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IDF Under Fire After Troops Caught Destroying Statue Of Jesus With Sledgehammer

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by blueapples
Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - 11:30

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The construction of the fallacious concept of Judeo-Christianity has come to serve as the ideological foundation of the Zionist subversion of Christendom. By eroding the fundamental tenets distinguishing the Abrahamic faiths, which divided Christianity from Judaism for thousands of years, Israel has been able to align Western nations with its geopolitical goals in a manner that has virtually turned them into vassal states. While the Zionist World Order continues to propagate the term as if it were evidence of the inextricable ties between the two religions and the cultures that manifest from them, no more than a cursory examination of how Christians are treated in Israel is needed to deconstruct the misguided concept of Judeo-Christianity that the Western world has fallen under the spell of.

From a rise in hate crimes against Christians in Israel reaching historic highs to the cultural acceptance of Jews spitting on Christians being promoted by religious and political leaders in the Jewish State, the picturesque ideal of Judeo-Christianity comes in stark juxtaposition to how Christianity is actually viewed by Jews in the Holy Land. Proof of the fallacy of the construct of Judeo-Christianity has arisen once again following the Israel Defense Forces ("IDF") confirming the authenticity of a photo showing its soldiers destroying a statue of Jesus Christ with a sledgehammer.

The destruction of the statue took place in the Maronite Christian village of Debel, which is roughly 54 miles to the southeast of Beirut and situated just north of the border between Lebanon and Israel. Since the onset of the war Israel began waging against Iran in March, Debel has come under heavy fire after a second front in was created against Lebanon when the IDF resumed attacks against Hezbollah. The demographics of the village are almost entirely Christian, with 99.5% of registered voters adhering to the faith, over 92% of whom are Maronite Catholics. Following the onset of IDF attacks into Lebanon, the Vatican coordinated a convoy to deliver over 40 tons of aid into Debel but was unable to to carry out the humanitarian mission because of what the Lebanese Maronite Church described as security concerns about the fortified presence of the Israeli military in the area.


After hours of circulating across social media, where the initial post of the act of anti-Christian vandalism in the village gained more than 5 million views, the skepticism that met the outrage of the image of an Israeli soldier destroying the statue of Christ was erased when the IDF confirmed its authenticity. IDF officials verified that the soldier captured in the photo was stationed in southern Lebanon during Israel's latest military offensive against the country. Those same officials also stated that an investigation into the act of anti-Christian violence would be conducted by the IDF's Northern Command. “The IDF views the incident with great severity and emphasizes that the soldier’s conduct is wholly inconsistent with the values expected of its troops,” a statement from the Israeli military said. In addition to pledging to take disciplinary action against the troops involved in the act, the Northern Command also stated it would assist the Christian community in southern Lebanon with restoring the statue.

Following the publication of the photo, Palestinian members of the Knesset amplified the post in an effort to shed light on the anti-Christian sentiment that has become accepted as a normal part of Israeli culture. Ahmad Tibi, one such member of the Knesset, illustrated the parallels between the destruction of the statue of Christ at the hands of the IDF and the lack of accountability the Israeli military has faced following the bombing of mosques and churches in the Gaza Strip. Tibi also brought attention to the practice across Israel of spitting on Christians, an act that has become commonplace and even celebrated by hard-lined Zionists, as evidence of a malignant cultural trajectory that has led to the normalization of attacks on Christians by Jews.

Jerusalem has become the epicenter where that rise in targeted attacks against Christian holy sites, clergy, and adherents has unfolded following the return of Benjamin Netanyahu to the office of the Prime Minister of Israel in December 2022. His re-election, achieved by forming a coalition government between his party, Likud, and far-right and ultra-Orthodox parties, ushered in the most ultra-Zionist government in the country's history and, in doing so, created a cultural climate emboldening overt acts of Jewish religious extremism in Israel without fear of consequence.

A chronology of the rise in anti-Christian violence by Israelis demonstrates how the destruction of the statue of Jesus Christ by IDF soldiers in southern Lebanon is by no means an isolated incident. In February 2023, another statue of Jesus was vandalized at the Church of the Condemnation and Imposition of the Cross, a holy site where Christians believe Christ first took up the cross after being flogged and sentenced to death by the Roman governor of Judaea Pontius Pilate. The statue at the church was found to have been vandalized by an American Jewish tourist. This act of vandalism was one of many targeted attacks against Christians that increased in the months following Netanyahu's re-election. These attacks included the desecration of Christian graves at an Anglican cemetery on Mount Zion, located near the site of the Last Supper, the assault of a priest in a church at the Tomb of the Virgin Mary, and soldiers from the IDF's Givati Brigade being arrested for spitting at an Armenian archbishop and other Christian pilgrims during a religious procession in the Old City of Jerusalem.

