"The
Temple Mount is open to everyone and if Hamas thinks that if it
threatens me, it will deter me, let them understand that times have
changed."
"No Israeli government that I'm a member of is going to bow to a
despicable and murderous terror organization... and if Hamas thinks that
I'll be deterred by its threats, it needs to accept that times have
changed and that there's a government in Jerusalem."
"The Temple Mount is open to everyone."
National Security Minister Ben Gvir, Israel
|
Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) visiting the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, Jan. 3, 2023. Source: Facebook. |
Israel
has a newly-elected government. Yet another newly-elected government.
Headed, once again by its most seasoned politician, a man who has
withstood much in the greater interests of promoting Israel's security.
This is the third government he will have led. A former military man, he
knows that Israel must appear to its neighbours as an invincible,
formidable adversary that will respond with the ferocity of existential
imperative to their violent incursions in efforts to destroy the tiny
geographic parcel representing a tiny proportion of its historical
ancestral landmass.
Never again will
Jews be trapped by a hostile world without a country, a slice of
geography of their own, with their own effective, self-protective
military and intelligence services to warn beforehand and to secure its
presence against malign usurpation. An ancient people, an ancient land,
an ancient culture and its religious devotion to a singular spiritual
guide that inspired two other great religions that took from Judaism
their guiding principles and values.
Both
of which, Christianity and Islam, felt entitled to pick from the sacred
scriptures of Judaism, what suited them from their perspectives and in
the process spite the source, insisting theirs are the final words of
the unifying divinity of humanity. Both institutions reverenced the
monotheistic revelation of the Supreme Spirit, while denying the
authentic originality of its introduction. And both institutions have
traditionally persecuted the original source.
Jews
refuse to remain a pathetic, friendless ethnic group imploring others
to come to their defense, knowing from past experience there will be no
saving response. Israel is the response of the global Jewish community
to a world indifferent to the plight of Jews when the most barbaric
extermination of human life was methodically undertaken to destroy
Jewish life, culture, society, memory. A government best positioned to
do just that is now viewed by the international community as
'right-wing', an epithet of rejection.
No
other national government on the planet is held to the standards that
Israel's is. In the General Assembly of the United Nations, the general
consensus is that Israel although a legally constituted country returned
to claim its ancestral geography, is itself illegal, because the land
is contested by those calling themselves indigenous, and taking the
identification of nomenclature along with attestations of originality
attached to Judaism's ancient cultural, religious, political and
socially significant sites.
An
Israeli Minister, duly democratically elected, is held to have
transgressed by setting foot on Judaism's most sacred site located in
the ancient capital of Judean ancestry, within a legally constituted
nation. Another religion, one that based itself on Judaism, claims
virtual ownership rights to the site located in the Jewish capital. A
capital that a group of migrated Arabs who settled from Egypt, Jordan
and Syria to call themselves Palestinians, taking that designation too
from the original Palestinian Jews as their own.
When
Islam was brought to Bedouin Arabs in the 7th Century, its founder
Mohammad's armies invaded the Arab Peninsula to force disparate
populations of pagans to accept Islam. In the process, in Medina, he
approached three Jewish tribes indigenous to the ancient city; the
Banu Nadir, the Banu Qainuqa, and the Banu Qurayza. All three refused
Mohammad's overtures to reject Judaism and adopt Islam. These indigenous
Jewish tribes were punished with violent conflict that massacred their
members and exiled others.
Now
it is seen as outrageous that Jews, living in Israel, and Jews visiting
from abroad, might wish to approach their own most sacred religious
site, to pray there. They cannot. When Israel signed a peace treaty with
Jordan it allowed Jordan to oversee the contested site, the Temple
Mount, where the (two iterations) Temple of Solomon once stood,
and which Islam names the Noble Sanctuary. There, Muslims may pray,
under the Jordan Waqf, but not Jews. It is a dictate of Islam and of the
surrounding Muslim-Arab nations.
Arab
Muslims in the Middle East, are affronted and infuriated that Jews
might mount their most sacred site, the third-most-sacred site in Islam.
And because a Jew on a mission to approach his own religion's original
sacred site while stating the obvious, that in Israel which is twenty
percent non-Jewish, with citizens who are Christian, Muslim, Druze, and
other religions no one is constrained from free movement of religious
devotion. Why then, should Jews be refused entry to their very own
religious site in its own capital, in its own country?
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