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Ultra-nationalists barred from Temple Mount
Internet Jerusalem Post ^ | Oct. 13, 2003 | ETGAR LEFKOVITS - Gershon Salomon

Posted on 10/13/2003 3:41:27 PM PDT by Phil V.


Oct. 13, 2003
Ultra-nationalists barred from Temple Mount
By ETGAR LEFKOVITS


Acting on police recommendations, the Supreme Court on Monday barred the leader of the fringe Temple Mount Faithful group, and the head of another small ultra-nationalist organization, from ascending the Temple Mount on Monday morning. 

The high court rejected an appeal by Gershon Solomon, and Yehuda Etzion to enter the ancient compound, after police warned that visits by either men could lead to bloodshed at the bitterly contested holy site. 

The Temple Mount was reopened to non-Muslims two months ago, after nearly three years when the site was closed off to Jews and Christians due to fears of renewed Palestinian violence. Thousands of visitors have passed through the ancient hilltop in the last eight weeks, with especially long lines at the mount's entrance reported this week during the Succot holiday. 

Scores of Israeli visitors who waited nearly two hours outside the compound during the morning visiting hours Sunday were turned away due to the crowd, police said. 

On Monday morning thousands of Israelis arrived at the Western Wall for the traditional priestly blessing [Birkat Kohanim]. Due to the immense crowd, police blocked off all entrances to the Old City to private cars. 
 

Exciting events of the Movement on the Temple Mount and in Jerusalem during Sukkoth 5764/2003



In the coming days the Temple Mount Faithful Movement will intensively continue all her activities relating to her mission. During the coming Festival of Sukkoth, the Feast of Tabernacles, we are preparing an event. At 9:30 AM on the morning of 17 Tishrei 5764 (Monday, 13 October 2003), the Temple Mount Faithful Movement will make a pilgrimage to the Temple Mount to carry the cornerstones onto the Temple Mount. Hopefully the authorities will not prevent the laying of the cornerstones on the Temple Mount. As in Biblical times we will carry with us the lulav, etrog, hadas, and aravah — the four species G–d commanded Israel in the Torah to take, to pray, and to make a pilgrimage with to the Temple Mount. We shall also carry with us a Torah Scroll. This will be an exciting pilgrimage filled with prayer and worship of the G–d of Israel. Afterwards we shall march to the Pool of Siloam in the City of David where we shall fulfill another command of G–d in the Torah, This was the most joyful event and tradition during the First and Second Temple times. Many thousands of pilgrims marched from the Temple Mount to the Siloam Spring to draw the holy water with exciting prayers and then marched back to the Temple Mount and poured out the water on the altar dedicating it to G–d and praying to Him for a blessed winter with much rain on Israel, which was mainly an agricultural society, and on all the world. This exciting march and ceremony was held in the evening and all the streets of Jerusalem were lit with many lights. The High Priest and all the other priests, dressed in their beautiful garments, walked in front of the pilgrims. After the priests came the Levites in their special garments and playing on their musical instruments, singing Psalms and praying and sharing the Word of G–d. Jerusalem was empty of people for they had all joined the marchers dancing all the way, at the spring and in the Temple itself. The tradition which was passed from generation to generation states that all who had not seen this joyful celebration had never in their lives seen a joyful celebration. We are repeating this event during Sukkoth. Priests and Levites will march together with us playing music and singing Psalms and the joy will be great. During the afternoon of the same day we are planning to participate together with the two cornerstones on a banner-decked truck in the Jerusalem March in which Israelis from all over the land and guests from outside Israel will take part. We hope to be a part of this march and will do everything possible to participate. Everyone from Israel and outside Israel who are in the land at this time are invited to participate in all our events during Sukkoth. We will meet at the Western Wall plaza at 9:30 AM in front of the western gate of the Temple Mount. Together we will fulfill the Word of G–d and His commandment to His people, Israel, and to all the world as it was written above. We are looking forward to meeting all of you in a great godly day and a great, exciting and godly event. You will be very welcome. 

We are looking forward to great godly days in Israel and her eternal godly capital, Jerusalem. Together with the G–d of Israel we will overcome all the obstacles. Nothing can stop the determination of the G–d of Israel to redeem His chosen people and all mankind. The Temple Mount and Land of Israel Faithful Movement calls on everyone in Israel and all over the world to be a part of these great days and to help the Movement in every way to fulfill her godly mission and activities and to bring about the prophetic endtime causes which G–d gave her. We so much want to thank our dear members and friends who have joined the Faithful Movement with such great dedication, devotion, and generosity and who have stood with us for so many years with great faithfulness. The G–d and people of Israel will never forget what you did at a time when it was so needed and important. We want to thank those who will join us in the near future and who will share the godly work and mission with us. Soon, together, we will all see the great day of fulfillment. Together we shall stand hand-in-hand in the rebuilt house of G–d with our hearts joined and we shall thank our beloved G–d for the great privilege that He has given us of being a part of His exciting prophetic endtime plans, activities and promises. 

In G–d we trust. 
 
