Israel Takes a Stand Against
Persecution of Middle East Christians-1
A view of Jerusalem and the portion of the Temple Mount platform on
which the First and Second Temples were located. It is believed that the
Dome of the Rock is situated on the spot where the Holy of Holies stood.
Abbas
and Hamas Call to Ban Jews from Temple Mount
"This is what Isaiah son of Amoz saw
concerning Judah and Jerusalem: In the last days the mountain of the Lord’s
Temple will be established as the highest of the mountains; … Many peoples will
come and say, 'Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the Temple of
the God of Jacob.'" (Isaiah 2:1–3)
In
its latest bout of warmongering against Israel, Hamas launched a rally
in Gaza City on Friday shouting for the "defense" of the al-Aqsa
mosque on the Temple Mount, while Fatah's Mahmoud Abbas urged for a ban of Jews
from the holy mountain. "This is our sacred place, al-Aqsa is
ours, this Noble Sanctuary (the Temple Mount) is ours … they have no right to
go there and desecrate it," said Abbas of the Jews, stating
that Jews should be stopped from entering the Temple Mount "by any
means."
Palestinians burned
the Israeli flag on Friday in response to incitement
by Hamas and Mahmoud Abbas against a Jewish presence on the
Temple Mount.
At a conference on last Friday in Ramallah, Abbas
equated al-Aqsa with Jerusalem, asserting Palestinian claim over the city for his desired future
state of Palestine."Jerusalem is the jewel in the crown and it is the
eternal capital of the Palestinian state. Without it, there will not be a
state," he said. "It is important for the Palestinians to be
united in order to protect Jerusalem." On Saturday, Abbas called Jews
visiting the Mount a "herd of cattle." In response, Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman said that Abbas was trying to ignite a holy war. "Behind
the suit and the pleasantries aimed at the international community, he is
raising the level of incitement against Israel and the Jews and is calling for
a religious war," Lieberman said. "Abbas has
effectively joined the frontlines of extremist Islamist organizations, such as
the Islamic State and the Nusra Front, who sanctify religious war," he said.
Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas
Abbas'
comments came days after Jerusalem police forces encountered Arab youth on the
Mount. They had built barricades at the al-Aqsa mosque and slept overnight on
the Mount, ready to attack police and Jewish visitors with stones, fireworks
and Molotov cocktails the next day. (YNet) Prior to admitting the
day's first Jewish visitors for Sukkot, police cleared the barricade and locked
the mosque, shielding themselves from a heavy rain of fireworks and rocks being
launched over the barrier. "This is
organized thuggery, designed to turn the Temple Mount into the hottest
battleground between Israel and the Arab world, and to undermine
Israel's control of the holy city," writes David Weinberg of Israel
HaYom. "Unfortunately,
the Israel Police are under orders to avoid escalation almost at any cost; and
as such, have become serial capitulators to the Muslim
muggers and the many radical Islamic forces that are encouraging, funding
and defending the brutes on the Mount," he writes. In expectation that
Friday, the Muslim "day of rest," would be fraught with Muslim riots,
Jerusalem District Police Chief Yossi Pariente issued a 50-and-above age limit
for Muslim visitors on Thursday.
Tourists visit the
Temple Mount where the First and Second Temples
were located in Jerusalem. Currently, the Dome of the Rock occupies the
spot where the ancient Temples once stood.
Meanwhile, from Doha, Qatar, Hamas
leader Khaled Mashaal continued to incite Muslims in Israel to lay claim to the
site. "We
call on all our people inside the country to hurry up to al-Aqsa to defend
it," he said on Thursday. The Palestinians are working toward demanding that the United
Nations Security Council remove Israel's rights in the disputed territories of
Judea, Samaria, Gaza and Jerusalem. The goal is to "evict"
Israel by November 2016—the same month the US elects its next president. The
Agence France-Presse printed a draft of this resolution in early October, which
requires the "full withdrawal of Israel, the occupying power, from all of
the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem, as
rapidly as possible and to be fully completed within a specified time frame,
not to exceed November 2016." On last Friday, Riyad Mansour, the
Palestinian UN ambassador, said his government wants the 15-member UN Security
Council to vote on the resolution before the end of the year. On Thursday,
Palestinian officials said they already have seven confirmed "yes"
votes of the nine they need. Failing success at the Security Council, Mansour
said Palestinians would join additional treaties and conventions and the
International Criminal Court (ICC) to "create legal facts on the ground
that we exist as a state."
Jewish people gather
for prayer at the Western (Wailing) Wall, which is
located in the Old City of Jerusalem at the foot of the western side of
the
Temple Mount, also
called Mount Moriah.
Mount Moriah was the place on which King
Solomon erected God's first "permanent" dwelling place on Earth. Later, it was
expanded by King Herod before it was destroyed by the Romans in AD 70 under
Emperor Titus. At present, the Mount houses the black-capped al-Aqsa mosque and
the more prominent, golden Dome of the Rock, which Muslims claim is the site
from which Muhammad rode to Heaven on a winged donkey. In 1967, Israel
liberated the Mount, which had been under Jordanian rule since the war for
Israel's independence ended in 1949. While Israel reclaimed legal sovereignty
over the site, it granted administrative privileges to the Islamic Waqf. In
January of this year, the Waqf ignored the overwhelming and undeniable historic
evidence of the Jewish presence on the Temple Mount and printed a pamphlet
claiming that there was no Jewish connection to the Mount and that King Solomon
was a Muslim.
While non-Muslims can visit the Temple Mount,
they are forbidden to pray
there. Non-Muslims
gain access to the Mount via one gate, compared
to multiple gates for Muslim visitors.