July 29, 2015    

Chris McDonnell, UK 

  A much needed place

(Comments welcome here)

 

chris@mcdonnell83.freeserve.co.uk

Previous articles by Chris

              I want to comment this week on a place and a person. The place is on the edge of southern Jerusalem , the Tantur Ecumenical Institute.

The vision for such a place came about in the 60s following the Vatican Council where both Anglican and Protestant observers were welcomed in their attendance. Paul VI, successor of the visionary John XXIII who first called the Council, dreamed of an ecumenical institute to continue their discussions. The following year, in 1964, the Patriarch Athenagoras met with Paul VI on the Mount of Olives and so began an opening between the Western Church and that of the East. Later it was to culminate when the two would lift the bans of excommunication that had been in effect since the Great Schism of 1054, an extraordinary event. Jerusalem became the obvious place for an institute to further this new relationship.

The property at Tantur was purchased by the Vatican and leased to the University of Notre Dame in 1967. Due to the conflicts of the time, it was not opened until 1972. It welcomed through its doors scholars from Protestant, Roman Catholic and Orthodox backgrounds.  It became an oasis of learning, prayer and hospitality in a turbulent part of the world, as it broadened its outlook to include both Jews and Muslims.

My interest in Tantur arose from reading a journal written by one of its Rectors, a Yorkshireman, Donald Nicholl- The Testing of Hearts. A memorable book indeed that can be dipped into and the flavour of his work experienced again and again.

A tall man, well over six foot in height, he was by training an historian, who worked in a number of academic departments both in the UK and the US . During the Second World War, he spent time with the army in India and Asia and finally in Hong Kong .

His conversion to Catholicism came from those years and he was finally received into the Church in 1946. His academic home in England came to be Keele University in Staffordshire. It was in the early Eighties that Nicholl accepted secondment to the Tantur Institute and there he remained as Rector for four years, from 1981 through to 1985. His journal mentioned above is his document of that experience, published in 1989. Nicholl was a layman whose Christian witness inspired many in his lifetime and whose influence still continues.

He was a person who was at home with diversity, seeking common ground and understanding rather than looking for the edges and tripping points of discord. The journal is a record of careful walking amongst peoples and views that rubbed together and so often produced sparks. He learnt the balancing act and in doing so, understood the pain of division. This was highlighted in the Sunday celebration of the Eucharist and the restraints placed on individuals when it came to Receiving. Those years in Jerusalem , when bitterness between Jew and Arab spilled over into violence born out of deep mistrust, were indeed difficult times

That Donald Nicholls steered the Tantur Institute through such a hazardous path is to his abiding credit. And today the Institute continues to flourish, its need never greater, its presence all-important in a troubled world.

He died of cancer in May 1997 at the age of 74.

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