Camie Davis
Did you hear about the Imam on the Temple Mount,
Ismat Al-Hammouri, who recently called for the destruction of America? Yawn. No
big deal. Just another day in the life of the religion of peace. Or
maybe you heard about Jerusalem’s most senior Muslim cleric, Mufti of
Jerusalem Mohammed Hussein, who instigated chairs being thrown at Jews on the
Temple Mount? At least that incident got the attention of the U.S.
State Department. They quickly jumped into action and told Israel to
“calm down” after Israel detained and questioned the Mufti. After
all, when the Arabs’ modus operandi is throwing firebombs and
rocks at Jews, what’s a few chairs?
Speaking of firebombs, did you hear about the Arabs
who threw firebombs at the Israeli police on the Temple Mount? No,
that probably didn’t make the evening news either. The good news is
that at least the Arab women who congregate on the Temple Mount have decided to
show a bit of decorum. Instead of throwing chairs or firebombs, they
have recently started throwing insults at the Jews on the Temple Mount. I
know, I know, stunning revelations for those who believe in the Obama induced
fairytale known as the “Peaceful Religion of Islam.”
But for realist like you and me, the violence
perpetrated by Arabs against Jews on the Temple Mount is not a big surprise. Luckily,
the Israeli government has faced the Arab instigated violence on the Temple
Mount head on . . . by preventing Jews, especially religious-looking Jews, from
ascending the Temple Mount. Appeasement and illogic have always gone
hand-in-hand.
To the growing frustration of many Israeli Jews,
the Israeli government continues to deal with Arabs who hate and want to hurt
Jews by appeasing them. Part of the appeasement involves giving the
Arabs just what they want – very little Jewish presence on the Temple Mount. After
all, no Jews on the Temple Mount corroborates well with the Arab narrative that
there is no Jewish history connected to the Mount.
Thankfully, not everyone in the Israeli government
is riding the appeasement train. There’s a newly elected Knesset
Member on the scene, Moshe Feiglin. He’s very conservative. Instead
of speaking like a politician, he speaks forthrightly and with common sense. He
does not accept, nor defend the status quo. And he is
anti-establishment. In other words, he is the antithesis to Israel’s
current appeasing government.
Because of the recent escalation of Arab instigated
violence on the Temple Mount and continued discrimination against Jews
ascending the Mount, there have been several heated discussions in the Knesset
regarding those issues. According to the Jerusalem Post, MK
Ibrahim Sarsour (United Arab List-Ta’al) asked why Jews cannot pray somewhere
other than at al-Aksa Mosque and stated, “Jews in Israel need to understand
that one day Jerusalem will return to Palestinians and Muslims. The solution is
to maintain the status quo.”
MK Feiglin responded to the propaganda by
saying, “The Wakf’s problem isn’t prayer, but the sovereign symbolism of
prayer. As far as they are concerned, [Jewish prayer] eats away at
the total Muslim rule over the Temple Mount.”
Feiglin has quickly become an outspoken proponent
for not only Jews retaining their right to ascend and pray on the Temple Mount,
but regaining Jewish sovereignty over the Mount. Feiglin recently
wrote on his Facebook page, “As a Knesset Member, I am obligated to actualize
Israel's sovereignty on the Temple Mount.”
Thankfully, Feiglin understands on a spiritual
level, which seems to be lacking in this day and age, and on a practical
level, the importance of the Temple Mount as he echoed the words of Israeli
poet Uri Tzvi Greenberg, "He who rules the Mount rules the Land." Don’t
think for one minute that the Arabs don’t know that. Arabs are
resorting to acts of violence to keeps Jews from ascending and claiming
sovereignty over the Mount. And the current Israeli government,
barring Feiglin and a few other like-minded MK’s, has played right into the
hands of the Arabs. The Arabs literally throw a fit or worse, harm
Jews, and the Jews get punished.
Part of this punishment includes Prime Minister
Netanyahu banning Feiglin from going on the Temple Mount. For ten
years, Feiglin has ascended the Mount on a regular monthly basis. After
he was recently elected to the Knesset, Feiglin went for his regular ascent. He
was stopped. On orders from Netanyahu, the police told him he could
no longer ascend. Although perhaps the most prominent Jewish person
to have his religious rights violated on the Mount, Feiglin is not the first. Sadly,
he is part of a long list of Jews whose own government has turned their backs
on them.
