SOLDIERS OF IDF VS ARAB TERRORISTS

SOLDIERS OF IDF VS ARAB TERRORISTS
Showing posts with label Arabs defiling Temple Mount. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arabs defiling Temple Mount. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2014

"Let the Jordan Run" Temple Mount Music Video #LetJewsPray



Our nation is praying for our boys, and, for the most exalted prayer, Jews assemble at the Kotel. But why settle for the outer wall? The most exalted prayer is not at the Kotel. The most exalted prayer is at the Temple Mount, our holiest site.

There is one problem. Jews are not allowed to pray there. The Wakf, which is the Muslim authority granted de facto control of the Temple Mount by the Israeli government since 1967, places strict restrictions on Jewish movement on the Temple Mount. Non-Muslims can ascend through only one gate at specific, inconvenient hours, while Muslims can ascend anytime from eleven gates; Jews are not allowed to even mouth words silently. Often, Jews are supervised by the Waqf, in tandem with Israeli police. Jewish visitors sometimes face intimidation in the form of Islamic chants intolerantly uttered by those for whom the mere presence of a Jew is an insult.

We had the Temple Mount in our hands, and we gave it away. Why can't Israelis and Jews worldwide claim what is most precious to them? Why can't we hold on to what it is we really want, in our hearts? Why all the self-denial? We tiptoe around world opinion, fear of terror, and a desire to be accommodating, giving up what is rightfully ours and giving in to bloodthirsty terrorists.

This attitude permeates Israeli culture, crippling our government's response to enemies it must crush, to enemies that want to repeat the Holocaust...the same people who mercilessly and joyously abducted our children.

"Let the Jordan Run," a parody of the beautiful, empowering anthem "Let the River Run" by legendary Carly Simon, calls for Jewish ascent to the Temple Mount, freedom of Jewish worship, and the end to the bullying of Jews. Get a little more background, here.

I felt very comforted as I made this video. The beautiful stars in the video are from "Students of the Mount," a movement of Israeli students, secular and religious, who just get it. They are our future leaders. The give me faith in our future.

Enjoy and share this video, and come run with us....Next time you're in Jerusalem, go to the Mount, where our prayers will really be answered, because that prayer will also be the ultimate act of defiance against the enemies of the Jews.
Yours,
Orit

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Elder Of Ziyon - Israel News: MK Moshe Feiglin's video tour of the Temple Mount

A few days ago, Israeli MK Moshe Feiglin went to the Temple Mount. (He claims Jewish law allows him to visit areas much closer to the actual Temple site than most religious Jews would be able to visit.)

The video has some fascinating scenes.


Keep in mind that Feiglin is denounced as a wild eyed Jewish fundamentalist fanatic by both the Arab and much of the Israeli media. This video does not exactly jive with that characterization.

(h/t Yerushalimey)

Thursday, February 27, 2014

A Rare Glimpse Inside the Domb of the Rock



The Temple Mount, the heart of the Israeli Arab conflict. Infolive.tv's cameras had the rare opporunity to film the interior of the Domb of the Rock mosque.Moslems throughout the world relate to the mosque as the symbol of the pan Islamic struggle against Israel. They deny any Jewish links to the site, but the archeological artifacts found there prove that it is the location on where the First and Second Temples were built.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Waqf Employee Talking to a Jew on Temple Mount Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/my-right-word/waqf-employee-talking-to-a-jew-on-temple-mount/2014/02/11/

waqf

Today on the Temple Mount: Jew:  Distance him from me.  Get him out of my face. Waqf employee:  Don’t touch anything!  Why are you touching the floor?   Jew (to policeman):  Distance him from me.  I request that you get him away from me. Waqfist:  Piece of garbage!  Liar!  (Pointing)  Why are you touching, you piece of garbage. One big zero.  Liar. Such pleasant people.



Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/my-right-word/waqf-employee-talking-to-a-jew-on-temple-mount/2014/02/11/

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

They Own It Let's face it, if we wanted to be on Temple Mount, we'd have been there.

