Learn More About Sumud

Sumud logo featuring an olive tree and the words "for Justice in Palestine and Israel" on a black and white background of an olive grove

We are church for the sake of the world. Sumud is the ELCA Churches response to occupation and injustice in Palestine and Israel.

Freed by the transformative life of Christ, the ELCA is committed to accompaniment, advocacy and awareness-raising with our partners in the Holy Land and in the United States. The growing Sumud network works in relationship with bishops and synods to empower ELCA communities in this commitment.  

Sumud is an Arabic word meaning “steadfastness.” The term is widely used by Palestinian theologians and others to signify Palestinian resistance to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands and people. That resistance takes the form of nonviolent advocacy for political change as well as “resistance through existence,” embodied in education, social work, the arts and one’s relationships with the land and community. On the occasion of Pentecost, followers of Jesus bore witness to Christ and were charged with a mission to share the Good News. Two thousand years later, that witness continues with the indigenous Palestinian Christians, including our partners, the only Lutheran Church in the Middle East, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land (ELCJHL).

We are all Sumud. Our advocacy and awareness-raising are grounded in accompaniment of the Palestinian people who are our primary partners in the region, and especially the ELCJHL, whose ministries of education, health care, social service, justice work, and intellectual and cultural leadership are integral to Palestinian society. Sumud follows the guidance of our Palestinian church partners in bearing witness to the truth of the situation on the ground: that only when justice prevails in the Holy Land — when the occupation ends and human rights are restored to Palestinians — can there be a true and lasting peace for all Palestinians and Israelis.

Sumud connects ELCA members to our companions in the Holy Land and seeks to follow guidance, support leadership, and amplify the voices of our Palestinian partners. Together with our Lutheran companions, we accompany Palestinians and Israelis, and many other Jews, Christians and Muslims, in working to establish the justice required for peace.

How we work:

Accompaniment: Our church’s primary companion church in the Holy Land is the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land (ELCJHL). This Arabic-speaking community of faithful Lutherans is the primary relationship through which the ELCA sees the situation in Palestine and Israel. Both our churches belong to the Lutheran World Federation (LWF), a global communion whose vital Jerusalem-area program has pursued projects related to health, education and humanitarian aid in the occupied Palestinian territories for over 65 years.

The ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America), the ELCJHL (Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land) and the LWF (Lutheran World Federation) share a long history of nurturing relationships among Jewish and Muslim communities in the Holy Land. The ELCJHL was instrumental in creating the Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land, whose faith leaders encourage and advocate for the moderate voices for justice and peace among their own people. The Rev. Mark Hanson, former presiding bishop of the ELCA, was a founding member of the National Interreligious Leadership Initiative for Peace in the Middle East, a group of Jewish, Muslim and Christian faith leaders who work toward a common vision of a just peace in the Middle East. ELCA Presiding Bishop Elizabeth Eaton continues to be involved with the initiative. The ELCA has long and deep relationships with Jewish and Muslim communities that foster mutual understanding and that challenge all to embrace justice, peace and nonviolence.

Advocacy: We invite you to join our efforts to advocate for justice in Palestine and Israel. You can do this by calling for:

  • Lifesaving aid—including food, water, and medical care—to reach civilian populations  
  • Negotiations which end current wars and armed conflicts and release all captives, civilians, and political prisoners.
  • Equal human rights and human dignity for all people in the Holy Land.
  • An end to Israeli settlement building and the occupation of Palestinian land, both of which violate international laws.
  • Stabilization of the Palestinian economy by investing in its products and, through selective purchasing, avoiding products made in Israeli settlements that are illegally built on Palestinian land.
  • An examination of U.S. military aid to Israel to ensure compliance with U.S. and international human rights law, and a possible withholding of aid for failing to comply with those laws.

Awareness-raising: Are you interested in learning more, sharing your experiences with others or traveling to the Holy Land? Sumud will share information about upcoming trips to the Holy Land, connect you with neighbors concerned about the future of Palestine and Israel, and provide you with resources (worship materials, maps, historical background, trip planning ideas, church policy, etc.). Click here to see our online resources.

Join us in this call to walk alongside our sisters and brothers in the Holy Land by raising awareness and advocating in your hometown, congregation, school or synod.

Our Work

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