Christians say helping Jewish farms heals wounds

DOLEV, West Bank – Sitting in the shadow of a row of leafy grapevines, 26-year-old Zac Waller grabbed his guitar and started playing a hymn.

The soulful sounds tripped down the hillside adjacent to the Jewish settlement of Dolev west of Jerusalem, bringing a smile to the volunteers harvesting grapes in the warm October sun.

Waller was among a group of Christians who are increasingly coming here to help Israelis and Palestinians with the grape and olive harvests. They see it as a religious duty.

During a trip to the Holy Land several years ago, Tommy Waller, father of Zac, was deeply moved when Nir Levy, a winemaker from the settlement of Har Bracha, pulled out his Bible and read from the Book of Jeremiah, "Again you will plant vineyards on the hills of Samaria."

"That verse spoke to me from a spiritual place," Waller says. "Before that, God was ethereal. I had never been physically touched by faith before."

Waller is the founder of Hayovel, which brings together more than 300 volunteers from 14 countries to work in the summertime and winter time in vineyards owned by Jewish residents, or settlers, of the West Bank.

Referred to by residents here by the biblical names Judea and Samaria, the West Bank (the land on the western shore of the River Jordan, where Jesus was baptized) is where much of biblical history took place.

Evangelical Christians don't just farm here beyond the Green Line, Israel's internationally recognized border, but donate significant amounts of money to support Israeli schools, hospitals, Holocaust survivors and even immigrant absorption.

On the other side of the political divide, Christians are increasingly donating money to Palestinian causes and institutions. They're also volunteering to help Palestinian farmers, especially during the busy autumn olive-picking season.

Like Hayovel's volunteers, those who take part in pro-Palestinian solidarity missions pay their own way, often through fundraising appeals in their local communities. Antwan Saca, deputy director of Holy Land Trust, a Bethlehem-based organization that organizes olive-harvesting opportunities for tourists and pilgrims, said his program encourages visitors to interact with Palestinian villagers.

On the spiritual level, "it enables Christians to fulfill the dictate to stand up for the weak and the oppressed, and to deliver justice through faith," Saca said.

The West Bank is disputed land and will remain so until Israelis and Palestinians work out their territorial differences. Controlled by the Ottoman Empire for decades, the land is home to hundreds of thousands of Israelis living among about 2 million Palestinians.

Advocates for Palestinian farmers are pleased to have the volunteer harvesters, who they say help create an additional line of defense against settler extremists accused of damaging thousands of Palestinian olive trees. There also have been instances of Palestinian vandalism, but on a much smaller scale.

Bill Christensen, the associate pastor of Vineyard Church of Columbus, Ohio, said that he and more than a dozen young members of his evangelical Christian church recently wrapped up seven full days of olive-picking in West Bank villages.

"We're serving the Palestinian people. Service is part and parcel of expressing one's faith and walking with Jesus," Christensen said at a meal in Bethlehem.

In the Israeli settlement of Dolev, volunteers are equally passionate about their work.

Wiping sweat from her brow during a break from picking grapes, Lois Llewellyn, a 52-year-old caregiver from Riverside, Calif., said she felt "part of the prophecy" of Jewish renewal in the Land of Israel.

"Here the stones of the Bible come alive. I'm in the land where Jesus walked, and the prophecy is being fulfilled."

A former organic produce grower from the hills of Tennessee, Tommy Waller came here with his 11 children and his wife. Despite his faith in Jesus, Tommy Waller emphasized that participants are not in the Holy Land to proselytize.

"We're not missionaries. We're not trying to convert anyone. We stay among ourselves," he said.

Waller finds it hard to fathom why the international community denies Jews the right to live on "contested land," whose status has so far resisted resolution despite numerous Palestinian-Israeli negotiations. He thinks there is room for both peoples here.

"It's so peaceful here," he said, his hand sweeping across the rocky soil part of the biblical Land of Israel. "We haven't seen terrorism."

When Waller shops in Rami Levi, an Israeli supermarket in the West Bank, "we see Jews and Arabs shopping together."

Waller says that most organizations and aid groups here support Palestinian agriculture and do not help Jewish farmers. "We have to be fair."

Christensen, 61, says his church is helping the Palestinians harvest to express their faith and raise awareness of the Palestinian situation. Jesus, he said, came here not to be served but to serve.

As for helping Jewish farmers, too, he said, "We wouldn't be opposed to it, but (it) didn't occur to us that they needed help."

Saca said his aim of helping Palestinian farmers is to allow Christians to help "the oppressed. We don't have a political agenda."

Gazing at the small Israeli vineyard that snaked its way down a rocky hillside, Tommy Waller said Hayovel seeks only to bless the Jewish people in their biblical homeland, "to heal the relationship between Christians and Jews, who Christians have hurt throughout history," he said.