They Own It

Photo Credit: Sliman Khader/FLASH90 Look at these thousands of Palestinians on their knees in Eid Al Adha prayers at the Temple Mount. They showed up there yesterday, like they owned it, and filled up the place, like they owned it, and prayed as they saw fit, like they owned it. It’s the holiest Jewish place on the planet. It’s where on Yom Kippur the high priest would pronounce God’s 72-letter name and we’d all fall on our hands and knees and yell out: Blessed be His Kingdom for eternity! But they, these multitudes of Arabs newly arrived from the peninsula after 699 CE, they behave like they own it. It’s maybe the third holiest Muslim site—some say it’s only the fifth or sixth. But they behave like they own it, and that’s what matters. Do you know why they behave like they own it? Because they own it. Do you know why they own it? Because we permitted it, we gave them the keys to our Father’s home and said, it’s yours, go have fun. And they’re having fun. Photo credit: Sliman Khader/FLASH90 It’s not the Arabs who keep us from taking back our mountain. It’s not the cops, it’s not the prime minister. It’s us. We don’t want to be back, praying on the mountain. We don’t want to be redeemed from the filth of the Diaspora. We like it down here, behind the supporting wall built by Herod in the back of the mountain, the service area, if you will. Did you see the pictures from Rav Ovadia’s funeral? Did you see hundreds of thousands of religious Jews filling up the streets? Do you think for a minute that if those multitudes decided to climb up to the Temple Mount and say Sh’ma Israel anyone could have stopped them? But they don’t want it. They are deathly afraid of a time when they would have to live according to the Torah in earnest. In justice. Without interest bearing loans. Without shticks. Like the woman told her husband who came home scared from shul after a drasha: God saved us from a lot of tzures, He’ll save us from Moshiach, too. There’s nothing keeping Moshiach away other than you and I. Pass it on.

Photo credit: Sliman Khader/FLASH90

Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/yoris-news-clips/they-own-it/2013/10/16/

Friday, October 11, 2013

ELDER OF ZIYON: Arab boys still desecrating Temple Mount with soccer games

Last month I noted that Israel's Public Security Minister had promised to have the police enforce a ban on Arabs playing soccer on Judaism's holiest site, the Temple Mount. I guess it was too good to be true, as this new short video shows:



Remember: Jews respectfully walking around their holiest place is "desecration" and "incitement." Arabs playing soccer, throwing stones and firebombs are fine. These are the rules that the world somehow swallows without question.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

ELDER OF ZIYON: Knesset committee to discuss Temple Mount today; Arabic websites freaking out

Here is the only place I could find this story in English, from The Algemeiner last Friday:
Before Jerusalem becomes the stage for the US-led peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority next Wednesday, an Israeli Knesset committee will meet on Sunday to tackle a question religious Jews have been asking since 1967, when Israel gained control of the Temple Mount and left authority over the religious hotspot in the hands of the Muslim Waqf Council.

The confounding issue of Israeli police not allowing Jews to pray on the Temple Mount is being taken up by Likud lawmaker Miri Regev’s Interior Committee, according to The Temple Institute’s Rabbi Chaim Richman, who led a prayer vigil at the Temple Mount as a peaceful protest this week.
While I see one Hebrew source saying that the Knesset will discuss opening the Mount to Jews during the Jewish holidays next month, even it doesn't mention anything about allowing Jews to pray there. Neither does the Knesset website, which similarly says that the mere half-hour discussion is about allowing Jews to visit during the High Holiday period but nothing explicitly about prayer. (It is followed by a half hour about security at Kotel HaKatan.)

However, this is huge news in the Arab media worldwide.

The headline in the Khaleej Times (UAE) is "'Knesset' discusses today to legitimize the desecration of Al Aqsa." The article says that the discussion will also include whether to open all of the gates to the Temple Mount to Jews, not only the Moroccan Gate.

I see over a dozen Arabic articles from Egypt to Moscow similarly warning that the Knesset may allow Jews to pray on their holiest site.


