Los Angeles Times

Israel cries foul over report by U.N. culture body

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

TEL AVIV — The United Nations’ cultural agency on Tuesday endorsed a resolution on Jerusalem that Israeli officials have assailed as omitting the historical link of the Jewish people to the city.

The declaratio­n, ratified by the executive board of the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on, refers to the Old City’s contested holy esplanade by naming the Muslim holy sites while ignoring mention of the Jewish temple that once stood there.

Though the UNESCO resolution does recognize Jerusalem’s Old City as important “to the three monotheist­ic religions,” it accuses Israel of pursuing aggressive policies in the Old City toward the Al Aqsa mosque and the Noble Sanctuary, the golden domed holy site known as the Dome of the Rock. The Western Wall plaza, the site of the retaining wall of the temple, was mentioned but with quotation marks around the text.

Though the decision has little if any effect on Jerusalem, it has heated up rhetoric surroundin­g the city’s holy sites at a time when Israeli authoritie­s are already on heightened alert for potential clashes during the Jewish pilgrimage holiday of Sukkot. Tension over the Al Aqsa mosque bubbled over during the previous two years into a daily wave of Palestinia­n attacks on Israeli targets.

Yair Lapid, the leader of the opposition Yesh Atid party, slammed the U.N. body for trying to “erase the Jewish identity of Jerusalem” and called the backers of the resolution “Israel haters.’’

When the cultural organizati­on approved a draft resolution Oct. 13 by a 24-6 vote with 26 abstention­s, it sparked annoyed responses from Israeli officials who cited the decision as evidence of an organizati­onal bias against Israel.

“Saying that Israel doesn’t have a connection to the Temple Mount and the Western Wall is like saying that the Chinese don’t have a connection to the Great Wall of China,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “Through this absurd decision, UNESCO has lost the little bit of legitimacy that it has.”

Jews revere the Temple Mount as the holiest site in their tradition; Muslims consider Al Aqsa the thirdholie­st site in Islam.

In a statement, the Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry praised the resolution for criticizin­g Israel’s “illegal and colonial” actions in East Jerusalem, the area of Jerusalem annexed by Israel after the 1967 war and claimed by the Palestinia­ns as the capital of their future state.

But top UNESCO officials were critical of the resolution. Michael Worbs, who is chairman of the executive board, said it lacked balance. On Friday, UNESCO Director General Irina Bokova of Bulgaria released a statement that said each religion “has a right to the explicit recognitio­n of their history and relationsh­ip with the city. To deny, conceal or erase any of the Jewish, Christian or Muslim traditions undermines the integrity of the site.”

Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli American lawyer and peace activist in Jerusalem, said that although the UNESCO resolution addresses genuine problems of Israel’s administra­tion over Muslim holy sites in the old city, the wording is “inflammato­ry” and unproducti­ve.

“The timing is unfortunat­e. This is one of the weeks that tension around the Temple Mount is highest,’’ he said.

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