and the Hispanic community,” Danny Ayalon, Israel’s ambassador to the US from 2002-2006, told Religion News Service. “I realised the great political, economic potential and human potential of the growing Hispanic community in the United States.”

In 2017, Latinos made up 17.8 per cent of the US population. That percentage is expected to grow to 25.6 per cent by 2060, according to the US Census Bureau.

“Hispanic Americans constitute an important population of increasing presence and political strength. As such, they are likely to enjoy leverage in their ability to influence American foreign policy issues, US-Israel relations amongst others,” according to research on Latino attitudes toward Israel at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, an Israeli academic institution.

The researchers found that Latinos who were born in the US and Latinos who are more politically involved are more supportive of Israel than those who are first-generation immigrants and are not involved in the political process.

In Latin America, many nations have been supportive of Israel since its inception in 1948.

“Latin America was the friendliest of continents when Israel was established. We have a lot of common interests, starting with our Judeo-Christian culture and heritage,” Ayalon said.

That heritage sometimes extends to DNA.

With the advent of home genetics testing kits like AncestryDNA and 23andMe, thousands of Latin American Christians have discovered that their ancestors were Jews who fled Spain and Portugal during the Inquisition. If Jewish genealogy sites are any indication, many are exploring their Jewish roots and learning about Israel.

In the US, evangelical Latinos are actively fighting against anti-Semitism and the delegitimisation of Israel.

LCI worked on pro-Israel and anti-boycott, divestment and sanctions legislation and consulted with Trump administration officials to secure pro-Israel language in the Republican Party platform. The organisation provides college students with resources to defend Israel and Jews on campus.

William Daroff, senior vice president for public policy of the Jewish Federations of North America, emphasised that the Jewish community tries to support Latino Christians as much as Latino Christians are supporting Jews and Israel.

“We’ve worked together on immigration issues, and we have looked at some Homeland Security issues together. It’s a relationship that is growing and very positive,” said Daroff, who is a member of LCI’s advisory board.

On a grassroots level, Ramiro Pena, pastor of Christ the King Church in Waco, Texas, said his congregation makes an effort to educate fellow Christians about the Jewish roots of Christianity and the Jews’ connection to the Land of Israel.

“It matters that Jesus was baptised here. It matters that he was a Galilean,” Pena said.

Abraham Rivera, pastor of La Puerta Life Center in Miami, said his congregation worked to pass an anti-BDS law.

Rivera said his congregation also fights anti-Semitism.

“The best thing is to create awareness and make a public statement against anti-Semitism. This is how we stand with the Jewish people.”

 

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