Today was the first time Jews were allowed to visit the Temple Mount since the middle of Ramadan about two weeks ago. Some of the visitors noticed some evidence that the Waqf had engaged in illegal demolitions with earth-moving equipment while Jews were barred from the area.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

MK Feiglin on the Destruction on Temple Mount



Moshe Feiglin in an emotionally charged description of the destruction taking place before our very eyes on the Temple Mount. (English Subtitles)
ח"כ פייגלין: מזה שנים רבות...אני עולה בקביעות לבקר ולסייר בהר הבית, מפני שהיא לב האומה וגם משום שאט אט הר הבית נשמט מידיו של עם ישראל, בפועל... גם עוברת וגם מועברת הריבונות בהר לידי זרים, לידי הוואקף המוסלמי במקרה הזה..... כשהתחלתי לעלות להר, שמתי לב שבקצהו הדרומי....מונח מערום אדיר מימדים של עצים מוזרים....בהמשך התברר לי שהוצאו ממסגד אל-אקצה ובבדיקה בוטנית התברר שמדובר בעצי ארז - חלק מבית המקדש הראשון מלפני 3,500 שנה....משך השנים הערמה פחתה. היום נשאר אולי שתי קורות..

Thursday, June 20, 2013

MY RIGHT WORD; The Temple Mount is "Islam's Third Holiest Shrine"

Really?

What Islamist religious rituals do you perceive here:













Jewish religious performance and customs are worse than this?

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Who is Really Desecrating Holy Sites? Palestinians claim that the mere presence of Jewish visitors is a 'desecration' of the holy site. By: Khaled Abu Toameh

Originally published at the Gatestone Institute.
Tensions have been mounting in recent months in Jerusalem over visits by Jews to the Temple Mount, or al-Haram al-Sharif [the Noble Sanctuary].
There is nothing new about Jews visiting the holy site: this has been taking place since 1967.
The visits, which are being held in coordination with the Israeli authorities, have triggered many confrontations between the Israeli police and Palestinian protesters.
Palestinians claim that the mere presence of Jewish visitors is a “desecration” of the holy site.
That is why some Palestinians have been resorting to violence to stop Jews from visiting the holy site.
The Palestinians say they are only trying to prevent Jews from destroying the mosques and rebuilding the Third Holy Temple.
But the truth is that the vast majority of Jews visiting the holy site are no different from other non-Muslim tourists who come to the area every day.
The Israeli authorities, in fact, require all visitors to the holy site to respect the feelings of Muslims by appearing in modest dress and without weapons.
Moreover, Jews visiting the compound are not allowed to bring sacred Jewish objects [prayer shawls, prayer books, etc].
Some Palestinians, however, are now exploiting these visits to incite the Arabs and Muslims against Israel.
Throwing stones, empty bottles, shoes and petrol bombs at the Jewish visitors and the policemen accompanying them has become almost a daily practice.
This, in addition to regular demonstrations that are staged at the holy site, where protesters chant slogans against Israel, Jews, the US and even some “moderate” Muslims.
The protests are primarily aimed at dragging Arabs and Muslims into war with Israel under the pretext that the Jews are plotting to destroy the Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. The ultimate goal is to turn the conflict into a religious war between Jews and Muslims.
Some Palestinians are hoping that the current protests against visits by Jews will spark another intifada [supposedly spontaneous uprising], like the one that erupted after former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s tour of the holy site in September 2000.
Then, the Palestinian Authority depicted Sharon’s visit as part of a Jewish conspiracy to destroy the mosques.
Those who are now using the visits by Jews to initiate violence and incite violence against Israel and others are hoping that Arab and Islamic armies will launch a war against Israel over its “desecration” of the holy site.
If anyone is desecrating the holy site, it is those who smuggle petrol bombs and stones into the compound to use them against visitors.
Originally published at the Gatestone Institute.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Who is Really Desecrating Holy Sites? by Khaled Abu Toameh

