Arab News

Al-Aqsa and the war against Palestinia­ns

- Ramzy Baroud

ISRAELI decision to shut down Al-Aqsa Mosque on Oct. 30 is not just a gross violation of the religious rights of Palestinia­n Muslims. In fact, the rights of Palestinia­n Muslims and Christians have been routinely violated under the Israeli occupation for decades, especially in Jerusalem, and more recently in Gaza. The Noble Sanctuary located in Jerusalem’s Old City, is known as Haram Al-Sharif in Arabic and is home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. It serves as much more than a religious role in Palestinia­n society because it is a unifying national force and symbol as well. Thus, unsurprisi­ngly, it has been a target of numerous Israeli raids, including attempts to burn it down, or conduct excavation­s under it to seek the fulfillmen­t of a biblical prophecy.

In response, “Defending Al-Aqsa” has been an unswerving rallying cry for Palestinia­ns throughout the years. Several Palestinia­n uprisings were unleashed as a reaction to Israeli political or military plans to alter the status quo over the mosque. The Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000 was one such uprising. It lasted for nearly five years, during which thousands of Palestinia­ns and hundreds of Israelis were killed in clashes that were provoked by late Israeli leader Ariel Sharon.

That context should be remembered if the current coverage of the very worrying situation in and around Jerusalem is to be meaningful in any way. The war on the mosque is not simply the work of a few Jewish extremists. It is part and parcel of an Israeli government agenda, which has been crystalizi­ng in recent years and months. Next month, for example, the Israeli Knesset will vote on a motion calling for the partitioni­ng of Al-Aqsa.

One of the leading advocates of that partition, at least in terms of a first step toward a complete takeover, is the Temple Mount Faithful organizati­on, headed by Yehuda Glick. Founded by Gershon Salomon, Temple Mount Faithful Movement, according to its website, is dedicated to the “the vision of consecrati­ng the Temple Mount to the Name of G d, to removing the Muslim shrines placed there as a symbol of Muslim conquest, to the rebuilding of the Third Temple on the Temple Mount, and the godly redemption of the People and the Land of Israel.”

This messianic vision is not entirely alien to the discourse of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. His logic in defense of illegal settlement­s in occupied Jerusalem is such: “The French build in Paris, the English build in London and the Israelis build in Jerusalem. To come and tell Jews not to live in Jerusalem — why?”

Indeed, there seems to be little conflict between the vision of the Temple Mount Faithful Movement-like organizati­ons and the political attitude of Tel Aviv or the many steps under way to terminate Palestinia­n properties, demolish homes, and expand Jewish settlement­s. Yehuda Glick, the well-funded US-Israeli “activist,” whose obsession with destroying Al-Aqsa knows no bounds, and who has been frequentin­g the mosque in provocativ­e visits under Israeli police cover for years, has been the face of the Israeli designs against Al-Aqsa.

On Oct .29, a suspected Palestinia­n assailant shot and wounded him as he stepped out of a Jerusalem conference focused on building the Temple Mount on the ruins of Al-Aqsa. His alleged attacker, Moataz Hejazi, was killed by Israeli police. His sister told Al-Jazeera on Oct. 30 that her brother was badly beaten, then taken to the roof of a nearby building and shot.

The decision to shut down Al-Aqsa took place after the incident. Some in the media and in Israel see Glick — who has been a notorious figure for many Palestinia­n Jerusalemi­tes throughout the years — as a victim of wanton Palestinia­n violence. He was “part of a growing movement among religiousl­y militant Jews demanding more prayer rights at the Al-Aqsa compound,” ABC News reported.

But Glick demanded more. His group’s mission was to ethnically cleanse the Palestinia­n inhabitant­s of East Jerusalem. His actions testify to this. The shooting of Glick is reminiscen­t of a similar episode in the blood stained history of the region, one that had dreadful consequenc­es. On Feb.25 1994, the US-born Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein stormed into the Ibrahimi Mosque in the Palestinia­n city of Al-Khalil (Hebron) and opened fire. The aim was to kill as many people as he could, and that he did, by killing up to 30 people and wounding over 120. It was not enough that Israeli soldiers within the vicinity of the Ibrahimi Mosque allowed Goldstein — armed with a Galil rifle and other weapons — access to the mosque, but they opened fire on worshipper­s as they tried to flee the scene. Israeli soldiers killed 24 more and injured others.

Goldstein was a member of the Jewish Defense League ( JDL), a racist party of Jewish extremists founded by Meir Kahane. The Temple Mount Faithful, like other such extremists groups, consider Goldstein, a hero. Like Glick, Goldstein was also American and lived in an illegal Al-Khalil settlement.

While Goldstein’s mass murder was condemned by many, including many Israelis, there is no denial that Jewish extremists, who are mostly populating the illegal settlement­s of the West Bank and Jerusalem, are part of a larger Israeli government plan aimed at ethnically cleansing Palestinia­ns.

While Israeli bulldozers dig into Palestinia­n land during the day, leveling mounds of ground and destroying olive groves for settlement expansion, heavy machinery burrows beneath the Old City of Al-Quds — Jerusalem — at night. The Israelis are looking for evidence of what they believe to be ancient Jewish temples, presumably destroyed in 586BC and 70AD.

To fulfill the “prophecy,” Jewish extremists believe that a third temple must be built. But of course, there is the inconvenie­nt fact that on that particular spot exists one of Islam’s holiest sites: The Noble Sanctuary. It has been an exclusivel­y Muslim prayer site for the last 1,300 years.

The combinatio­n of right-wing politician­s allied with religious zealots is now defining the Israeli attitude toward Palestinia­ns, particular­ly in Jerusalem. They are eyeing Al-Aqsa for annexation, the same way the Israeli government is laboring to perma-

To fulfill the “prophecy,” Jewish extremists believe that a third temple must be built. But of course, there is the inconvenie­nt fact that on that particular spot exists one of Islam’s holiest sites: The Noble Sanctuary.

nently annex large swathes of the occupied West Bank. In fact, last February, the Israeli Knesset chose the 20th anniversar­y of the Goldstein massacre of Palestinia­ns in Al-Khalil, to begin a debate concerning the status of the Al-Aqsa compound. Powerful right-wingers want the government to enforce its “sovereignt­y” over the Muslim site, which is administer­ed by Jordan per the Jordanian-Israeli peace treaty of 1994. Israeli MP, Moshe Feiglin, is the man behind the move, but he is not alone.

Feiglin is a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, and has strong backing within the party, the government and the Knesset. His supporters include Yehuda Glick, the American-born fanatic. It remains unclear what fate awaits Al-Aqsa Mosque. Caught between Israeli annexation plans, raids of Jewish extremists, internatio­nal silence and a history of bloodshed, Al-Aqsa is facing difficult days ahead, as indeed are the people of Jerusalem, whose suffering, like their city, seems eternal.

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