The Jewish Chronicle

Israeli minister links Italy earthquake to Unesco vote

- BYANSHELPF­EFFER TEMPLE PROOF — AND FORGERIES?

THE ISRAELI Foreign Ministry has been forced to disown remarks by Deputy Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Ayoub Kara, who said the recent earthquake­s in Italy were divine retributio­n for Rome’s failure to back Israel during last week’s anti-Israel vote at Unesco.

The comments came in a statement from Mr Kara’s office after the minister metPopeFra­ncisinRome.Theysparke­d outrage across Italy and, awkwardly for the Israeli government, came ahead of a visit by Italian President Sergio Mattarella to Israel this week.

Two months ago, an earthquake in central Italy killed over 300 people and last week there were at least three strong tremors.

In his statement, Mr Kara said: “I am certain that the earthquake happened because of Unesco’s decision that the pope didn’t really love.”

The Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem said that the statement was inappropri­ate and in no way reflected the strong ties between Israel and Italy. The ministry said Mr Kara had apologised for the remarks.

Italy was one of the countries to abstain during the vote on a Unesco resolution that did not recognise the Jewish connection to Temple Mount. The Israeli government was disappoint­ed Italy had not voted against the vote, especially as ties with Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s government have been close of late.

A 1,000-year-old early Muslim inscriptio­n found on a mosque in a village near Hebron has been held up as further proof of Jewish ties to the Temple Mount and Jerusalem.

Israeli archaeolog­ists Assaf Avraham and Perez Reuven said the inscriptio­n, which refers to the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount as “Bait al-Maqdess”, was an Arabised version of the Hebrew words for the Temple, Beit Hamikdash.

Meanwhile, doubt has been cast on the authentici­ty of a 7th century papyrus, unveiled by the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority last week, that has been said to contain the earliest Hebrew mention of Jerusalem outside the Bible.

Radiocarbo­n dating verified the age of the papyrus. But Aren Maier, an archaeolog­y professor from Bar-Ilan University, said carbon-14 dating was insufficie­nt in view of “well-known cases in which writing was forged on an ancient platform. It’s very possible that only the papyrus itself is ancient”.

Mr Kara, a member of the Druze community, is Likud’s only non-Jewish MK and has made outspoken statements in the past, including accusing Israel of forsaking the Druze minority in Syria.

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