The ultimate goal is to turn the conflict into a religious war between Jews and Muslims. If anyone is desecrating the holy site, it is those who smuggle petrol bombs and stones into the compound to use them against visitors.
Tensions have been mounting in recent months in Jerusalem over visits by Jews to the Temple Mount, or al-Haram al-Sharif [the Noble Sanctuary].
There is nothing new about Jews visiting the holy site: this has been taking place since 1967.
The visits, which are being held in coordination with the Israeli authorities, have triggered many confrontations between the Israeli police and Palestinian protesters.
Palestinians claim that the mere presence of Jewish visitors is a "desecration" of the holy site.
That is why some Palestinians have been resorting to violence to stop Jews from visiting the holy site.
The Palestinians say they are only trying to prevent Jews from destroying the mosques and rebuilding the Third Holy Temple.
But the truth is that the vast majority of Jews visiting the holy site are no different from other non-Muslim tourists who come to the area every day.
The Israeli authorities, in fact, require all visitors to the holy site to respect the feelings of Muslims by appearing in modest dress and without weapons.
Moreover, Jews visiting the compound are not allowed to bring sacred Jewish objects [prayer shawls, prayer books, etc].
Some Palestinians, however, are now exploiting these visits to incite the Arabs and Muslims against Israel.
Throwing stones, empty bottles, shoes and petrol bombs at the Jewish visitors and the policemen accompanying them has become almost a daily practice.
This, in addition to regular demonstrations that are staged at the holy site, where protesters chant slogans against Israel, Jews, the US and even some "moderate" Muslims.
The protests are primarily aimed at dragging Arabs and Muslims into war with Israel under the pretext that the Jews are plotting to destroy the Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. The ultimate goal is to turn the conflict into a religious war between Jews and Muslims.
Some Palestinians are hoping that the current protests against visits by Jews will spark another intifada [supposedly spontaneous uprising], like the one that erupted after former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's tour of the holy site in September 2000.
Then, the Palestinian Authority depicted Sharon's visit as part of a Jewish conspiracy to destroy the mosques.
Those who are now using the visits by Jews to initiate violence and incite violence against Israel and others are hoping that Arab and Islamic armies will launch a war against Israel over its "desecration" of the holy site.
If anyone is desecrating the holy site, it is those who smuggle petrol bombs and stones into the compound to use them against visitors.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

TIMES OF ISRAEL: Did ancient beams discarded in Old City come from first and second temples?A collection of neglected wooden beams from the Al-Aqsa mosque offer a glimpse at ancient Jerusalem — and possibly at the biblical temples themselves


