|
The Jews of Israel are
currently locked into a conflict with their Palestinian Arab neighbors. While
the media bombards us with constant reports of violence in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, there is no doubt that the epicenter of the conflict lies in
Jerusalem and more specifically on the Temple Mount in the Old City.
Yasser Arafat constantly repeats that there can be no
peace without Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine and total Moslem sovereignty
over the Temple Mount. Indeed, the last Camp David Summit floundered over
Arafat's uncompromising position on the issue of controlling the site.
Israeli leaders, on the other hand, say that Jerusalem
will remain under Israeli sovereignty, even as Barak offered significant
autonomy over the Temple Mount and Palestinian Authority control over Arab
sections of Jerusalem.
What historical or religious claim do both sides make? Is
either party's claim for Jerusalem stronger, or is it merely a case of
"might makes right?"
The purpose of this article is not to prove or disprove
anyone's claim to Jerusalem, but rather to help clear up some of the fog
clouding this controversy and enable us to better understand both the Jewish and
Moslem connection to this holy site.
THE JEWISH SPIRITUAL CONNECTION TO JERUSALEM
To understand the Jewish connection to Jerusalem we must
begin with the Jewish Bible. From the Jewish perspective, the area of special
holiness is Mount Moriah, today known as the Temple Mount. This area is located
beneath the platform on which the Moslem Shrine, the Dome Of the Rock, now
stands.
In the Jewish Bible, Jerusalem has many names: Salem (Shalem),
Moriah, Jebuse (Yevuse), Jerusalem (Yerushalayim), and Zion (Tziyon).
The most common term for the city, Yerushalayim, is mentioned 349 times
in the Jewish Bible, while Tziyon is mentioned an additional 108 times.
The earliest mention of the site is Genesis 4:18, when
Abraham interacts with Malchizedek, King of Shalem. According to Jewish
tradition the story of the Binding of Isaac (Genesis 22:1-19) also takes place
in the "land of Moriah" on the site of the present-day Temple Mount.
Abraham chooses the site specifically because he sensed how God's presence is
strongly connected to this site.
In the Kabbalah, the Jewish metaphysical
tradition, the rock of Mount Moriah is known as the "Even Shtiyah"
-- the Drinking Stone. This is the spiritual center of the universe, the place
from where the world is spiritually "watered."
Later patriarchal stories in Genesis are also connected
with the site:
 |
When Isaac goes out into the fields to pray prior to meeting Rebecca for
the first time (Genesis 24:63-67), he is standing on Mount Moriah. |
 |
Jacob's dream of the ladder to heaven with the angels ascending and
descending (Genesis 27:10-22) takes place on this site. |
|

|
|
The
Temple Mount is the single holiest Jewish site, a connection
well-represented in contemporary Jewish practice. |

|
|

|
We see from here that for thousands of years, the Jewish
people have always associated Mount Moriah as the place where God's presence can
be felt more intensely than any other place on earth. That is why, for the
Jewish people, the Temple Mount is the single holiest place.
This connection is still very much alive and well in
contemporary Jewish practice:
 |
When religious Jews pray three times a day, they always turn toward
Jerusalem. (Someone praying in Jerusalem faces the direction of the Temple
Mount.) |
 |
Jerusalem is mentioned numerous times in Jewish daily prayers and in the
"Grace After Meals." |
 |
Jews close the Passover Seder with the words "Next Year in
Jerusalem." These same words are invoked to conclude the holiest day of
the Jewish year, Yom Kippur. |
 |
The Jewish national day of mourning, Tisha B'Av, commemorates the
destruction of the First and Second Temples. |
 |
During a Jewish wedding ceremony, the groom breaks a glass as a sign of
mourning to commemorate the destruction of the two Temples which stood on
Mount Moriah. The breaking of the glass is accompanied by the recitation of
part of Psalm 137: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand
forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the
roof of my mouth; if I do not set Jerusalem above my highest Joy." |
 |
Religious Jews often keep a small section of one wall in their house
unplastered and unpainted, as a sign of mourning for the destruction of the
Temple. |
THE JEWISH HISTORICAL CONNECTION TO JERUSALEM
The early history of Jerusalem is also rooted in the
Bible. In addition to the events already mentioned, the Book of Joshua (ch.
10)describes how Adoni-Tzedek, the Canaanite king of Jerusalem, wages war
against the Jews.
During the approximately 400-year period from the
entrance of the Jewish people into the land, through the period of the Judges,
Jerusalem remained a non-Jewish city. It was not until the reign of King David
(ca. 1,000 BCE) that Jerusalem was captured from the Canaanites (2-Samuel 5) and
converted into the political/spiritual capital of the Jewish people.
(Archaeologists agree that the original Canaanite city and the City of David was
located in what is now the Arab village of Silwan, a few meters south of the
"modern" walls of the Old City.)
|