 



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Israel; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: templemount

1 posted on 10/13/2003 3:41:27 PM PDT by Phil V.
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To: SJackson
Would you please apply your bump list this sad article?
2 posted on 10/13/2003 4:04:42 PM PDT by Phil V.
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To: All

Let's keep the Dem's on the run!
Click the Pic!

3 posted on 10/13/2003 4:05:05 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Phil V.
Christians cannot pray on public property here in America and Faithful Jews cannot do the same in Israel, all because of the liberal Left-wingers in both countries. As one ultra-orthodox teacher once said: "Israel is more afraid of George Bush than the Burning Bush." What a state the faithful find themselves in both countries.

Old Patriot

4 posted on 10/13/2003 4:17:37 PM PDT by old patriot
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To: SJackson
The cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1792.

formerly known as the Executive Mansion (1810–1902)  the official office and residence of the president of the United States at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W. in Washington, D.C. The White House and its landscaped grounds occupy 18 acres (7.2 hectares). Since the administration of George Washington (1789–97), who occupied presidential residences in New York and Philadelphia, every American president has resided at the White House. Originally called the “President's Palace” on early maps, the building was officially named the Executive Mansion in 1810 in order to avoid connotations of royalty. Although the name “White House” was commonly used from about the same time (because the mansion's white-gray sandstone contrasted strikingly with the red brick of nearby buildings), it did not become the official name of the building until 1902, when it was adopted by President Theodore Roosevelt (1901–09). The White House is the oldest federal building in the nation's capital. 

The building's history begins in 1792, when a public competition was held to choose a design for a presidential residence in the new capital city of Washington. Thomas Jefferson , later the country's third president (1801–09), using the pseudonymous initials “A.Z.,” was among those who submitted drawings, but Irish American architect James Hoban won the commission (and a $500 prize) with his plan for a Georgian mansion in the Palladian style. The structure was to have three floors and more than 100 rooms and would be built in sandstone imported from quarries along Aquia Creek in Virginia. The cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1792. Labourers, including local slaves, were housed in temporary huts built on the north side of the premises. They were joined by skilled stonemasons from Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1793. 

In 1800 the entire federal government was relocated from Philadelphia to Washington. John Adams , the country's second president (1797–1801), moved into the still unfinished presidential mansion on November 1st and the next night wrote in a letter to his wife, Abigail Adams :

I Pray Heaven Bestow the Best of Blessings on This House and All that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but Honest and Wise Men ever rule under this Roof.
 

At the insistence of President Franklin Roosevelt (1933–45), the quotation was inscribed on the fireplace of the State Dining Room immediately below the portrait of Abraham Lincoln, by George Healy. When Abigail Adams finally arrived in Washington several days later, she was disappointed with the inadequate state of the residence. The first lady wrote,

There is not a single apartment finished. We have not the least fence, yard, or other convenience outside. I use the great unfinished audience room [East Room] as a drying room for hanging up the clothes.
 

The mansion quickly became a focal point of the new federal city and was symbolically linked to the United States Capitol by way of Pennsylvania Avenue. Following his inauguration in March 1801 Jefferson became the second president to reside in the executive mansion. In keeping with his ardent republicanism, he opened the house to public visitation each morning, a tradition that was continued (during peacetime) by all his successors. He personally drew up landscaping plans and had two earthen mounds installed on the south lawn to remind him of his beloved Virginia piedmont. Meanwhile, construction continued on the building's interior, which still lacked ample staircases and suffered from a persistently leaky roof. During Jefferson's tenure, the White House was elegantly furnished in Louis XVI style (known in America as Federal style). 

During the War of 1812 the building was burned by the British, and President James Madison (1809–17) and his family were forced to flee the city. The Madisons eventually moved into the nearby Octagon House, the Washington mansion of John Tayloe, a Virginia plantation owner. Reconstruction and expansion began under Hoban's direction, but the building was not ready for occupancy until 1817, during the administration of President James Monroe (1817–25). Hoban's reconstruction included the addition of east and west terraces on the main building's flanks; a semicircular south portico and a colonnaded north portico were added in the 1820s. 

During the 19th century the White House became a symbol of American democracy. In the minds of most Americans, the building was not a “palace” from which the president ruled but merely a temporary office and residence from which he served the people he governed. The White House belonged to the people, not the president, and the president occupied it only for as long as the people allowed him to stay. The idea of a president refusing to leave the White House after losing an election or an impeachment trial was unthinkable. 

The inauguration of Andrew Jackson (1829–37), the “people's president,” attracted thousands of well-wishers to the nation's capital. As Jackson rode on horseback down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House, he was surrounded by a frenetic throng of 20,000 people, many of whom attempted to follow him into the mansion to get a better look at their hero. A contemporary, Margaret Bayer Smith, recounts what happened next: “The halls were filled with a disorderly rabble…scrambling for the refreshments designed for the drawing room.” While friends of the new president joined arms to protect him from the mob, “china and glass to the amount of several thousand dollars were broken in the struggle to get at the ices and cakes, though punch and other drinkables had been carried out in tubs and buckets to the people.” Said Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, “I was glad to escape from the scene as soon as possible.” During his administration Jackson spent more than $50,000 refurbishing the residence, including $10,000 on decorations for the East Room and more than $4,000 on a sterling silver dinner and dessert set decorated with an American eagle. 