Under a tarp in one little-visited corner of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem lies a pile of rotting timber that would hardly catch a visitor’s eye.
In a padlocked storage space under a building in the settlement of Ofra, in the West Bank, lies an even larger pile of similar beams, some with rusted metal nails. Still more of the same beams can be found in one of the rooms of the Rockefeller Museum, outside Jerusalem’s Old City.
The beams offer a fascinating historical record of Jerusalem, including Byzantine cathedrals, early Muslim houses of prayer and, not inconceivably, the ancient temple complex itself. But though there are signs of renewed interest in them — including an article this month in Biblical Archaeology Review, a US publication — the several hundred existing beams have never been subjected to a comprehensive academic study, and many are in danger of decay and disintegration.Despite their unprepossessing appearance, the beams are unique and important to scholars because of their place of origin — the Al-Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount — and their age: Some were hewed from trees felled nearly 3,000 years ago.
The first iteration of Al-Aqsa was built in the late 600s CE on the Temple Mount, known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif, or the Noble Sanctuary. When the Muslim builders constructed the roof and supports they re-used timber that had been used in older structures nearby, common practice in the ancient world.
Those structures, scholars say, include not only materials dating to the time of the second Jewish temple in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago — but to the time of the first, as many as eight centuries before.
Beams (left) near the Golden Gate on the Temple Mount, this week (photo credit: Matti Friedman/Times of Israel)
Beams (left) near the Golden Gate on the Temple Mount, this week (photo credit: Matti Friedman/Times of Israel)
Many of the beams were removed from Al-Aqsa in the late 1930s, during a renovation that followed two earthquakes, and some were taken by British scholars to the Rockefeller Museum, where they remain. Other beams were removed in a later renovation of the structure’s dome under Jordanian rule in the 1960s.
In 1984, a scholar from Tel Aviv University, Nili Liphschitz, published a brief scientific paper looking at 140 of the beams in a Hebrew journal, Eretz Yisraelalong with two other scholars.
Liphschitz, a dendochronologist — a specialist in determining the age of trees — found that most of the beams she examined were of Turkish oak, with a smaller number of Lebanese cedars. There were also beams of cypress and several other types of wood.
By analyzing the tree rings and using carbon-14 dating, she found, unsurprisingly, that some of the wood was from the early Muslim period. One of the cedars, for example, was about 1,340 years old, or roughly the same age as Al-Aqsa. (The margin of error for the rather inexact dating process was 250 years.)
But others were older, dating to Byzantine times, and still others dated to Roman times, around the era of the Second Temple in Jerusalem.
Even more striking were her findings regarding one of the cypress beams. The age of the beam “was found to be 2,600 years,” she wrote, with a margin of error of 180 years. That placed it near 630 B.C.E. — around 50 years before the destruction of the First Temple.
And one of the oak beams was even older: 2,860 years. That meant the tree had been cut down around 880 B.C.E, early in the First Temple period.
The Temple Mount, with the black-domed Al-Aqsa mosque in the foreground (photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)
The Temple Mount, with the black-domed Al-Aqsa mosque in the foreground (photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)
There was no evidence connecting the beams to the temple itself, and in her paper Liphshitz seemed less interested in the possible human or biblical connections than in what the beams related about climate changes in the region. The truncated size of some of the tree rings, she wrote, seemed to indicate that a heavy drought had struck the region in the 5th century C.E.
Her paper drew little public notice, but a lecture she delivered the same year happened to be attended by two residents of Ofra, one of the first communities established in the West Bank by Gush Emunim, the religious settler movement. One of the men was Ze’ev Erlich, today a well-known tour guide and historian. The other was Yehuda Etzion, a prominent settler leader and a fervent believer in the return of Jewish ritual to the Temple Mount.
“Yehuda walked out after the lecture and said — we have to get those beams,” Erlich recalled.
After the renovation of the 1960s, it appeared, the Waqf — the Islamic body still in charge of the day-to-day running of the holy site — had sold some of the beams as scrap to an Armenian dealer, Mussa Baziyan, who had a junkyard north of Jerusalem. Baziyan was selling the wood to carpenters. As it happened, the Ofra settlers had done business with the dealer, buying second-hand bunk beds from an insane asylum for use in a new dormitory.
Etzion arranged for the local government in charge of Ofra to pay, and had trucks ferry the 100 or so remaining beams from Baziyan’s yard to the settlement.
Later that year, Etzion was arrested as part of a Jewish underground that had killed Palestinian seminary students, maimed mayors of West Bank cities, planned to bomb Arab buses in East Jerusalem — and was plotting to blow up the Islamic shrines of the Noble Sanctuary to pave the way for the reconstruction of a Jewish temple on the mount.
The beams lay outside for a time. Later, Erlich had them transferred to an indoor storage space, where he showed them to a reporter this week. Six beams which were found to have carved decorations are stored at an undisclosed location elsewhere in the settlement. Samples from 14 of the beams at Ofra have been taken to the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot for carbon dating, and Erlich is currently awaiting the results.
Some of the Al-Aqsa beams include inscriptions in Arabic and Greek. One beam at the Rockefeller Museum, for example, bears the Greek words, “In the time of the most holy archbishop and patriarch Peter and the most God-beloved this whole house of St. Thomas was erected.” The Peter in question was patriarch of Jerusalem in the mid-500s C.E., and the beam must have been used in a Byzantine church of the time.
In a 1997 paper, Liphschitz and a second scholar, Gideon Biger, suggested that some of the wood for Al-Aqsa may have come from the ruins of the grandiose Byzantine church known as the Nea, destroyed by earthquake or war in the early 600s. Other beams might have come from an earlier wooden mosque that a 7th-century pilgrim described existing on the Temple Mount before Al-Aqsa was constructed.
Beams in a storeroom at Ofra, this week (photo credit: Matti Friedman/Times of Israel)
Beams in a storeroom at Ofra, this week (photo credit: Matti Friedman/Times of Israel)
Those structures also almost certainly used wood from earlier buildings. The story of the beams — moving from conqueror to conqueror and from one religion to another through the centuries — is the story of Jerusalem.
“The cypress timber, dated to the 1st century BC, was probably taken from a more ancient monumental construction, built in or around Jerusalem in that era,” the two scholars wrote. That was the time of Herod’s massive rebuilding of the Second Temple complex.
In this month’s article in Biblical Archaeology Review, Israeli archaeologist Peretz Reuven singled out another beam, among those currently kept on the Temple Mount, in a pile next to the Golden Gate. It was cataloged by British Mandate officials in the 1930s as number 13.
Beam 13, he wrote, not only has Roman-style decorations but also signs of columns at intervals of 10.8 feet. “There was a similar interval between the columns in Herod’s Royal Stoa, a magnificent basilica that stood on the southern end of the Temple Mount,” Reuven noted. That is where Al-Aqsa now sits.
Might some of the beams lying around Jerusalem and elsewhere be from Herod’s temple complex? “I believe the answer is ‘yes,’” Reuven wrote. “Some of the beams may even be from the Temple.”
It is unusual for wood to survive for thousands of years, according to archaeologist Aren Maeir of Bar-Ilan University. At Maeir’s ongoing excavation of the three-millennia-old Philistine city of Gath, for example, only carbonized wood fragments survive.
But it is different if wood is kept indoors and cared for, he said.
“Usually, wood does not survive in Mediterranean climate — save when beams are used again and again and are curated long after they would have normally survived,” he said.
These pieces of wood, he said, “were probably used repeatedly over the ages, as large beams would be in many cases. So they are definitely archaeological materials, though of course whether they are from the temple is another question.”

