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Protesters Mob Laura Bush in Jerusalem |
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by Nedra Pickler Associated Press Entered into the database on Monday, May 23rd, 2005 @ 01:33:34 MST |
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ABU GHOSH, Israel (AP) -- Laura Bush said Monday she was not surprised to be
met by protesters during her tour of Mideast holy sites and pledged the United
States will do all it can to help resolve age-old conflicts. "As we all know, this is a place of very high tensions and high emotions,"
the first lady said while standing in the garden courtyard of the Church of
the Resurrection. "And you can understand why when you see the people with
a deep and sincere faith in their religion all living side by side." Mrs. Bush said the protesters who heckled her during Sunday's visits to the
Dome of the Rock and the Western Wall did not surprise her and she denied that
they ovovershadoweder goodwill visit. "I think the protests were very expected. If you didn't expect them, you
didn't know what it would be like when you got here," she said. "Everyone
knows how the tensions are and, believe me, I was very, very welcomed by most
people." "I think that Abu Ghosh, as we leave Israel, can show us what it's like
when the people of three religions that have so many holy sites here in the
Holy Land indeed can live in peace with each other," she said. The first
lady was heading to Cairo after the visit to Abu Ghosh. As Mrs. Bush toured the 12th-century church, nuns and monks sang Psalm 150
in Hebrew as a symbol of the religious cultures cocoexistingn the region. The
peaceful visit was in contrast to her stops Sunday at sites sacred to Muslims
and Jews. At the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest shrine, protesters demanded that the
U.S. release Jonathan Pollard, a Jewish American imprisoned for spying for Israel.
During a visit to the Dome of the Rock, she faced heckling from angry Palestinians.
One man yelled, "How dare you come in here! Why your husband kill Muslim?"
Some visitors that Mrs. Bush encountered near the Dome of the Rock, a mosque
on a hilltop compound known to Muslims as Haram as-Sharif and to Jews as Temple
Mount, shouted at her in Arabic. "None of you belong in here!" one
man yelled as Mrs. Bush and her entourage arrived. Mrs. Bush removed her shoes as she entered the mosque and walked barefoot on
the red carpet. She held a black scarf tightly around her head as she gazed
up at the gilded dome and the colorful mosaics. Despite the chaos at both sites, Mrs. Bush kept smiling and said little. As she left, visitors and media grew so aggressive that Israeli police locked
arms to form a human chain and pushed by Israeli media and protesters who got
to close. U.S. Secret Service agents packed tightly around her. Pollard's supporters also held up signs outside the residence of Israeli President
Moshe Katsav, where Mrs. Bush had tea with his wife, Gila Katsav, and other
Israeli women. No protesters were evident when Mrs. Bush had lunch with leading Palestinian
women at a hotel in Jericho, a town that Israel recently turned over to Palestinian
control, or when she visited the ruins of an 8th-century palace in the West
Bank town of Jericho and appealed for peace. "It will take a lot of baby steps, and I'm sure it will be a few steps
backward on the way," she said. "But I want to encourage the people that I met with earlier and the women
that I just met with that the United States will do what they can in this process.
It also requires the work of the people here, of the Palestinians and the Israelis,
to come to the table, obviously. And we'll see." © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. |