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American tourist arrested for alleged attack on Jesus statue in Jerusalem church

ISRAEL-PALERSTINIAN-CONFLICT-RELIGION
A priest shows a piece of a wooden statue of Jesus Christ that was pulled down and damaged in the Church of the Flagellation, where Christians believe Jesus was flogged and sentenced to death, in Jerusalem's Old City, February 2, 2023. AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty

Jerusalem — Israeli police on Thursday arrested an American tourist after he allegedly knocked down and broke a statue of Jesus in a church in Jerusalem's Old City. Images on social media showed the statue laying horizontally on the floor after apparently being pulled down from a stand at the church.

The incident occurred in the Church of the Flagellation, which is located on the Via Dolorosa, the route believed to have been walked by Jesus to his crucifixion.

Police said they made the arrest with the assistance of a church security guard. Video on social media showed a man sitting atop the alleged vandal who is heard saying "you can't have idols in Jerusalem, this is the holy city."

Police said the man's mental health was being assessed.

ISRAEL-PALERSTINIAN-CONFLICT-RELIGION
A wooden statue of Jesus that was pulled down and damaged in the Church of the Flagellation, where Christians believe Jesus was flogged and sentenced to death, is seen in Jerusalem's Old City, February 2, 2023. AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty

The incident came as tensions run high in Jerusalem and the region following a bloody week. An Israeli military raid in the West Bank killed 10 Palestinians, mostly militants but also a 61-year-old woman. An east Jerusalem shooting attack outside a synagogue killed seven people, including a 14-year-old.

The unrest comes in the first weeks of Israel's new, far-right government, some of whose ultranationalist, religious members have used inflammatory, anti-Arab rhetoric.

Blinken, visiting Mideast, calls for calm amid rising Israeli-Palestinian tensions 04:59

Church officials could not immediately be reached for comment. Father Nikodemus Schnabel of the Dormition Abbey just outside the Old City linked the incident to the government's character.

"Welcome to the new Christian-hating Israel, encouraged and supported by the current government!" he tweeted.

Police said they view damage to religious institutions as serious.

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