
It is ludicrous to view metal detectors as a threat to freedom of Islamic worship, or a change to the status quo at the holy site. Nevertheless, Israel's defense establishment recommended removing the metal detectors. Why? Right now, Israel's enemies across the Middle East are busy fighting one another. Israel remains outside of the combat arenas. In the wider perspective, Israel's interest is not to enter into a new conflict. Israel has no interest in uniting the Islamic world against it. (Ynet) Continue to pray for the peace of Jerusalem. [Comment]
More than 1,000 Jews ascended the Temple Mount on Tues. 1 August 217, during the annual Tisha B’Av fast, commemorating the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple nearly 2,000 years ago. Unlike Muslim visitors to the Mount, who are permitted to pray at the holy site and are not required to undergo any security check to enter, the Jewish visitors were required to pass through metal detectors, submit to security searches, and agree not to engage in prayer while visiting the Temple Mount. Special magnetometer metal detectors had been placed at all entrances to the Temple Mount last month, following the 14 July 2017 murder of two Israeli Border Police officers by a trio of Israeli-Arab terrorists near the Temple Mount. After less than two weeks, Israel removed not only the metal detectors, but also security cameras, following violent protests and a wave of terror attacks. While over 1,000 Jews were permitted to ascend the mount Tues. morning, hundreds more waited in line for hours at the entrance. (Arutz-7) [Comment]
Of the non-commanded biblical feast and fast days commemorated in Judaism, Tisha b’Av is the most somber. It is literally translated as the ninth day of Av, which is the fourth month in the Jewish calendar. It is a day of mourning, fasting and remembering the many tragedies experienced in Jewish history. One calamity is recorded in the book of 2 Kings, chapter 25, which details the horrors of the conquest of Jerusalem by the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar II. Following a lengthy siege on the capital, the city walls were breached, the Temple erected by King Solomon was plundered, ransacked and set ablaze. Officials and priest were killed as well as countless other Jews. Many thousands who escaped the genocide were taken captive by the Babylonians, bringing an end to the Davidic Empire and beginning the first exile out of the Promised Land. A later event allocated to the ninth of Av is the destruction of the Second Temple at the hands of the Romans in the year 70 A.D. The place of worship had been erected under the instruction of Cyrus the Great as described in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah. On the day of the fast, all food and the drinking of all liquid is forbidden. No bathing or makeup is allowed. There are evening services and the book of Lamentations is read. Tisha b’Av fell on 1 August this year. And was observed from sunset Mondayuntil sundown on Tuesday. (Kehila News) [Comment]
In Mecca, Saudi Arabia, there are 5,000 closed-circuit television cameras overseen by a British company, G4S. As a security measure, an electronic bracelet is attached to each of the millions of pilgrims throughout their entire stay in the kingdom, allowing the authorities to monitor them. (Ynet) There are metal detectors also at the Vatican, at Jerusalem's Western Wall, Westminster and hundreds of other vulnerable sites across the globe. Only Israel is singled out as not being able to protect itself against terrorist murders with preventative security devices. Palestinian leaders in every walk of life continue to condone, teach, honor and promote violence against the Jewish State and then bitterly protest when Israel takes up self-defense measures. [Comment]
Despite the removal of metal detectors from the entrances to the Temple Mount, Muslim worshipers are still refusing to enter the compound. The worshipers said that they refused to enter the holy place and will continue to carry out violent protests until all security measures including cameras are removed from the site. On Mon. night 24 July 2017, the security cabinet issued a statement saying that it had adopted the recommendations of the various security services to remove the metal detectors in favor of the smart-cameras as well as "other measures.” The Cabinet had decided to allocate a budget of up to $28 million to implement new "smart check" technology over a time frame of up to six months. Until the smart-cameras and other requirements are in place, the numbers of police personnel at the site will be increased in order to ensure the safety of visitors to the Temple Mount. The decision to remove the metal detectors comes after a period of heightened tensions following a terrorist attack at the Temple Mount in which two police officers were murdered. The decision to erect the metal detectors was met with rioting and clashes from Arabs and Muslims in Israel and abroad. The crisis reached a peak when an Israeli embassy guard in Amman shot dead to two Jordanians in self defense after being attacked by one wielding a screwdriver, who managed to stab the guard twice before being shot and killed. (J.Post) Pray that police, IDF soldiers and all security forces will be coordinated and equipped with all they need to be to deal with this very dangerous situation. [Comment]
Israel began removing the metal detectors at Jerusalem’s Temple Mount that arebeing cited by the Muslim world as the cause for days of rioting and are replacing them with hi-tech cameras with thermal capabilities. More than $28 million has been allocated for the new system, which will include cameras capable of facial recognition and spotting weapons or explosives. The decision to capitulate on the magnetometers is believed to be tied to a proposal made by USA President Trump’s international negotiator, Jason Greenblatt, and included the situation caused by an incident in Jordan in which an Israeli embassy guard shot and killed two Palestinians working in the area who attacked him with a screwdriver. Jordanian officials refused to allow the embassy staff to leave when they were summoned to return to Israel in order to prevent further incidents in Amman. Although it has been denied that the decision to remove the metal detectors was related to the incident in Jordan, it is believed that the solution was agreed to by Israeli PM Netanyahu and Jordan’s King Abdallah II in discussion with Greenblatt. Israel’s diplomatic staff from the Amman embassy, including the guard who killed the Jordanians, were allowed to leave and returned to Israel on 25 July 2017. (Reuters) [Comment]
A deadly shooting at Israel’s Embassy in Jordan further complicated Israeli government efforts on Mon. 24 July 2017 to find a way out of an escalating crisis over a major Jerusalem shrine, including mass Muslim prayer protests and Israeli-Palestinian violence. The shooting, in which an Israeli security guard killed two Jordanians after being attacked by one of them with a screwdriver, led to a diplomatic standoff between the two countries at a time when Jordan is heavily involved in efforts to defuse the crisis over the Jerusalem holy site. Jordan is the Muslim custodian of the shrine, which is the holiest site of Judaism, revered as the place where biblical Temples once stood. The 37-acre walled compound is the third holiest site of Islam, after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. Following diplomatic tensions between the two countries and Jordan’s refusal to release Israel’s diplomatic staff from the Amman embassy, including the guard who killed the Jordanians, they were allowed to return to Israel late Mon. night, 25 July 2017. (Washington Times/J.Post) [Comment]
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