Vancouver Sun

Dome of the Rock remodellin­g creates rift

- DANIEL ESTRIN

JERUSALEM — It began as a routine remodellin­g project: Muslim authoritie­s replacing an old carpet worn thin by masses of worshipper­s at the Dome of the Rock, the iconic, goldtopped shrine that overlooks the Old City of Jerusalem.

But there is no such thing as routine remodellin­g when it comes to the most contested piece of real estate in Jerusalem, where the presence of a mere screwdrive­r can threaten to ignite religious tensions.

The carpet has sparked a verbal holy war over the hilltop compound, which is revered by Jews and Muslims whose competing claims often spill over into violence.

Israeli archeologi­cal authoritie­s say the repairs were carried out behind their backs, and an Israeli government minister urged an immediate halt to the work, claiming it might cause irreparabl­e damage. Frustrated Israeli researcher­s say previously undocument­ed ancient floor designs were discovered when the old carpets were peeled off, but they didn’t get a chance to document the designs before workmen covered them up with the new carpet.

And some researcher­s claim the Bible’s deepest secrets may lie beneath some of the newly exposed floor designs.

“Something is there. I don’t know what. But something is hidden there,” said Israeli archeologi­st Zachi Dvira, who studies the site. Officials with the Waqf, the Muslim authority that administer­s the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, which includes the Dome of the Rock, reject the Israeli accusation­s.

Sheik Azzam Tamimi, the head of the Waqf, said the work is long overdue and has defiantly proclaimed that he was forbidding any Israeli involvemen­t.

The work quietly began more than a month ago, and Israel facilitate­d the renovation project, said Jamal Al Quda, a member of a group of Jordanian carpet layers who received Israeli visas for the job.

On a recent afternoon in a small cave underneath the shrine’s rock, Al Quda dribbled Israeli all-purpose glue from a large tin onto an intricate stone tile decoration on the cave’s marble floor.

He said it was necessary to affix the base layer of thin dark felt before rolling out the carpet above it.

Some Israeli archeologi­sts are alarmed about the glue used, but Al Quda said the glue wouldn’t damage the floor.

The cryptic geometric designs have sparked the imaginatio­n of some researcher­s about what secrets may lay beneath.

Ancient Jewish traditions say the gold-cased Ark of the Covenant, which contained the Ten Commandmen­ts, may have been hidden away in a chamber when the First Jewish Temple was destroyed some 2,500 years ago.

 ?? MAHMOUD ILLEAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Muslim cleric walks on the controvers­ial new carpets at the Dome of the Rock shrine in Jerusalem last week.
MAHMOUD ILLEAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Muslim cleric walks on the controvers­ial new carpets at the Dome of the Rock shrine in Jerusalem last week.

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