Three years ago, Rabbi Chaim Richman, of The Temple
Institute in Jerusalem, spoke on his radio show about the religious
discrimination against all non-Muslims on the Temple Mount. He asked his
listeners to participate in signing a petition against the discrimination to
send to Netanyahu. Rabbi Richman efforts got the attention of many
people, including an officer from the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv who indicated that
he was very interested in the work of the institute. After Rabbi Richman
was visited by the embassy official, he was also visited at night at his house
by Israel's National Security Agency, known as the ISA or Shin-Bet.
During the "visit" Rabbi Richman was told to desist from all his
efforts to influence the public or the government into taking action on issues
regarding the Temple Mount. His actions, he was told, were “damaging
the relationship with the United States, placing a stumbling block in the path
of the peace process, and inciting Arabs to violence.” He was then
threatened with being arrested. That's right. A rabbi, with a
petition, is indeed dangerous.
The founder of the Temple Institute, Rabbi Yisrael
Ariel, also experienced the discriminatory and illogic behavior of the Israeli
government. Muslim clerics in Israel are notorious for crying “wolf!”
(i.e. “Jew!”) causing the Israeli police to detain Jews. When a Jewish
holiday approaches, Islamic clerics work their followers into a frenzy over the
possibility of Jews visiting the Temple Mount. On one such occasion
before Jerusalem Day 2012, a leading Muslim cleric, Sheikh Yousef Ideis, made
such claims. He warned Arabs to "be alert for possible infiltration
of fanatic Jews" onto the Temple Mount. Instead of ignoring the
obviously staged incitement, the Israeli police validated the cleric’s claims,
and criminally investigated Rabbi Yisrael Ariel, a national hero, who had the audacity
to pray on the Temple Mount.
Rabbi Ariel fought in the 1967 Six Day War.
He was one of the famed Israeli paratroopers who took part in the
liberation of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. Marking the liberation of
the Mount, Rabbi Ariel along with other Jews, including Knesset members,
visited the Mount on Jerusalem Day. Surprisingly they were uninhibited by
both the Islamic Wakf officials and Israeli police for a few moments, so they
took advantage of the rare occasion and sang and prayed. Rabbi Ariel’s
prayer was captured on video and he can be heard saying, "I have waited
forty-five years to be able to say the Shehechianu (literally,
"He who has kept us alive,") here on the Temple Mount." He
then said a memorial prayer for his fallen comrades.
After Jerusalem Day, Rabbi Ariel tried to ascend
the Temple Mount again, but to his surprise was prohibited from doing so by the
Israeli police. He was informed that he was barred indefinitely from the
Mount and that he was under criminal investigation for actions, “that were not
in compliance with the law.” Which begs the question, which law?
Sharia law?
It is not against Israeli law for a Jew to pray or
show any type of reverence on the Temple Mount. But by acquiescing
to Arabs who get upset over a Jew moving his or her lips on the Temple Mount,
the Israeli police have made it common policy to escort Jews off the Mount, or
worse, arrest them if they appear to pray. For instance, Yosef
Hacohen, age 76, felt ill while touring the Temple Mount and needed some water.
Before drinking the water he said a blessing. Accorinding to Israel
National News, Hacohen’s actions, “aroused the ire of three Muslim Wakf
officials who had been following the 30-member group of which Hacohen
was a participant.” So naturally what did the Israeli police do?
They arrested Hacohen "on suspicion of reciting the Priestly
Blessing." And just this week, four Jewish teenage boys were arrested for what appeared to be bowing on the Temple Mount.
The Israeli police capitulate to the demands of the
Arabs to such an extent that on Holocaust Memorial day they warned Jewish
visitors on the Mount not to stand still while the memorial siren sounded
because it would “upset the Muslim Wakf officials.” The
sentiment, “Never again!” seems to have been lost on the police.
As Jews become aware of the discrimination on the
Temple Mount, many are beginning to protest. A few months ago, youth
group Bnei Akiva held a protest rally in Jerusalem against the
discrimination. When they applied for a permit they were told by
police that they could not hold banners with the famous words, "The Temple
Mount is in our hands," because it would be a provocation against Arabs.
Thankfully, MK's at the time, Aryeh Eldad and Michael Ben Ari, attended the
rally and held a sign with the forbidden words.