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Women of the Mount


While Jewish women were demonstrating their ownership over the supporting wall of the western corner of our Holy Temple in Jerusalem, some Arab women were making a whole bunch of noise over the real thing. They chant slogans in solidarity with Al-Aqsa mosque following Friday prayers outside the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem’s Old City on May 10, 2013.
I say, let’s leave the Kotel to the WOW and the Haredim and go up to the mount, to the site of God’s real house.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Translation:



Does this [the Dome of the Rock] bother you 
that it's on the shirt?

Why doesn't it bother you that it's on the Temple Mount?

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Palestinians throw petrol bombs at cops from inside Temple Mount mosqueJerusalem police calls violence from within al-Aqsa ‘a new escalation’; nine officers and dozens of rioters lightly injured in riots


Israeli police entered Jerusalem’s Temple Mount compound on Friday to disperse hundreds of Palestinians who, for the second Friday in succession, emerged from prayers to throw rocks at security forces near the entrance to the compound.
Rioters also threw two molotov cocktails at officers from inside the al-Aqsa Mosque, in what Jerusalem police chief Yossi Pariente said was “a new level of escalation.” Both petrol bombs exploded, and one of them set fire to the foot of an Israeli policeman, who quickly put out the blaze without serious injury.
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said Palestinian worshipers rioted after Friday Muslim prayers at the holy site in the Old City. Four people were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the riots, the police said.
Rosenfeld said police dispersed the crowd with stun grenades.
Nine officers were slightly injured by masked Palestinians who threw rocks and two firebombs, but police did not enter the mosque itself. A photographer with the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth was also injured when a rock struck him in the face. 
Thirty-five Palestinians were lightly injured in the clashes, according to Palestinian sources.  
The contested site, where the al-Aqsa Mosque compound is built above the ruins of the biblical Jewish Temple, is one of the region’s most volatile.
Israeli steps to quell Palestinian disturbances there have led to full-blown riots in the past.
In past weeks, tempers have been flaring throughout the West Bank, with many clashes between Palestinians and Israeli security forces and swirling talk of a “Third Intifada,” or popular uprising, in the offing.
On Thursday, a Palestinian man, who was shot by IDF soldiers during clashes near Ramallah two weeks earlier, died in an Israeli hospital. Mohammed Asfour was laid to rest on Friday.
Several Palestinians and three Israeli journalists were injured at that demonstration, which took place at the Beitunia military checkpoint near Ofer Prison outside Ramallah.
Protesters were calling for the release of Palestinian inmates who were on a hunger strike.
A soldier was lightly injured Friday by a stone thrown by Palestinians during a riot near the West Bank settlement of Tekoa. The soldier was taken to Jerusalem’s Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem for treatment.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Storming Jews "performing Talmudic rituals" again! (video)

From Kuwait's Al Qabas:
Jewish extremists stormed the Al Aqsa Mosque in occupied Jerusalem this morning and performed Talmudic and Jewish rituals in the courtyards.

