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Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Israeli Wicked Plans:
The Lurking Danger Beneath
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 15, 2014
Something sinister is brewing around and below al-Aqsa Mosque in
occupied East Jerusalem, and it has the hallmark of a familiar Israeli
campaign to strip the Mosque of its Muslim Arab identity. This time around,
however, the stakes are much higher. The status of al-Aqsa mosque is
unparalleled within the context of Muslim heritage in Palestine itself. It
is also the third holiest Muslim shrine anywhere. But equally as important,
it is a symbol of faith, resistance and defiance. Its story of struggle and
perseverance goes hand in hand with the very modern Palestinian struggle for
rights, freedom and identity. Praying at al-Aqsa at times seems like an
impossible feat. Many Palestinians lost life or limbs simply trying to gain
access to the mosque. In a statement released on March 7, the
Palestinian Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs said Israeli forces
carried out 30 attacks against Al-Aqsa Mosque and other holy sites during
the month of February alone. Most of the attacks targeted Al-Aqsa itself.
While the recurring violations at Al-Aqsa were led by Jewish settlers,
according to the statement, they have done so under the watchful eye,
protection and support of the Israeli police and army. Most
alarming about these attacks is their political context, which indicates
that a great degree of coordination is underway between politicians,
security forces and Jewish settlers. In anticipation of a
Palestinian backlash, on March 04, an Israeli court sentenced Islamic leader
Shaikh Raed Salah to eight months in prison for ‘incitement’. The Sheikh is
the most outspoken Palestinian leader regarding the danger facing Al-Aqsa.
Why silence Shaik Salah now when the attacks against al-Aqsa are at an all
times high? It was on February 25, 1994, that US-born Jewish
extremist Baruch Goldstein stormed into the Ibrahimi Mosque in the
Palestinian city of al-Khalil (Hebron) and opened fire. The aim was to kill
as many Arabs as he could. At that moment, nearly 800 Muslim
worshipers were kneeling down during the dawn prayer in the holiest month of
the Muslim Calendar; Ramadan. He killed up to 30 people and wounded over
120. Exactly 20 years later, the Israeli army stormed al-Aqsa Mosque, the
third holiest Muslim site, and opened fire. The timing was no accident.
Like the rest of the West Bank, Al-Khalil is facing the dual challenge
of armed Jewish settlers and Israeli occupation soldiers; the latter
enforcing the military occupation, while providing further protection to the
settlers. The settlers, extremists from the illegal settlement of Kiryat
Arba, often attack Palestinian residents of the town with complete impunity.
Interestingly, many of Kiryat Arba settlers are Americans, as was Baruch
Goldstein. It was not enough that Israeli soldiers within the
vicinity of the Ibrahimi Mosque allowed Goldstein – armed with a Galil rifle
and other weapons - access to the mosque, but they opened fire on worshipers
as they tried to flee the scene. Israeli soldiers killed 24 more and injured
others. Goldstein, now a hero in the eyes of many in Israel, is often blamed
solely for the massacre in al-Khalil. But in fact, it was a mutual effort
between Goldstein and the Israeli army. This symbiotic
relationship between the army and settlers, which dates back to the early
days of the Israeli occupation of Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza in 1967,
continues. While Israeli bulldozers dig into Palestinian land
during the day, leveling mounds of ground and destroying olive groves for
settlement expansion, heavy machinery burrows beneath the Old City of
al-Quds, Jerusalem, at night. The Israelis are looking for evidence of what
they believe to be ancient Jewish temples, presumably destroyed in 586BC and
AD70. To fulfil “prophecy”, Jewish extremists believe that a third temple
must be built. But of course, there is the inconvenient fact that on that
particular spot exists one of Islam’s holiest sites: The Noble Sanctuary, or
al-Haram al-Sharif. It has been an exclusively Muslim prayer site for the
last 1,300 years. The Noble Sanctuary, located in Jerusalem’s Old
City, is the home of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. The site has
been under constant threat, attacks, acts of arson and military violence for
nearly five decades. The few Muslim clergy – belonging to the Islamic Trust
which manages the area, along with the custodianship of Jordan – are mindful
of the ever-lurking Israeli threat that oftentimes turns deadly. It was no
surprise that late Israeli leader Ariel Sharon chose that exact place to
carry out his proactive ‘tour’ of al-Aqsa compound in 2000. Many unarmed
Palestinians, mostly worshipers, died on that day. Thousands more were lost
in the following months and years as the entirety of the occupied
territories and Palestinian towns inside Israel exploded with unprecedented
fury. Sharon was later elected Prime Minister of Israel. That same
dangerous combination – rightwing politicians allied with religious zealots
– is at work once more. They are eyeing Al-Aqsa for annexation, the same way
the Israeli government is laboring to permanently annex large swathes of the
occupied West Bank, to preclude any future settlement with the Palestinian
Authority of Mahmoud Abbas. The Israeli Knesset (Parliament) chose
the 20th anniversary of the Goldstein massacre of Palestinians in al-Khalil
to begin a debate concerning the status of Al-Aqsa compound. Right-wingers –
which constitute the bulk in the government of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu – want the Israeli government to enforce its ‘sovereignty’ over
the Muslim site, which is administered by Jordan per the Jordanian-Israeli
peace treaty of 1994. Israeli MP Moshe Feiglin, is the man behind the move,
but he is not alone. Feiglin is a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, and has
strong backing within the party, the government and the Knesset. A
major backer of Feiglin’s initiative is Miri Regev, also a far-right Likud
member. Regev is demanding that the government establish separate prayer
times for both Jews and Muslims in Al-Aqsa Compound. The model she wishes to
duplicate is no other than the Ibrahimi Mosque. “We will reach a situation
where the Temple Mount will be like the Cave of the Patriarchs, days for
Jews and days for Muslims,” she said. Of course, Regev omitted the
fact that 20 years ago to the day, a Jewish extremist and Israeli troops
killed and wounded hundreds of Palestinians kneeling for prayer. On
the next day following the Israeli government debate, a thundering sound was
heard around 3 AM in the Wadi Hilweh neighborhood of Silwan, located south
of the Old City of Jerusalem. Residents heard the “sounds of heavy duty
machines digging under their houses throughout the night,” Ma’an reported.
Then, a large wall suddenly collapsed, while a few houses sustained damage.
The Israeli underground network of tunnels is growing, as some of these
tunnels connect Wadi Hilweh to the Western Wall to Al-Aqsa. While
the danger of Al-Aqsa Mosque collapsing is very real, it is a representation
of the mentality that rules Israel: one of annexation and military
occupation, with no regard whatsoever to Palestine’s holiest site, also
revered by over 1.6 billion Muslims around the world. - Ramzy
Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an
author and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. He is a PhD scholar at
University of Exeter, UK. His latest book is “My Father Was a Freedom
Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London).
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