Is there any hope of friendship for a PLO sniper and a Jewish Soldier? (http://biblenetworknews.com)
BELLFLOWER, CA, USA (ANS), April 16, 2002 — Taysir Abu Saada "Tass" was a Fatah fighter trained to kill Jews. His hatred was so strong he dreamed of poisoning Jews who frequented the restaurant where he worked. Moran Rosenblit was a soldier for Israel who became embittered after a Palestinian suicide bomber killed seven of his friends. Improbably, these former enemies now talk to each other almost every day, sharing a profound friendship and love only possible because of Jesus Christ..."Do you want a picture of the solution for the Middle East?"
asks Moran. "If God changed my heart and Tass's heart he can change
anyone's heart," he says. "God delivered me from this
hatefulness toward Arabs and he's been teaching me to love my
enemies."
Both men left the cauldron of the Middle East in search of a better life
in America, which Moran once imagined lightheartedly as a "dreamland,
where you pick money off the trees." While they each found a measure
of success after emigrating, their views of reality were unalterably
changed when they each had powerful encounters with the risen Savior.
Tass was born in the Gaza Strip and grew up in Saudi Arabia under Muslim
teachings. Trained as a sniper by Fatah to kill Jews, he even instructed
children about their duty to fight and kill Israelis. After he arrived in
the U.S., he worked in the hotel and restaurant industries in Kansas City,
Missouri, where he met an American named Charlie Sharpe.
One day Sharpe spoke to Tass about a "spiritual connection" he
enjoyed, which brought miraculous blessings and peace. Weeks went by as
Tass pondered what this connection might be. He begged Sharpe to give him
the secret.
Sharpe told him, "Tass, to have the peace that I have you must love a
Jew."
Tass was taken aback by this remark. "I hate these people-you know
how I feel about them," he said.
"What do you know about Jesus Christ?" Sharpe asked.
"I know Jesus-he's a prophet," Tass replied.
"Well, he's more than that. He's the Son of God — He is
God," Sharpe said.
Sharpe got a Bible and placed it between the two men. "The minute he
put the Bible between the two of us I started shaking and jumped away from
it," Tass recalls.
"Let me tell you what the Word of God says about Jesus Christ,"
Sharpe said, as he began to read from the first chapter of the Book of
John.
"When he started reading," Tass says, "I started shaking
and I lost
consciousness and the next I know I'm on my knees on the floor with my
hands lifted up, inviting Christ to be my Lord and Savior," he says.
"I felt like a mountain lifted off my shoulder and a joy and peace
came into my heart I never experienced before."
Tears were flowing from Charlie's eyes. "Man, I've never seen
anything like this in my life," he said, as he hugged Tass. "Do
you know what happened?"
"No."
"You've become a Christian," Sharpe told him.
"Well, if the reason I'm feeling the way I'm feeling in my heart is
because he is the Son of God, then I want him to be my Lord and
Savior."
The next morning, Tass couldn't wait to tell his 18-year old son, Benali,
who was shaving at the time. "Yesterday, I accepted Jesus as my Lord
and Savior."
"Oh, Dad!" Benali exclaimed. Benali started crying, hugging his
father, as shaving cream slopped all over their faces.
"Wait a minute," Tass said. "Why are you happy for
me?" he asked, knowing his son was a Muslim.
"Dad, I accepted Christ three months ago too and I didn't tell
anybody," he said. Benali then explained how he asked his pastor what
he should do, knowing that his father would "kill me when he finds
out."
The pastor told him, "Go back to your father's house and love him
more." Then the pastor called a special meeting at the church asked
that a prayer chain be established 24-hours a day for Benali's family.
"That was three months before I got saved," Tass says.
"They prayed for me until they made my life so miserable that I had
to look up for answers," he says.
During the same time period, God was working in the heart of an ex-Israeli
soldier named Moran Rosenblit. His outlook about life changed dramatically
after a suicide bomber demolished his unit near Netanya, Israel.
"That night would be a night I would never forget," Moran says.
"About 22 soldiers died on that day, and seven were friends of
mine," he says. "They were brothers-we ate from the same plate
and drank from the same cup."