Local radio stations said that a number of Jewish extremists stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque under the protection and guard of the Israeli occupation forces to perform Talmudic ritual in patios at Sur Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Scuffles occurred between those stationed in Al-Aqsa Mosque and the occupation forces after the raid, injuring two of those stationed in the Mosque.
From the Al Aqsa Foundation site we can see a video of exactly how provocative those "Jewish extremists" are, as they peacefully walk around while being screamed at by a crowd of Muslim women. Those violent "Israeli occupation forces" are politely shooing them away from the peaceful Jews.

Porush Wants Feiglin Thrown out of Likud Over Har Habayit incident

Menachem Porush, former MK from Agudat Yisrael and father of current MK Meir Porush, famously took credit for persuading then Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan (after a delegation of rabbis led by Rav Yechezkal Abramsky met with Dayan) to give Har Habayit over to the Arabs after the Six Day War in which Israel had retaken the Old City and Har HaBayit..

Today MK Moshe Feiglin went up to Har HaBayit, as he does on the 19th of every Hebrew month, and attempted to use his immunity as MK to enter one of the mosques. This specific mosque has barred entry to non-Muslim visitors, but, according to the news reports, Feiglin insisted as MK to be granted entry. The Arabs got upset, made a bit deal, thigns got heated, and Feiglin was removed from Har Habayit.

MK Meir Porush (UTJ), son of Menachem Porush mentioned above, has now issued a call to Prime Minister Netanyahu to throw Feiglin out of the Likud due to his actions this morning. According to Porush, Feigline's attempt to go up to har Habayit was irresponsible and dangerous, and damages the sensitive relations with the Muslims, and it could lead to igniting a new intifada. Porush also called on Tzippi Livni and Yair Lapid as members of a future coalition to join him in this demand.
(source: Kikar)

While the call to Netanyahu said Feiglin's attempt to ascend Har Habayit was the problem, the truth is he ascends regularly and that is not what caused the kerfuffle. What caused it was the incident by the mosque. Further, the truth is, the incident was not even by a mosque. it was by the Dome of the Rock, which is not a mosque.
Feiglin said about this morning's incident:
In the inroduction to his book "Har Habayit", Rav Goren zt"l wrote that when there is the risk of foreign control over Mount Moriah, it is even permissible to enter the area of theazara, the courtyard that is normally forbidden to non-kohanim and to those impure, in order to not give them a foothold on the mount of God, for the ascent of Jews on the Mount in this situation is considered conquering and prevents foreigners from taking it over.
From the moment I became MK, a representative of the ruling Jewish authority in Eretz Yisrael - I have sensed that these words of Rav Goren obligate me to go into any and every area of Har Habayit. This morning I did so and I never had imagined how right I was. It seems the Dome of the Rock, which is not a mosque, has been closed for two years from Jews and tourists. "Only Muslims can enter" the Waqf representative said to me when I politely asked to enter. I explained to the police officer that by law nobody can prevent entry from an MK to any place, and definitely not to a place that citizens are allowed to enter. The response of the policeman was astounding - " the place belongs to the Muslim Waqf". Here it is - the heart and core of Eretz Yisrael, the place of the Holy of Holies, has been given practical control to the Muslims - simply because Jews have not walked there because of its holiness.
It is important to stress, I am not calling on Jews to start going to the place of the mikdash itself - there is a difference between me as MK and between the wider public, but what became clear this morning was a clear admission regarding the loss of Jewish authority on the Mountain, and it is incumbent upon all of us to be drafted with our feet to change the situation.
It is my intention to turn today to the Attorney General in order to clarify the status of authority on the Mount and the breaking of the law by the Israeli Police.
One can debate whether what Feiglin did was prudent or not. Personally, I think the only thing that will change the current situation is something that will shake things up. What Feiglin did is perhaps just what was needed to bring about the renewed discussion regarding control over Har Habayit, and what Jews should be allowed to do while on it.

