Messianic pastor's son injured by bomb
by Erin Roach, Baptist Press, Mar 25, 2008
www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=27695
Copyright © 1999-2005, Southern Baptist
Convention

Ami Ortiz |
ARIEL, Israel (BP)In one of the most serious attacks against the
persecuted Messianic community in Israel, the 15-year-old son of a well-known Messianic
pastor was severely injured March 20 when he opened a package delivered to the family's home
that turned out to be a bomb.
Ami Ortiz, the youngest son of David and Leah Ortiz of Ariel, endured seven hours of surgery
to remove shrapnel from his body. He suffered second- and third-degree burns, damage to his
right eye and a collapsed lung, according to e-mail updates circulated by Messianic
believers in the area.
Hannah Weiss, a close friend of the Ortiz family, described a conversation she had with the
family's housekeeper a couple of days after the blast. The woman was distraught because she
had retrieved the package from the doorstep and left the room only moments before Ami opened
it.
The package looked like a traditional food gift exchanged among Jews for Purim, a festive
holiday celebrating victory over oppression. A label on the package said "Happy Purim" in
Hebrew, Weiss recounted, and was decorated with smiling faces and colorful letters. The top
half was transparent cellophane with chocolates inside, she wrote in an e-mail released to
Baptist Press.
Part of the family's apartment was destroyed in the blast, and Messianic believers are
rallying to make repairs. Friends have said it is impossible to look at the apartment and
believe that Ami survived the bombing, and doctors apparently have used the word "miracle"
several times regarding his status.
David Ortiz, in an article by The Jerusalem Post March 23, gave an update on his son's
condition.
"His neck had an eight-inch gash like someone slit his throat. He has a ruptured lung.
Doctors had to operate on his tongue. He has second-degree burns to his chest and arms, and
there is no flesh on the thighs," Ortiz said, adding that doctors amputated two of Ami's
toes. "They're trying to continue to make sure that he won't lose his arms and legs. His
whole body is full of fragments of shrapnel."
Police are investigating the crime, and the two groups under suspicion are Arab terrorists
and anti-missionary Orthodox Jews, according to various reports. A Palestinian group called
the Al Aksa Brigade claimed responsibility on Arab TV, but Weiss said the group has been
known to make fictitious claims in order to boost their popularity.
Jim Sibley, a professor at Criswell College in Dallas and a former missionary to Israel,
noted the paradox that exists in a region known for religious strife which largely rejects
Jesus as Savior.
"Both Islam and Judaism, especially in their more orthodox expressions, really fear an open
marketplace when it comes to religious ideas," Sibley, who knew Ortiz from his time in
Israel, told Baptist Press. "This violence is born out of that fear. And yet it's this
message of the Gospel that provides the only hope for people in the area."
The Jerusalem Post, in its coverage of the bombing, identified David Ortiz as "a prominent
Christian pastor," "well-known in Ariel," where he has lived with his wife and six sons for
more than a decade. The Post said Ortiz "works mainly with Palestinians in the West Bank,
encouraging them to convert to Christianity."
In the mid-1990s the terrorist group Hamas issued a death threat against Ortiz for preaching
the Gospel to Palestinian Muslims, and the U.S. Embassy asked him to keep a low profile. The
family has been the object of repeated harassment by Orthodox Jews, many of whom live in
Ariel near the Ortiz home. Ortiz has been beaten up at least once by Palestinians from a
neighboring village while distributing Bibles, and a Molotov cocktail was thrown at his car,
The Post reported.
"I live my life as if every day could be my last," Ortiz said.
Whoever is responsible for the bombing, Weiss marveled at the outpouring of response from
believers around the world who have prayed for the Ortiz family and at the blessings that
were evident in the midst of tragedy.
"The scene at the hospital last night, outside the intensive care unit, was more like a
party than a vigil -- believers coming and going, a table of food and drink, Ami's parents
mingling and joking," Weiss wrote March 25. "There are a lot of challenges ahead for the boy
and his family, and there are still potential dangers, but for now we can't help but
celebrate."
Ami is improving each day, Weiss reported, and though he remains in a medically induced
coma, doctors are slowly lowering the doses of anesthesia. They have not yet been able to
remove all of the metal bolts that pierced both lungs and they're awaiting results on his
injured eye.
One of Ami's older brothers who served in the Israeli army was interviewed on a local
television station about the attack, Weiss said. The camera didn't show his face or give his
full name in order to protect him, but the woman who conducted the interview mentioned
Messianic Jews a couple of times, portraying the group as victims of needless violence.
Some Messianics may hope the bombing at the Ortiz home will turn public opinion regarding
believers who have long been harassed in Israel. Howard Bass, head of a Messianic
congregation in Beersheba, told The Jerusalem Post that in the past there has been "very
little sympathy for our plight."
"We get the feeling that nobody in Israel is willing to take a strong stand against violent
anti-missionary activity," Bass said in an article March 25.
Just before Christmas in 2005, Bass' congregation was attacked by hundreds of demonstrators
who received the backing of the local rabbinic leadership, The Post said. Another Messianic
believer, Edwin Beckford, is under house arrest. Last fall, arsonists set fire to
Jerusalem's Narkis Street Baptist Church, which sustained minor damage.
--30--
Erin Roach is a staff writer for Baptist Press.
Subject: Pictures of the Ortiz
apartment where Israeli bombing took place.
From:
Shoshana Montgomery
Date: 3/31/2008
4:14 PM
My friend Tikvah is now living in the area where the Ortiz family's
apartment was bombed and their teenager son was severely injured when he opened a fake
"Purim" gift that exploded. She has sent pictures of some of the aftermath in the
apartment and you can clearly see where the bomb went off on the kitchen table. May
these be a focus of continued fervent prayer for this messianic family and their precious
son and all of our brothers and sisters who suffer such persecution and anger against them.
Shoshana Montgomery
Messianic Market
www.messianicmarket.com

http://familybible.org/Israel/Conflict/MessianicTerror.htm
Last revised at
03:16 PM on
Thursday, 19 March 2009 |