Following the attacks of October 7th and subsequent wars in Gaza and against Iran waged by the Netanyahu regime, Jewish extremism has been fomented even further across Israel. A 2024 report from the Rossing Center for Education and Dialogue documented at least 111 incidences of crimes targeting Christians in Israel, an increase from the 94 such cases it documented in its 2023 report. The center's 2025 findings illustrated another annual increase, with 155 incidences of attacks targeting Christians being documented in its report for the year. These cases included 61 physical attacks, 52 attacks on church properties, 28 cases of targeted harassment, and 14 incidences of defacement of public signage.

The Religious Freedom Data Center ("RFDC"), an organization tracking attacks against Christians across Israel and East Jerusalem, published similar findings to the Rossing Center's annual report for 2025. In its own annual report, the RFDC recorded 181 cases of targeted attacks against Christians in 2025. Of those 181 cases, 109 were of Christians being spit on, with 32 incidents of verbal abuse, 22 of vandalism, and 9 of physical violence. The RFDC report's findings concluded that 80 percent of the attacks occurred in Jerusalem.

The 2025 annual report issued by the Rossing Center closely examined the rise in support for Jews spitting on Christians in particular. In a September 2025 survey conducted by the center, it found that 3.7% of Jews in Israel support those who spit on Christians. 2.5% of the respondents to the survey admitted they would spit on Christians. Orthodox Jews were the largest demographic of respondents to the survey in support of spitting on Christians, with 19% condoning it and 12% admitting they would do it themselves. The rise in support for this act of targeted violence against Christians was most evident from the demographic of Israeli Jews aged 18 to 24 who responded to the survey. In that group, 12% said they both supported the practice and would spit on Christians themselves. “These findings reflect the reality on the ground, where a higher prevalence of spitting is evident among young people. In fact, all attackers responsible for incidents tracked during the reporting period and in previous years are Jewish,” the Rossing Center's 2025 report stated.

While the practice of Jews spitting on Christians has been condemned by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and has even led to arrests, other members of his government have justified this type of attack against Christians. Following the arrest of five Orthodox Jews for spitting on Christians in the Old City of Jerusalem on October 4th, 2023, during a parade for the festival of Sukkot, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir defended the practice. “I still think spitting at Christians is not a criminal case. I think we need to act on it through instruction and education. Not everything justifies an arrest," Ben-Gvir stated. Before entering politics, Ben-Gvir justified spitting on Christians as "an ancient Jewish custom." This position has been explained by other Jewish extremists as being part of the Aleinu Prayer, demonstrating the rejection of idolatry. Elisha Yered, a far-right Jewish settler activist, responded to the acts of spitting on Christians that led to those October 2023 arrests by echoing the sentiment that the practice was part of Jewish tradition.

Remarks from the likes of high-ranking officials in the Netanyahu government such as Ben-Gvir highlight the incongruity between the public-facing statements it has made against Jewish attacks on Christians and the prevailing attitudes of its members. This contradiction conveys the hypocrisy that religious freedom groups like the Rossing Center and the RFDC believe demonstrates the absence of the will of the Israeli government to act against the rise of anti-Christian violence. The destruction of the statue of Jesus Christ by IDF troops in southern Lebanon demonstrates how attacks against Christians by Jews have effectively become sanctioned by Israeli institutions.

The rise in Jewish extremism inspired by the return to power of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has simultaneously undermined his leadership, as it has also served as a catalyst for the decline in support for Israel across the world. That decline in popular support has been accelerated by the visibility of targeted attacks against Christians in Israel. Those attacks have lifted the veil of Judeo-Christianity that Israel has hidden behind to frame itself as an ally of the West. Events that have exposed the innate contradiction of that false construct highlight the religious schism between the Jewish and Christian worlds that Zionist propaganda had previously been successful in obfuscating. While that has been made clear, what remains to be seen is whether or not that revelation will be enough to lead to confronting the political schism between the agenda of world governments aligned with the interests of Zionism instead of those of their own citizens.

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.
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