Any attempt to build a synagogue on Jerusalem's Temple Mount would
immediate plunge Israel into horrible bloodbath, warned Tuesday MK
Ibrahim Sarsur, head of the southern wing of the Islamic Movement.
"Muslims and Arabs will not stand idly by while representatives of
Satan on earth such as MK Uri Ariel and his lunatic friends from the
Yesha Rabbinic Council try to launch their insane plots," said Sarsur.
"We will resort to violence if need be, which I believe is legitimate
under such circumstances."
Sarsur was reacting to an announcement by Ariel (National
Union-National Religious Party) Tuesday that he intended to revive an
old idea to build a synagogue on the Temple Mount and reverse a cabinet
decision that prohibits Jewish prayer on the mount.
Ariel stressed in his announcement that his proposal would maintain the
status quo and would not infringe Muslims' right to full access to the
Al Aqsa Mosque, which is situated on the ruins of the destroyed Second
Temple.
"Muslims now have the opportunity to prove they are tolerant enough to
accommodate faiths that different from their own," said Ariel.
"[Building this synagogue] will rectify an historic injustice, much
more than the re-interment of [Theodore] Herzl's children in Israel.
Since the Temple's destruction and the consequent loss of independence,
exile and oppression, Jews' presence on the Temple Mount has clear
symbolism."
But Sarsur said that the very building of the synagogue was a gross
violation of the status quo and tantamount to a call to war.
"I want to believe that the government and the sane Israeli voice will
not allow fundamentalists and self-haters to plunge the entire area
into a horrible bloodbath," added Sarsur, who heads the more moderate
southern branch of the Islamic Movement, which decided in 1996 to run
for parliamentary representation.
Ariel, chairman of the National Union faction, said it was abnormal
that the most holy Jewish site in the world was off limits to Jews as a
place of religious worship.
In his press announcement on the synagogue initiative Ariel said that
the planned house of worship would be built in an area on the Temple
Mount that did not require prior immersion in a ritual bath [mikveh]
like other places on the mount.
However, since the exact measurements of the Temple are unknown all
Orthodox Jews immerse as an added precaution before entering all parts
of the mount.
Entering prohibited sections of the mount when impure carry severe
religious sanctions. According to Jewish law, some parts of the Temple,
such as the holy of holies, are completely forbidden at all times since
today all Jews are impure from coming into contact either directly or
indirectly (by entering a hospital for instance) with the dead.
Rabbis are split over the issue of building a synagogue on the Temple
Mount. Former Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu proposed building one after
the Six Days' War when all of Jerusalem came under Israeli control.
Eliyahu hoped that by building a synagogue, clear borders would be set
between permitted and prohibited parts of the mount.
However, the Chief Rabbinate ruled in the 70's that it was forbidden to
enter any part of the mount.
Followers of Rabbi Avraham Yitzhak Kook, such as Rabbi Shlomo Aviner,
oppose the idea.
They a ruling by Kook from the 1920's when he was Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi
of Palestine that rejected Rabbi Haim Hirshenson's suggestion to build
a synagogue on the mount. Hirshenson, author of a collection of
halachic ruling called Malki B'kodesh, hoped that such a synagogue
would unite the diverse groups within the Jewish people.
But, according to Aviner, Kook made a clear distinction between the
Land of Israel and the Temple Mount.
"Rabbi Kook taught that Israel must be physically built by the Jewish
people, while the Temple Mount would be rebuilt by God - whatever that
means - when the Jewish people were ready."
Aviner said that improving ourselves and our society must precede the
building of the Temple.
"By building a just society we bring nearer the building of the
Temple," said Aviner.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Rabbis split on Temple Mount synagogue plan
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)