WGNNews.org Posted 10:45 A.M. February 19,
2004Note from Kenneth Martin: There's a time to obey
God and a time not to obey God. The time not to obey God is when
your ready to go to Hell.
from the August 02, 2001 edition
A Muslim-Jewish clash at a holy site on Sunday left 50 people
injured.
JERUSALEM The cheerful man
with the white ranger hat seems an unlikely person to enflame
passions throughout the Mideast.
But upon close inspection, Gershon Salomon's hat has a map
that pictures Syria, Jordan, and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula as
parts of Israel. And what is even more explosive, the tiny
movement he leads has embarked on a series of initiatives aimed
at dismantling the 1,300-year-old mosques in al-Haram al-Sharif,
the Noble Sanctuary that is Islam's third holiest shrine. In
their place, they intend to build a third Jewish Temple, on the
spot where Jewish temples were destroyed in 586 BC and AD 70 by
the Babylonians and the Romans, respectively.
None of this is new to the Israeli or Palestinian
decisionmakers who have grappled with the deadly antics of Mr.
Salomon's Temple Mount and Land of Israel Faithful in recent
years. And yet on Sunday, when Salomon organized his latest
symbolic action to rebuild the Temple, each side simply played
out parts in a blood-stained march of folly.
By foreseeing but not averting a clash, Israel and the
Palestinians underscored the extent to which the violence
between them is now on a type of automatic pilot, resulting as
much from force of habit as active malice. That augurs poorly
for prospects of an end any time soon to the 10 months of
fighting.
Indeed, the situation deteriorated further on Tuesday,
when Israeli army helicopters fired missiles into a Hamas office
in the West Bank town of Nablus. Two small children, two Hamas
leaders, and four others were killed in the deadliest incident
since a US-backed cease-fire went into effect June 13
Salomon certainly plans to be back with his several-dozen
followers. It is all part of a mission he has taken upon himself
since Israel occupied the Temple Mount along with the rest of
East Jerusalem during the 1967 Middle East war.
He is convinced that the Muslims there are occupiers,
having come "only" in the 7th century, and that the mosques
"must be dismantled and rebuilt in Mecca, where they belong."
He heaps scorn upon Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
for adhering to the Israeli policy since 1967 that gives Muslim
clerics autonomy on the mount, and restricts Jewish prayer to
the nearby Western Wall.
The powder-keg potential of those seeking to build a new
temple stems not from their numbers, although in recent years
the idea of Jewish prayer on the mount has gained wider support
among Jewish settlers. It emanates from the symbolic resonance
of al-Haram al-Sharif/the Temple Mount, which touches on the
core identities of Palestinians and Israelis. Israel occupied
the compound during the 1967 war and annexed it to its capital,
Jerusalem, amid a wave of nationalist intoxication that the
modern state of Israel had been reunited with its ancient
spiritual capital, the very sources of Jewish nationhood. For
Palestinians, meanwhile, the Haram "represents the history,
civilization, and destiny of Palestinians as Muslims," in the
words of Khalil Shikaki, director of the Palestinian Center for
Policy and Survey Research.
After decades of mounting distrust, starting with a fire
set in the Haram's Aksa mosque by an Australian tourist in 1968,
most Palestinians have become convinced that Israel intends to
destroy Aksa and its neighbor, the Dome of the Rock, and build a
temple in their place, according to Mr. Shikaki. That is why any
perceived threat to the area resonates widely, as was the case
when then-Likud-party-leader Sharon visited the mount last
September, a move that was followed the next day by the Israeli
security forces' fatal shooting of seven Palestinian
demonstrators at the site. The violence that ensued continues to
this day.
As far back as October 1990, Salomon announced that he was
bringing a cornerstone of the temple to the mount, just as he
planned to do on Sunday. On the earlier occasion, as on Sunday,
police prevented Salomon from coming to the mount, and he was
forced to conduct a ceremony nearby. But the mere rumor of
activity by Salomon brought thousands of Muslims to the Haram
and touched off stonethrowing against worshippers at the Western
Wall. About 20 Palestinians were killed by Israeli police.
Gissin argues that the reason there are clashes at the
site is Arab incitement against Israel. Israel, he says, has no
intention of harming any of the mosques, but the Palestinians
propagate that idea to gain wider support in the Arab world
Hatem Abdel-Kader, a Palestinian legislator, says the
violence could have been averted had Israel barred the faithful
from holding any gathering. Gissin terms the faithful a "fringe"
group, but says they have a democratic right to present their
views as long as they don't engage in incitement.
In Gorenberg's view, the mount will continue to be
susceptible to eruptions until Israel and the Palestinians have
a serious dialogue about it. He concedes that now is not an
optimal time for that, but adds: "There has to be a negotiated
agreement on the status of this spot. It is difficult, but the
consequences of not having one are clear."