In 1842 the visit to the United States of the English novelist Charles Dickens brought an official invitation to the White House. After his calls at the White House door went unanswered, Dickens let himself in and walked through the mansion from room to room on the lower and upper floors. Finally coming upon a room filled with nearly two dozen people, he was shocked and appalled to see many of them spitting on the carpet. Dickens later wrote, “I take it for granted the Presidential housemaids have high wages.” Until the Civil War, however, most White House servants were slaves. Moreover, the wages of all White House employees—as well as the expenses for running the White House, including staging official functions—were paid for by the president. Not until 1909 did Congress provide appropriations to pay White House servants. 

Dickens was not the only foreign visitor to be disappointed with the White House. On a trip to Washington just before the Civil War, Aleksandr Borisovich Lakier, a Russian nobleman, wrote that “the home of the president…is barely visible behind the trees.” The White House, he said, was “sufficient for a private family and not at all conforming to the expectations of a European.” Subsequent changes to the building in the 19th century were relatively minor. The interior was redecorated during various presidential administrations and modern conveniences were regularly added, including a refrigerator in 1845, gas lighting in 1849, and electric lighting in 1891. 

The White House was the scene of mourning after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln (1861–65). While Mary Todd Lincoln lay in her room for five weeks grieving for her husband, many White House holdings were looted. Responding to charges that she had stolen government property when she left the White House, she angrily inventoried all the items she had taken with her, including gifts of quilts and waxworks from well-wishers. 

During the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt , the mansion's second-floor rooms were converted from presidential offices to family living quarters, not least because of the president's six children. For them, one observer said, “nothing [in the White House] was too sacred for amusement and no place too good for a playroom.” Additional space was needed for the children's exotic pets, which included raccoons, snakes, a badger, and a bear. To accommodate a growing presidential staff and to provide more office space for the president, the West Wing was constructed in 1902. More office space was made available with the building of the East Wing in 1942. (The East and West wings are connected to the main building by the east and west terraces.) 

In 1948, during the presidency of Harry Truman (1945–53), the main building was discovered to be structurally unsound; during the next four years the entire interior was carefully rebuilt, though the original exterior walls were left standing. A second-floor balcony was likewise added on the south portico. The last major alterations to the White House were made in the 1960s by Jacqueline Kennedy , wife of President John F. Kennedy (1961–63). Renowned for her beauty and refined taste, she collected and displayed items of historic and artistic value throughout its rooms. She made the White House a centre of national culture and awakened public interest in its beauties by conducting a televised tour of the mansion in 1962. 

The White House building complex has a total of more than 130 rooms. The main building still contains the presidential family's living quarters and various reception rooms, all decorated in styles of the 18th and 19th centuries. Parts of the main building are open to the public. The west terrace contains the press briefing room, and the east terrace houses a movie theatre. The presidential office, known as the Oval Office, is located in the West Wing, as are the cabinet and press rooms; the East Wing contains other offices. 

Over the years the White House has become a major American historic site, attracting more than 1.5 million visitors annually. In 1995 the section of Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House was closed to automobile traffic because of concerns about terrorism, and the area has since became popular with pedestrians and skaters. The allure of the building has never waned, and few who enter its environs—visitors and occupants alike—leave unaffected by its ambience and rich history. Jefferson thought that the White House was too large, “big enough for two emperors, one Pope, and the grand lama,” and Caroline Harrison, wife of President Benjamin Harrison (1889–93), complained that there was “no feeling of privacy” on the property. But Franklin Roosevelt found it warm and comfortable. “My husband liked to be in the White House on New Year's Eve,” remembered Eleanor Roosevelt :

We always gathered a few friends, and at midnight in the oval study the radio was turned on and we waited with the traditional eggnog in hand for midnight to be announced. Franklin always sat in his chair and, as the President, would raise his glass and say: “To the United States of America.” All of us stood and repeated the toast after him. Somehow, the words were especially meaningful and impressive in that house.
 

The White House is a unit of the National Capital Parks system and was accredited as a museum in 1988.
 
 
 


5 posted on 10/13/2003 4:19:47 PM PDT by Phil V.
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
6 posted on 10/13/2003 4:39:00 PM PDT by SJackson
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To: SJackson; yonif; rdb3; Simcha7; American in Israel; spectacularbid2003; Binyamin; Taiwan Bocks; ...
"In G–d we trust."

Indeed.


If you'd like to be on or off this
Christian Supporters of Israel ping list,
please FR mail me. ~
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Letter To The President In Support Of Israel ~
'Final Solution,' Phase 2 ~

7 posted on 10/13/2003 4:52:25 PM PDT by Salem (FREE REPUBLIC - Fighting to win within the Arena of the War of Ideas! So get in the fight!)
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