Christian broadcaster Robertson apologizes for Sharon remarks (AP) Updated: 2006-01-13 09:47
Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson has sent a letter apologizing for
suggesting that Ariel Sharon's massive stroke was divine punishment for pulling
Israel out of the Gaza Strip.
Robertson's comments drew widespread condemnation from other Christian
leaders, President Bush and Israeli officials, who canceled plans to include the
American evangelist in the construction of a Christian tourist center in
northern Israel.
In a letter dated Wednesday and marked for hand delivery to Sharon's son
Omri, Robertson called the Israeli prime minister a "kind, gracious and gentle
man" who was "carrying an almost insurmountable burden of making decisions for
his nation."
 American television personality and
evangelical Christian leader Pat Robertson, backed by an Israeli flag,
delivers a speech to a crowd of mostly evangelical Christians from various
nations on a pilgrimage to Israel, during an event of the International
Christian Embassy in Jerusalem in this Sunday, Oct. 3, 2004 file
photo.[AP/file] | "My concern for the future safety of your nation led me to make remarks which
I can now view in retrospect as inappropriate and insensitive in light of a
national grief experienced because of your father's illness," the letter said.
"I ask your forgiveness and the forgiveness of the people of Israel,"
Robertson wrote.
The 77-year-old prime minister suffered a devastating stroke Jan. 4 and
remained hospitalized Thursday in critical but stable condition.
The day after Sharon's stroke, Robertson suggested he was being punished for
pulling Israel out of the Gaza Strip last summer. The pullout was seen by many
evangelical groups as a retreat from biblical prophecy of Jewish sovereignty
over the area.
"God considers this land to be his," Robertson said on his TV program "The
700 Club." "You read the Bible and he says 'This is my land,' and for any prime
minister of Israel who decides he is going to carve it up and give it away, God
says, 'No, this is mine.'"
Despite the apology, it was doubtful Robertson would be brought back into the
fold of the proposed Christian Heritage Center in the northern Galilee region,
where tradition says Jesus lived and taught.
The exclusion carries a special irony for a preacher who helped define
television ministries: The planned complex is to include studios and satellite
links for live broadcasts from the Holy Land.
Rami Levi, director of marketing for Israel's tourism ministry, told The
Associated Press that the government remains "outraged" by Robertson's remarks.
Israel's tourism minister, Abraham Hirchson, said Wednesday that Robertson's
help was no longer welcome for the proposed center.
"But, of course, we continue full engines ahead to construct it because the
Christian community around the world — the evangelical community — are friends,"
said Levi, who is responsible for coordinating tourism contacts between Israeli
groups and other faiths around the world.
Christian groups, particularly evangelical congregations from the United
States, have become an important source of revenue and political influence.
Evangelicals funnel millions of dollars each year to Jewish settlers in the
West Bank and provide aid for those evicted from Gaza. They also represent an
essential component of the estimated $4 billion in tourist revenue expected this
year.
Levi said groundbreaking on the center could come early this year and the
first buildings could be finished within two years. The complex will include an
amphitheater and broadcast facilities near key Christian sites, including
Capernaum, the Mount of the Beatitudes, where Jesus delivered the Sermon on the
Mount, and Tabgha on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, where Christians believe
Jesus performed the miracle of the loaves and fish.
Hirchson had predicted it would draw up to 1 million pilgrims a year,
generate $1.5 billion in spending and support about 40,000 jobs. Robertson was
leading a group of evangelicals who have pledged to raise the $50 million needed
to build the site.
But Levi said there was "more than enough outreach" to other Christian groups
to meet the funding.
"The government does not rely on one person in constructing such a site,
which is important to the Christians around the world," said Levi.
Levi suggested that an apology from Robertson would not get him back on the
project, but he said that Hirchson did not exclude cooperation with Robertson on
other fronts.
"We love to do joint projects with people. But we are also human beings and
we have feelings and we think our partners should consider that at times —
especially times like this — that statements like this hurt," said
Levi.
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