The most recent act of discrimination against Jews
was on Tisha B’Av, the day Jews mourn the destruction
of the First and Second Temple, yes the Temples the Arabs claim never existed. Hundreds
of Jews, including Deputy Foreign Minister Ze'ev Elkin and MK Shuli Mualem,
arrived early to ascend the Mount on such an auspicious day. However,
they were locked off the Mount. The gates were literally shut and
locked in their faces by order of Netanyahu, who some believe had taken his
orders from Jordanian officials, who administer the Wakf.
A contentious Knesset meeting was held the day
after the group was locked off of the Temple Mount. Feiglin, not
satisfied with the vagueness of Public Security Minister Yitzhak
Aharonovich’s “reasoning” for keeping Jews off the Temple Mount, demanded that
the minister admit that the actions were not security related but rather, the
Israeli government feared a confrontation with the Muslim Wakf, which
administers the Temple Mount, and with the Jordanian government.
With a growing number of Jews supporting him,
Feiglin continues to keep the sovereignty of the Temple Mount in public debate.
He boldly spoke of the white elephant that has been sitting on the Mount since
1967 when Moshe Dayan immediately gave administration of the Temple Mount back
to the Arab Wakf. He said, “Israel’s government did not want to liberate
Jerusalem. Or to be more specific, the Labor and National Religious Party
ministers did not want to liberate Jerusalem.”
Because of the Israeli government’s continual
policy of keeping the status quo intact, i.e. pandering to Arab demands,
Feiglin has acknowledged that it will take a grass-roots movement by Jews to
instigate change. As he said in a 2012 Temple Mount Awareness
Day interview, “Every Jewish step on the Temple Mount will bring back
sovereignty of the Temple Mount to the Jewish people.”
Even some members of the Israeli police have
expressed that an increased presence of Jews on the Temple Mount would create
drastic changes. At a conference in Jerusalem in 2009 regarding
Jewish ties to the Mount authorities said, “If only more Jews would visit the
Temple Mount on a regular basis, the entire balance of power would shift. There
would be a paradigm shift; the attitude of the government and the police would
be different towards the Jewish visitors on the Temple Mount. The Muslim terror
would be abated. Many Jewish people visiting the Temple Mount would be the cure
to the overall security situation.”
Perhaps the millions of Jews who visit the Kotel instead of the Temple Mount will take those words to heart soon. Yet, currently, because very few Jews try to exercise their rights on the Mount, it is convenient for the Israeli police to dismiss the lawful rights of Jews and instead indulge the demands of the Arabs. The adage "the squeaky wheel gets the grease" rings true. The Arabs currently make more noise than the Jews do over the Mount. Thankfully, that is beginning to change.
Perhaps the millions of Jews who visit the Kotel instead of the Temple Mount will take those words to heart soon. Yet, currently, because very few Jews try to exercise their rights on the Mount, it is convenient for the Israeli police to dismiss the lawful rights of Jews and instead indulge the demands of the Arabs. The adage "the squeaky wheel gets the grease" rings true. The Arabs currently make more noise than the Jews do over the Mount. Thankfully, that is beginning to change.
The novelist Anthony Trollope once said, “My belief is
that in life people will take you at your own reckoning.” If
only Israel would grasp that concept. When Israel takes its own
rights, sovereignty, and destiny seriously the world will follow suit.
As a government official, Feiglin has taken on the
mantle established by Temple Mount activists such as Rabbi Ariel and Rabbi
Richman, and is leading the way in taking the issue of Israel’s sovereignty
seriously as recently demonstrated by his words to the Arab MK’s. He
said, “When a guest is in my home, I give him respect. As long
as they understand who is the host, and who is the guest, everything is fine. We
have to speak the truth: this is our land, not yours. You are guests. The
minute that you are guests, you deserve every individual right. But when it
becomes a national struggle – you do not deserve anything.”
Feiglin also told the Arab MK’s recently, “I know
of no other minority in the entire human race that receives so much, and wails
so much.” Perhaps soon the rest of the Israeli government and the
Israeli police will share Feiglin’s sentiments and implement their rightful
position of sovereignty throughout the entire Land of Israel, but especially on
the Temple Mount, instead of giving in to the wails of the children of Ishmael.
After all, unless I'm mistaken, it is called the Land of Israel for a
reason, not the Land of Ishmael.