More bad news followed. "Two weeks later another friend died in
Lebanon and I didn't go to the funeral because I'd had enough of feeling
the pain," Moran says. Months later, two helicopters collided killing
86 Israeli soldiers. None were friends of Moran, but the mounting death
toll left him feeling depressed, "like something was missing."
Moran also served four months in Lebanon. "I didn't know if I was
going to come back," he says. One week after he left Lebanon,
"seven soldiers died driving the same road we drove."
Shaken, Moran's depression mounted, and he tried to drown his sorrows with
alcohol at local nightclubs. A Swedish girlfriend inspired Moran to leave
Israel, and he traveled first to England, then the United States. Leaving
loved ones behind, he found himself in California, rooming with a
Christian family in Manhattan Beach. As he watched them exercise their
faith, his own questions about God began to surface.
"Driving in the car, the mother turned on a worship tape," Moran
says. "I saw her teaching her kids about God and I wondered, 'Is
there a God?'"
When a friend invited Moran to church, the pastor was teaching from the
Book of Hebrews about the blindness of the Jewish people. "I was
angry," Moran says, and his friend suggested he question the pastor
directly. The pastor told Moran he was not speaking against the Jewish
peoples, and encouraged him to read the Bible.
Later, as he read from the Bible and another Christian book that belonged
to his roommate, something unusual happened. "The Holy Spirit just
fell down on me, just filled me up," Moran says. "The light
switch went on and from darkness I saw the light, and I accepted Jesus
into my life."
"I wanted to hide in the beginning," Moran says, admitting that
boldness was not part of his newfound faith. "I didn't tell my
friends, but God did something" to change this, exercising sovereign
"humor."
Moran was baptized two months after he received Jesus as Messiah.
"The next day I was freaking out because I didn't want my friends to
know I'm baptized," he says. Then a friend called him.
"Have you read the Daily Breeze?" he asked.
"What?" Moran was quizzical.
"They put a big picture of you on the front page with a caption that
read, 'A Jew getting baptized."
But there was a small typographical error. "The Daily Breeze spelled
my name M-O-R-O-N," he says. "But I have a saying about it-I
don't mind being a moron for Jesus Christ."
As Moran grew in his faith, a friend invited him to a conference for Arab
and Jewish believers. "I had friends who were Arabs but I always
watched my back to make sure they wouldn't stab me in the back," he
says. "Israelis can not trust Arabs and Arabs can not trust
Israelis-that's a reality."
Moran says he "smiled" outwardly at the conference, "but
there was nothing behind the smile." One year later, he was invited
to another conference of Arab and Jewish believers, and this time the
organizers asked him to share his testimony.
"It was hard for me to share in front of Arab people," he says,
"because some of those people might have been people who killed my
friends."
As Moran finished his testimony, a Palestinian man approached him.
"I was a Fatah fighter," said Taysir Abu Saada, the 51-year old
ex-PLO man also known as "Tass."
"I was in shock," Moran recalls, as he took a half step
backward, and stared into Tass's eyes, trying to read his heart.
Moran says Tass "looked me in the eyes and he said, 'I love you.' I
can't explain what that did to my heart when he said that."
Then Tass did something even more radical. "He asked me to forgive
him in the name of his people for my friends who died from suicide
bombers," Moran says. "It was God's grace that allowed me to
forgive him," he says. "It was not my strength that I was able
to forgive him."
Then Moran also sought forgiveness. "I asked him to forgive me for
not being able to love him and trust him and for my anger," he says.
"And he did."
Soon small groups were forming of Arab and Jewish believers praying
together. "Here I was praying with an ex-enemy in the name of
Jesus-the one and only true God," Moran says.
Since that conference in March 2001, Moran and Tass speak to one another
almost daily, as their bond of friendship grows without measure.
"Jesus touched my heart," Tass says. "It goes to show the
world there is hope in Jesus," he says.
With the Middle East caught in a repetitive cycle of violent revenge, many
are losing hope. "I don't think there is a political solution,"
Moran says. "I believe there needs to be a change of heart to
love," he says. "People can only live in peace together through
Jesus Christ-but that's the only way to bring peace."
Source: Mark Ellis, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service