Israel Orders Deportation of Jews for Jesus Missionary
Messianic group worries legal precedent could be used to expel more missionaries.
Courtesy of Morning Star News
Barry Barnett (left), during the Jews for Jesus event which got him arrested.
An Israeli immigration judge has ordered the deportation
of a Messianic Jewish man from England who was arrested last week for
taking part in an evangelistic event in southern Israel.
Barry Barnett, 50, a worker with Jews for Jesus UK, was ordered on
Sunday (Nov. 24) to leave the country by Dec. 3. Barnett,
who is based
in England, was volunteering at the Jews for Jesus "Behold your God
Israel" campaign around the city of Be'er Shiva when he was arrested
Wednesday (Nov. 20) at about 4 p.m.
According to his wife, Alison Barnett, six immigration control officers
took him from Be'er Shiva, 125 kilometers (78 miles) south of
Jerusalem, to an immigration office in Omer, just outside of the city.
He was held there for several hours without charge, then transferred to
an immigration-holding unit of a prison in Ramle, near Tel Aviv. He
spent four days in jail before his court hearing.
The team present at the time of the arrest was made up of Israeli
citizens except for Barnett. Dan Sered, Israel director for Jews for
Jesus, said in a press release that the arrest was "outrageous."
"As an Israeli, I have been proud that our country allows for freedom
of religion," he said. "Yet those who seized Barry and took him to
prison have done a shameful thing."
According to Sered, the presiding judge ruled that Barnett was not allowed to engage in "missionary activity" while in Israel.
"They did not really give a reason why they detained him," Sered told
Morning Star News. "All they said is that he was doing 'missionary
activity.' That is correct, he was doing missionary activity, and that
is legal to do in Israel."
The reason the state of Israel gave for his deportation, he said, was
that Barnett was engaging in missionary activity and not regular tourist
activity on a B2 tourist visa.
"But the global ethics code for tourism, which the state of Israel
signed and even advertises on its own Ministry of Tourism Web page,
states that tourism for the purpose of exchanging religious beliefs is
not only valid but also should be encouraged," Sered said. "Therefore,
his deportation and arrest by the state of Israel was done without a
real legal cause."
Sered said Jews for Jesus would fight the deportation order. If the
order is not overturned, there is a risk that it will become a legal
precedent that could be used to expel missionaries or any expatriate
engaging in religious activities deemed unacceptable by the Israeli
government – or by government officials acting alone.
The immigration officers who arrested Barnett seized a banner he was
holding with a group of Israelis who were campaigning with him. Julia
Pascoe, UK branch leader for Jews for Jesus, said there was nothing
inherently offensive on the banner. The banner read, "Salvation equals
Jesus," which Pascoe said was an explanation of Jesus' name and declared
him the source of salvation. It also had a telephone number to contact
Jews for Jesus.
Pascoe conceded, however, that, "The gospel is an offense to those who don't want to
hear it."
Alison Barnett said that the ultra-Orthodox, anti-Christian group Yad
L'Achim had followed the Jews for Jesus teams to their campaign sites in
Israel since the event started. Yad L'Achim has a long-standing history
of links with sympathetic government officials who issue legal actions
on their behalf.
Jews for Jesus members fear there is a troubling possibility that
immigration officials under the influence of Yad L'Achim may have an
unwritten directive to arrest foreign religious workers as part of a
general crackdown on missionaries.
Yad L'Achim has worked to deny Messianic Jews (who believe Jesus is the
promised Messiah) the right of return to Israel and to deny spouses of
Messianics immigration visas. They also picket and severely harass
Messianics at their homes and their congregations and have been linked
to different government agencies revoking the licensing of
Messianic-owned businesses.
Informing on Barnett would fix a pattern of cooperation between Yad
L'Achim and the government that has been well documented by the Israeli
media. On Yad L'Achim's website, the organization reported about
interfering with the Jews for Jesus outreach's "spiritually poisonous
propaganda."
"Yad L'Achim has been dispatching beefed-up teams of activists wherever
the missionaries are taking up positions in order to alert the public
as to their nefarious goals," the ultra-Orthodox, nationalist
organization stated.
Jews for Jesus is an international organization whose stated purpose is
to, "Make the messiahship of Jesus an unavoidable issue to our Jewish
people worldwide." This is the first time a Jews for Jesus member,
either a worker or a volunteer, has been arrested in Israel, Pascoe
said.
"We have enjoyed freedom of religion in Israel over many campaigns
similar to this one; the treatment we received was atypical of the way
the law is usually enforced," she said. "We have never experienced this
before."
Pascoe added that she doesn't believe whoever directed the arrest is "a representative of the majority."
Barnett's wife, who wasn't with her husband when he was arrested, said she was surprised about it as well.
"This is the first time we have had any problem like this at all, and
we have done eight campaigns," she said. "It was quite a shock."
Nevertheless, Alison Barnett said she expects "opposition" when in Israel.
"And quite frankly," she added, "if we don't get any [opposition], we probably aren't doing our jobs right."
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