|
|
King
David purchased the peak of Mount Moriah, as recorded in 2-Samuel
24:18-25. |

|
|

|
David purchased the peak of Mount Moriah (2-Samuel
24:18-25) as the site for the future Temple and gathered the necessary building
supplies. The Book of 1-Kings (ch. 6-8) describes in great detail how David's
son, King Solomon, built and dedicated the Temple: "And it came to pass
after the 408th year after the Children of Israel left Egypt, in the fourth year
of Solomon's reign over Israel... that he began to build the house of the
Lord" (1-Kings 6:1).
Solomon's Temple is also known as the first Beit
HaMikdash (the First Temple). While all archaeologists agree that it stood
on Mount Moriah, probably on the site of the present Gold Dome of the Rock, its
exact location is unknown.
Four hundred and ten years after its completion, it was
utterly destroyed by the Babylonians when they besieged Jerusalem and no trace
of it remains.
After the Babylonian destruction, most of the Jewish
population of Israel was forcibly exiled from the land. This forced exile on the
road to Babylon is mentioned in the famous verse from Psalm 137: "By the
rivers of Babylon, there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion."
Fifty years later, after Babylon was captured by Persia,
the Jews were allowed to return to Jerusalem. Under the leadership of Zerubavel
and Nechemiah, the Jews rebuilt both the Temple and walls around the city (Nechemia
4-6).
During both the First and Second Temple periods, the
Temple was the central focus of the Jewish world both in Israel and the diaspora.
Its upkeep was paid for by all Jews worldwide. The Kohanim (priests) and Levites
served in the Temple, and three times a year -- during the holidays of Passover,
Sukkot and Shavuot -- all Jews were commanded to come to Jerusalem and visit the
Temple.
This rebuilt temple is known as the Second Temple (Bayit
Sheni). It stood for 420 years on the same site as the First Temple, on
Mount Moriah. The Second Temple was remodeled several times, but reached its
most magnificent form during the reign of King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE). The
great Jewish historian, Josephus, who lived during the end of the Second Temple
period, gives detailed descriptions of both Herod's construction and the layout
of the Temple compound (see "Antiquities" ch. 15 and "Jewish
Wars" ch. 5).
The Second Temple period ended with the Roman destruction
of Jerusalem in 70 CE. It is possible that the Jews tried to rebuild the Temple
at later periods, but they were never successful, and for over 600 years the
site of the Temple Mount lay in ruins. The only remains are the massive
retaining walls that encompass Mount Moriah, built by Herod to support the
platform on which the Temple stood.
THE MODERN JEWISH CONNECTION TO JERUSALEM
Although the Temple hasn't stood for almost 2,000 years,
Jerusalem continues to be the focus of the Jewish world. The Temple may not be
there, but Jews believe that the intrinsic holiness of the site always remains.
Jewish tradition also maintains that in the End of Days, during the Messianic
Era, a third and final Temple will be built on Mount Moriah.
It is often erroneously stated that the holiest site in
the world to Jews is the Western Wall. This is incorrect. The holiest spot for
Jews is Mount Moriah itself, behind the Wall. The Western Wall is merely a small
section of Herod's massive retaining wall and has significance only as it
relates to the Temple Mount itself.
So why do Jews pray at the Wall? Since the destruction of
the Temple, the Sages decreed that due to the sanctity of the site, Jews (and
non-Jews) should not go up on the actual Temple Mount. Therefore, the Western
Wall became the site of prayer for Jews wishing to get as close as possible to
their holiest site, the Temple Mount. It earned the moniker "Wailing
Wall" because Jews coming to this site would shed tears over the loss of
the Holy Temple.
THE MOSLEM SPIRITUAL CONNECTION TO JERUSALEM
The Islamic connection to Jerusalem began much later in
history, during the 7th century CE. The central personality of Islam, Mohammed,
was born and raised in the area of present-day Saudi Arabia and founded Islam in
the early 7th century. (The first year of the Moslem calendar, or the Hajira,
corresponds to the year 622 CE of the Christian calendar.)
Scholars agree that Mohammed was influenced by Judaism
(and Christianity). This influence was significant enough that Mohammed's
original plan for the direction of prayer (Qibla) was also Jerusalem.
Mohammed later changed the direction of prayer to Mecca in Saudi Arabia -- a
place that was converted from a pagan pilgrimage site to the "eternal
city," and the center of the Moslem religion. (Moslems also placed Mecca as
the spot where Abraham nearly sacrificed Isaac's brother Ishmael.)
|