Regarding Porush, well, perhaps the attitude about Har Habayit just runs in the family.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Former Labor MK Shocked to Discover Temple Mount Discrimination Former Labor MK Daniel Ben-Simon cut short a visit to the Temple Mount after he personally witnessed the discrimination of Jews.


Former Labor MK Daniel Ben-Simon cut short a visit to the Temple Mount on Sunday, after he personally witnessed the discrimination by Israeli police towards Jewish visitors to the holy site.
Speaking to Arutz Sheva about the experience on Monday, Ben-Simon said he was surprised, already at the start of his visit, to see that Jews are forced to wait in long, crowded lines to enter one of the holiest sites in the world.
Ben-Simon said that when he finally reached the end of the line-up after a long and unpleasant wait, he was told that the Temple Mount is closed due to what was described as “tension”. He later discovered that the source of this tension is a Quran that fell from the hands of a Muslim worshiper who came to the Temple Mount.
The Arab worshiper claimed that an Israeli police officer had deliberately dropped the book from her hand, but Ben-Simon expressed doubt at the truthfulness of the story and said it was unacceptable that the area was closed off to Jews because of such a minor event.
"Because of a fallen book they close the Temple Mount to hundreds of people who are waiting to get in?” he said. “The Minister of Internal Security must be summoned and asked about the reality in which the police are on high alert because of a fallen book. Who’s in charge here? All this is done without explanation.”
Later in the afternoon Ben-Simon, who was visiting the compound as part of researchhe is conducting for a book he’s planning to write, returned to the Temple Mount, getting in this time, and was shocked by what he discovered.
“I was surprised by the intensity of the tension. People looking at you from all sides, examining the movements of your lips, and heaven forbid if they move in what seems like a prayer," he said. "When I saw this I asked my companions to leave. This is not a visit. I do not feel comfortable when Waqf and police accompany each step I make. I cut the visit short and left within ten minutes.”
Ben-Simon admitted that despite having served as an MK, he was previously unaware that this reality is what Jews are always facing on the Temple Mount, and said that most Israeli MKs do not visit the site and are unaware of this absurd reality.
"The vast majority of those present were tourists. Israelis do not visit," he said, adding, "This is an unpleasant experience that I would not like to go through again. I expect to get a little respect in a place of prayer.”
The former parliamentarian said he finds it difficult to understand how Israel got to the current situation. He likened the corridor leading to the Temple Mount to a military facility where one cannot look left and right, fearing his looks may be interpreted incorrectly and cause rage.
Ben-Simon said the Israeli system should examine the situation at the Temple Mount, though he admitted it would be hard to change things in the current political reality.
At the same time, Ben-Simon said, it is “an impossible situation that anyone who comes to the Temple Mount is suspected of wanting to blow up the compound.” He added that delegations of Knesset members should be taken on a tour of the Temple Mount so they can see the situation firsthand and then closely examine appropriate ways to solve it.
"I did not know the problem existed when I was a Knesset member,” he admitted.
Israel liberated the Temple Mount during the 1967 Six Day War, leaving the Waqf in charge of the compound.
The Waqf, in return, has removed every sign of ancient Jewish presence at the Jewish holy site. At the entrance to the Temple Mount, a Waqf sign says, “The Al-Aqsa Mosque courtyard and everything in it is Islamic property.”
Israeli Police, in an attempt to appease the Waqf, discriminate against Jews. They limit the number of Jewish worshippers allowed on the Temple Mount at one time in order to prevent conflict with Muslim worshippers. They often close the Mount to Jews in response to Muslim riots, as Ben-Simon saw for himself on Sunday, despite evidence that Muslim riots have been planned in advance for the specific purpose of forcing Jews out.
Arabs continuously accuse Israel of "Judaizing" the Temple Mount, sometimes resorting to ridiculous propaganda such as accusing Israel of using chemicals to erode the foundations of the mosque in order to cause it to collapse.
At the same time the Waqf consistently destroys Jewish antiquities on the Temple Mount in a direct violation of a ruling by the Supreme Court.