Why Is Israel Purging Jerusalem of Armenians?

The Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem, which comprises one-sixth of the Old City’s Christian heart, is under siege. It’s not being attacked with swords or bombs, however, but with bogus tax bills and illegal eviction threats. These attacks are being launched by the Jerusalem Municipality and its leader, Mayor Moshe Lion. 

Mind you, this is no bureaucratic hiccup. It’s a calculated push to erase a 1,600-year-old Christian community. The stakes are high, and the silence from the West is deafening.

The Armenian Patriarchate, which has called the Quarter home since the fifth century, faces crippling tax bills on properties that house convents, schools, and St. James Cathedral. Nonpayment, the city warns, means foreclosure and seizure. This isn’t just about money. It’s about control. 

The Quarter, a refuge for Armenian Christians since their genocide in 1915, is prime real estate. Developers, allegedly tied to ultranationalist settlers, are circling, eyeing luxury condos and "cultural centers" that critics say are a front for Judaizing the Old City. 

The Patriarchate calls it a violation of the 1852 Ottoman agreement that protected Christian holdings. Church-owned property was always exempt from this tax, known as the arnona. In the Patriarchate's case, the arnona was retroactively calculated without due process, and amount to discriminatory economic pressure. Its aim: to weaken the 1,600-year-old Armenian Christian presence in Jerusalem. 

Essentially, the Jerusalem Municipality showed up at the Patriarchate’s door with a tax bill to which they are not subject. The value of the taxable properties was assessed arbitrarily and placed so high that the Patriarchate could never afford to pay up, ensuring that the Municipality would have the right to evict the Armenian community and sell their homes to developers.

Even many Israeli scholars have sided with the Patriarchate, condemning the Municipality's scheme as a "land grab.” 

The Armenian Quarter isn’t just a collection of buildings. It’s a living testament to a people who survived Ottoman slaughter to build a spiritual stronghold. Their cathedral’s bells have rung since the age of St. Gregory the Illuminator, when Armenia became the first Christian nation. To squeeze them out now, under the guise of tax equity, smells of a broader agenda: a Jerusalem unified not as a shared holy city but as an exclusively Jewish one.

Christians in Jerusalem are now barely two percent of the population, down from a robust community decades ago. They face harassment, visa denials, and now financial chokeholds. 

There are no tanks rolling through the Quarter. The reality is subtler, but no less devastating.

The U.S. government, which is always quick to cut the IDF a check for a couple billion, has little to say about the Quarter’s plight. Evangelicals, fixated on biblical prophecy, back Israel’s every move, ignoring how it undercuts the Christian presence they claim to revere. 

If the Armenian Quarter falls to developers or settlers, the Old City risks becoming a monolith, not a meeting place. A Jerusalem that alienates its minorities is a Jerusalem primed for conflict, not peace.

What can be done? First, the Patriarchate needs support—legal, financial, diplomatic. Orthodox as well as Catholic bishops should pressure their nation’s leaders to condemn Israel’s power-play. Second, the public must be informed. Christian media must shine a light on this dark chapter in Jerusalem’s history. Third, Israel must be reminded of its own history. A nation born from persecution should know better than to squeeze a genocide-scarred community out of its ancestral home.

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