|
|
Mohammed
never made it to Jerusalem, and the word "Jerusalem" appears
nowhere in the Koran. |

|
|

|
After founding Islam and leading his Islamic armies to
victory over his pagan rivals, Mohammed died. Although Mohammed never made it to
Jerusalem with his conquering armies, his successor, the Caliph Omar, captured
Jerusalem from the Byzantines in 638. When Omar first visited the ruined Temple
mount, he deliberately prayed south of the ruins of the Temple, toward Mecca, so
that no one should think he was praying in the same direction as the Jews.
The holiest book of Islam is the Koran, which according
to Moslem tradition contains the teachings of Mohammed. Unlike the Jewish Bible
which contains hundreds of references to Jerusalem, the word
"Jerusalem" appears nowhere in the Koran. So what is the Islamic
spiritual connection to the site? To answer that question we must understand
more of early Islamic history.
THE MOSLEM HISTORICAL CONNECTION TO JERUSALEM
By the time the Omar arrived in Jerusalem in 638, the
Islamic direction of prayer was toward Mecca, and the two holiest sites, Mecca
and Medina were already well-established. Islam, which like Christianity has
many of its spiritual roots in Judaism recognized the Jewish connection to the
Temple Mount, and one early Islamic name for the Temple Mount was Bayt al-Maqewdis
-- literally "Holy Temple." The name used today, al-Quds, is
based on the Hebrew word for "holy." Moslems have also used the
term Sahyun or Sihyun, the Arabic form of "Zion."
Historians suggest several reasons for the construction
of Moslem holy sites on the Temple Mount. The establishment of the Umayyid
Islamic Dynasty in 658 corresponds to a period of instability in the Islamic
world, characterized by power struggles and assassinations. One of the Five
Pillars (commandments) of Islam is Hajj -- pilgrimage to the holiest Islamic
city, Mecca. In the late 7th century, the Damascus-based Umayyid Caliphate lost
control of Mecca. This need to diminish the importance of Mecca and create an
alternative Moslem holy site closer to Damascus may well have pushed the Umayyid
Caliph Abd al-Malik, in 688, to begin construction of the Dome of the Rock on
the former site of the Jewish Temple.
Another reason suggested by historians for a Moslem
presence in Jerusalem is that the Caliph wished to compete with the impressive
Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the traditional burial place of Jesus in
Jerusalem. It is interesting to note that the present dimensions of the Dome of
Rock are identical to those of the rotunda of the Holy Sepulcher.
Yet given that Jerusalem isn't mentioned in the Koran,
what is the uniquely Islamic connection to the site? The answer is found in the
17 Sura (chapter) of the Koran. This chapter recounts the story of a dream
Mohammed has where he takes a midnight ride (al-Isra) on his flying horse
al-Buraq, which had the face of a woman, the body of a horse and the tail
of Peacock. The narrative of the Koran in Sura 17 describes it as follows:
"Glory be to Him, who carried His servant by night from the Holy
Mosque (in Mecca) to the further mosque (al-masjid al-Aqsa), the precincts of
which we have blessed."
The actual location of al-Aqsa (the "further
mosque") in Mohammed's dream ride is never mentioned. Some early Moslems
understood al-Aqsa metaphorically, or as a place in heaven.
In the late 7th century, the Umayyids claimed that the
actual site of al-Aqsa was in fact the Temple Mount. Later the site of al-Aqsa
was restricted to the mosque area at the southern end of the Temple Mount (the
site of the current Al Aqsa Mosque). The original mosque, probably located on
the site where Omar first prayed when he arrived in Jerusalem in 638, was built
by the Umayyid Caliph al-Walid in the early 8th century. It was destroyed by
earthquakes several times and later rebuilt.
|

