A crisis over the issuance of visas to members of evangelical organizations based in Israel is expected to be resolved next week following the intervention of the Prime Minister’s Office, officials said Wednesday.
The issue stems from the refusal of mid-level bureaucrats at the Interior Ministry to issue visas to members of evangelical groups based in Israel, which threatens to impair the work of the staunchly pro-Israel Christian Zionist ministries that goes back decades.
The Prime Minister’s Office intervened after a prominent evangelical organization based in Jerusalem went public with its frustrations over the hurdles it was facing in obtaining long-term visas for staff members from officials at the Population and Immigration Authority within the Interior Ministry. The issue was compounded by oft-changing leadership at the ministry during a time of governmental instability due to the COVID-19 crisis and five national elections in 43 months.
“We are confident that we can work this out,” David Parsons, vice president and senior international spokesman of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, the largest evangelical organization in Israel, said in an interview with Zenger News. “We just regret that we needed to go to the media to get their attention after waiting over three years for this promised review.”
Israel issues highly coveted clergy visas primarily to officials with mainstream Christian organizations and to the head ministers of the various evangelical organizations based in Israel. The long-term staffers and volunteers in such ministries are dependent on receiving clergy, work or volunteer visas.
Over the last three years, however, ministry officials balked at issuing new visas to these groups and imposed strict financial conditions on applicants, endangering the functioning of such organizations by reducing their Jerusalem-based staff.
After the intervention of the Prime Minister’s Office, negotiations are underway to resolve the issue as early as next week, officials said. One long-term proposal would see a “special Christian worker” visa category created for the evangelical staff, although that plan would need the approval of a Knesset subcommittee that is currently in months-long summer recess.
“The needle is finally moving,” Parsons said.
The Prime Minister’s Office declined to comment on the talks underway to resolve the issue.
Founded in 1980 to promote Christian support for Israel, the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem is the largest global pro-Israel evangelical organization, with branch offices in over 90 nations and outreach in more than 170 nations worldwide. Over the last four decades, the group, which has about 40 local staff members, has assisted more than 180,000 Jews in making aliyah, provided more than 250 bomb shelters to vulnerable Israeli communities near the Gaza and Lebanon borders, and cared for hundreds of Holocaust survivors.
The embassy is most widely known for hosting the annual autumn celebration of the Feast of Tabernacles, which draws thousands of Christian pilgrims from around the world to Jerusalem in the single biggest tourism event of the year.
“We want Christians from abroad to experience Israel,” Parsons said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called the hundreds of millions of evangelical Christian supporters around the globe “the greatest friends” of the State of Israel.
Produced in association with Jewish News Syndicate