Palestinians make astonishing claim,
deny they'll help restore burned tomb
By Aaron Klein
Building at Joseph's Tomb site after Palestinian Authority took control
in 2000 .
In the wake of an attempt by Palestinians to burn down Joseph's Tomb –
Judaism's third holiest site – Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas' Fatah faction issued a statement denying it will help restore
the shrine, referring to both the shrine and the biblical patriarch as
"Muslim."
"Pay no attention to the rumors that we will work with Israel to
restore the burial site of the holy Muslim Joseph," said the statement,
issued from Nablus, the biblical city of Shechem. "We are going to
guard this holy Muslim site."
Joseph's Tomb is the believed burial place of the son of Jacob who was
sold by his brothers into slavery and later became viceroy of Egypt.
Palestinian security officials in Nablus said Monday they were called
to the tomb to find 16 burning tires inside the sacred structure. A
Palestinian police official who inspected the site told WND there was
some fire damage to the tomb.
He said the Palestinian Authority, fearing embarrassment, immediately
formed a joint committee from the PA's Force 17, Preventative Security
Services and Palestinian intelligence, to find out who was behind the
fire.
The move comes after Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced last week he
would ask Israel's Defense Ministry to work with the PA to reconstruct
and restore the tomb, parts of which were destroyed in 2000 by
Palestinians, including known PA security officers.
Under the 1993 Oslo Accords, which granted nearby strategic territory
to the Palestinians, Joseph's Tomb was supposed to be accessible to
Jews and Christians. But following repeated attacks against Jewish
worshippers at the holy site by gunmen associated with then-Palestinian
Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat's militias, then-Prime
Minister Ehud Barak in October 2000 ordered an Israeli unilateral
retreat from the area.
Within less than an hour of the Israeli retreat, Palestinian rioters
overtook Joseph's Tomb and reportedly began to ransack the site.
Palestinian mobs reportedly tore apart books, destroying prayer stands
and grinding out stone carvings in the Tomb's interior. A Muslim flag
was hoisted over the tomb.
Israel first gained control of Nablus and the neighboring site of
Joseph's Tomb in the 1967 Six-Day War. The Oslo Accords signed by
Arafat and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin called for the area surrounding
the tomb site to be placed under Palestinian jurisdiction but allowed
for continued Jewish visits to the site and the construction of an
Israeli military outpost at the tomb to ensure secure Jewish access.
Following the transfer of control of Nablus and the general area
encompassing the tomb to the Palestinians in the early 1990s, there
were a series of outbreaks of violence in which Arab rioters and gunmen
from Arafat's Fatah militias shot at Jewish worshipers and the tomb's
military outpost.
Six Israeli soldiers were killed, and many others, including yeshiva
students, were wounded in September 1996 when Palestinian rioters and
Fatah gunmen attempted to over take the tomb. Eventually, Israeli
soldiers regained control of the site.
Gravestone at traditional burial site for biblical patriarch Joseph
after it was ransacked by Palestinian mobs
The Palestinians continued to attack Joseph's Tomb with regular
shootings and the lobbing of firebombs and Molotov cocktails. Security
for Jews at the site increasingly became more difficult to maintain.
Rumors circulated in 2000 that Barak would evacuate the Israeli
military outpost and give the tomb to Arafat as a "peacemaking gesture."
In early 2000, the Israeli army began denying Jewish visits to the tomb
on certain days due to prospects of Arab violence. Following
U.S.-mediated peace talks at Camp David in September 2000, Arafat
returned to the West Bank and initiated his intifada. During one bloody
week in October 2000, Fatah gunmen attacked the tomb repeatedly,
killing two and injuring dozens, prompting Barak to order a complete
evacuation of Judaism's third holiest site Oct. 6.
Original
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Biblical hero Joseph,'was really a Muslim'
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