|
|
Islam
claims that the site of Mohammed's ascension to heaven was a rock atop
Mount Moriah. |

|
|

|
The narrative of the Koran then describes how Mohammed,
having arrived at al-Aqsa, then ascends to heaven (al-Mi'raj --
"the ascension") accompanied by the angel Gibril (Gabriel),
where he then traveled around the heavens and spoke with Allah and other
prophets. The Umayyids in Jerusalem claimed that the actual site of Mohammed's
ascension to heaven was the exposed piece of bedrock at the top of Mount Moriah.
Thus Caliph Abd-al-Malik's beautiful Dome of the Rock was built to commemorate
the location of this important event.
From 638 CE until 1917 (with the exception of the
Crusader occupation from 1099 to 1187), Jerusalem was controlled by various
Islamic dynasties based in Syria, Egypt and Turkey. While Jerusalem remained a
city of pilgrimage, none of these Islamic dynasties made Jerusalem their
capital. The only other people in the last 3,000 years to have Jerusalem as a
capital are the Crusaders who founded the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem from
1099-1187.
For most of this 1,300-year period, despite its status as
the third holiest Islamic city, Jerusalem remained a backwater, run-down town
under Islamic control. Exceptions were during both the Umayyid period (7th to
mid-8th century) and the Mamluk period (mid-13th to early-16th century), when
major Islamic building projects were carried out in the city.
MODERN REALITIES IN JERUSALEM
From 1918 through 1948, the Land of Israel was under the
control of the British who conquered it from the Ottoman Turks in World War One.
The State of Israel was established in 1948, when half of Jerusalem -- including
the entire Old City and Temple Mount, was under the control of the Kingdom of
Jordan.
During the Six Day War in 1967, Israel captured the Old
City and for the first time in over 2,000 years, the Temple Mount was back under
Jewish control.
It is worth noting that the inaugural PLO Covenant of
1964 does not mention Jerusalem. Only after the city fell back to Jewish control
did the updated PLO Covenant of 1968 mention Jerusalem by name.
|

|
|
Israel
handed over control of the site to the Wakf, the Moslem Religious
Trust. |

|
|

|
One might have expected that the Israelis would
immediately expel the Moslems and re-establish control of the single holiest
Jewish site. But in an act of what can only be described as unprecedented
tolerance, Israel handed over control of the site to the Wakf, the Moslem
Religious Trust.
Today, although Israel technically claims sovereignty
over the site, the defacto reality since 1967 has been that the Moslems have
control over the site, to the point where Jews are forbidden to pray on the
Temple Mount (but permitted to visit).
CONCLUSION
Within the Hebrew word Jerusalem is contained the word
for peace -- shalom. Jerusalem is often referred to as the City of Peace. It is
ironic that this city sits at the heart of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
There are no simple solutions to complex problems,
especially when religious beliefs and national identities are at stake. But only
through an objective understanding of the intricacies that surround the history
of Jerusalem, can we hope to arrive at a just and lasting solution.
SOURCES AND SUGGESTED READING:
Bahat, Dan. The Illustrated Atlas of Jerusalem.
New York: Simon & Shuster, 1990
Ben-Dov, Meir. In the Shadow of the Temple Mount - The
Discovery of Ancient Jerusalem. New York: Harper and Rowe, 1982
Gil, Moshe. A History of Palestine, 634-1099.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Mazar, Benjamin. The Mountain of the Lord - Excavating
in Jerusalem. Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Co., 1975.
Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome. The Holy Land - An Oxford
Archaeological Guide from Earliest Tines to 1700. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1998.
Prawer, J, and Ben-Shammai, H. The History of
Jerusalem - The Early Muslim Period 638-1099. New York: New York University
Press, 1996.
Shanks, Hershel. Jerusalem - An Archaeological
Biography. New York: Random House, 1995.
Rabbi Ken Spiro is originally from New Rochelle, NY. He graduated from
Vasser College with a BA in Russian Language and Literature and did graduate
studies at the Pushkin Institute in Moscow. He has Rabbinical ordination from
Yeshiva Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem and a Masters Degree in History from The
Vermont College of Norwich University. He lives in Jerusalem with his wife and
five children where he works as a senior lecturer and researcher on Aish HaTorah
outreach programs
|