by Hillel Fendel
(IsraelNN.com) A historic first: Last week, during a special visit to
the Temple Mount, the Priestly Blessing (Numbers 6:24-26) was recited
there, for arguably the first time since the 1st-century destruction.
The Blessing is recited daily in synagogues in Israel by descendants of
Aaron the Priest, and only on festivals in the Diaspora.
On the Temple Mount: During the Priestly Blessing, the "Kohanim" raise
their hands.
www.TempleInstitute.org
The special visit was held to commemorate the 842nd anniversary of
Maimonides's famous visit to the Temple Mount, Judaism's holiest site.
A group of some 25 Jews, organized by the Temple Institute in
Jerusalem, marked the special day with a commemorative visit. Giving
extra-special meaning to the occasion was a spontaneous Priestly
Blessing delivered to the group by Yehuda Katz, the lead singer of the
Reva L'Sheva band, and Eliezer Breuer, originally of the former Soviet
Union and now from Kiryat Arba.
Rabbi Chaim Richman, one of the organizers of the trip, said, "This was
probably the first time since the destruction of the Temple [1,928
years ago] that the Priestly Blessing was delivered on our holiest
site. At times like these, when there is talk of giving away our
precious places, and when despair is sometimes in the air, events of
this nature serve to remind us that G-d has not forgotten about us, and
that He still has big plans for both us and the Holy Temple - and that
the Temple will yet become the focal point of the world once again."
Another notable aspect of the visit was the welcoming attitude of the
police. "In an unusual departure from standard procedure," one
participant said, "we found that the police were particularly
sympathetic to our needs. At one point, when the Moslem Wakf guards
started yelling that we were praying, one of the policemen took our
side and even threatened to remove them if necessary."
Maimonides, also known as the Rambam, made his historic visit to the
Temple Mount on the sixth day of the month of MarCheshvan in the year
1166 (4926 in the Jewish calendar). Unanimously considered one of
Judaism's greatest figures, the Rambam wrote that he put himself in
danger to make a trip to Jerusalem, where he entered "the Large and
Holy House [the Temple Mount] and prayed." Three days later, he also
visited the Machpelah Cave in Hevron, and vowed to commemorate the
anniversaries of those days as his personal festivals for years to
come.
Thursday's visit to the Temple Mount www.TempleInstitute.org
Last week's visit was also led by Rabbis Yisrael Ariel and Yehuda
Glick. Rabbi Ariel is a former Yeshiva head, founder of the Temple
Institute, and one of the paratroopers who took part in the 1967
liberation of the Temple Mount. Rabbi Glick made news briefly over two
years ago when, as Director of the Absorption Ministry's Ashkelon
region, he became the first public official to resign in protest over
the plans to withdraw from and destroy Gush Katif.
Though the Chief Rabbinate disagrees, the Yesha Rabbis Council has
ruled that one who ascends and visits the Temple Mount while adhering
to three conditions - prior immersion in a mikveh; keeping the laws of
Awe of the Temple (no leather shoes, proper respect, etc.); and
knowledge of the precise permitted areas - is fulfilling a "great
mitzvah [Torah commandment]."
The group stands on a staircase built recently by the Muslim Waqf on
the Mount's southern end, leading to new mosques below. The Waqf does
not allow entry to non-Muslims.
www.TempleInstitute.org
To arrange a trip to the Temple Mount in accordance with the above
requirements of Jewish law,
"The more Jews who visit this holy site," Rabbi Richman told Arutz-7,
"the more cooperative the police are with us and the more respectful
they are of our needs - as some police officers have indicated to me.
And the more we encourage Jews with stories like what happened last
week, the more they will come."
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Priestly Blessing on Temple Mount
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