Anti-Jewish Discrimination at Temple Mount
Discrimination against religious Jews who wish to visit the Temple Mount continues. A group was turned away today, as non-Jews passed freely through.
February 26, 2006
A small group of Jewish tourists from Los
Angeles attempted to ascend to Judaism's holiest site this morning, after
immersing in a mikveh and taking the other Halakhic precautions. They were
stopped at the entrance, however, and told they could not enter because they did
not have identification.
"The most frustrating part," said their tour guide, Yossi Maimon,
"was that lots of other tourists, clearly not Jewish, were allowed up
without even being checked." Maimon said he asked the local police
commander about the discrimination against Jews, and was told that this is in
fact the official policy.
Long-time Holy Temple activists Rabbi Yosef Elboim of Jerusalem and Yehuda
Etzion of Ofrah said that this policy is a long-running one.
"Not only are there different rules for religious Jews and others,"
Rabbi Elboim told Arutz-7, "but the police treat the religious Jews with
tremendous disrespect. Recently, a large group of students from the Birkat Moshe
yeshiva in Maaleh Adumim wished to ascend [to the holy site], and the police
took aside the Rosh Yeshiva [dean], who is not a young man, and totally checked
every part of him. Would they ever treat a priest or a kadi that way?"
"A sheikh can call
for world-wide Moslem rule from the Temple Mount," Rabbi Elboim
continued, "but if a Jew whispers Yibaneh HaMikdash (a prayer that
the Holy Temple should be rebuilt), they immediately take him away for
questioning and restrict him from visiting the site again. Where are we
living?!"
At present, religious Jews are permitted to enter the Temple Mount, if they are
approved, from 7:30 to 10:00 Am, and for another hour beginning at 12:30.
Etzion said that a special booth has been set up at the Mugrahbim Gate entrance
to the Temple Mount, adjacent to the prayer area of the Western Wall, for the
purpose of checking religious Jews. "The way they check Jews, under their
yarmulke and all over the body, for any type of prayer, is simply
humiliating," he said.
Etzion said that he himself is now less involved in direct Temple Mount issues,
and is rather dedicating his efforts towards the publication of a six-volume
work of the writings of Shabtai Ben-Dov.
Rabbi Elboim said that the deterioration in Jewish rights at the Temple Mount
has taken place since Gideon Ezra assumed the post of Minister of Public
Security. Ezra can be faxed at (+972-2) 530-8039, and emailed at
SOURCE: Arutz Sheva