RCA
and OU Deplore Call for Sharing Temple Mount
The
Rabbinical Council
of America and the Union of
Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America today denounced the
statement carried in the New York Times by Jewish leaders stating
that there is no religious reason to require exclusive Jewish
sovereignty over the Temple Mount.
In light of the sensitive diplomatic and security situations
in which Israel finds itself, the suggestion of shared sovereignty
is an anathema. The
statement cites a passage from the Prophet Isaiah that refers to the
Temple Mount, that My house shall be called the House of Prayer
for all nations to support the idea that the Temple Mount in
Jerusalem can be shared by Jews and Muslims.
This passage, in context, clearly states that it is the
Jewish Temple that is to be open to all to worship G-d. When King
Solomon said that also the gentile may pray in the Temple, it
is the Jewish Temple that was built on the Temple Mount to which he
was referring, not to a temple shared with any other faith.
Regarding
the implication that shrines of other faiths are threatened or that
access to holy places by all faiths has not been provided adequately
under Israeli sovereignty, it must be stressed that the only time
during the past 2000 years that the religious practices and
traditions of every faith community with interests in Jerusalem have
been respected and protected there has been since Israel liberated
the Old City in 1967. It
is only under Israeli rule that members of all other religions have
enjoyed full access to their shrines, a right that Israelis of all
faiths were brutally denied between 1948 and 1967. This equal access
has even been true of the Temple Mount, where Islamic shrines were
built on Judaisms most sacred site.
In
light of the events of the past ten weeks, beginning with the
Palestinian Authoritys orchestrated attacks on Jewish worshippers
at the Western Wall on Erev Rosh Hashana, it is quite evident that
the Muslim authorities have no desire to grant freedom of access to
Jewish worshippers. Any
calls to share the Temple Mount not only fly in the face of
Jewish tradition, they also endanger freedom of access to holy
places for all.
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