Posted on 03/26/2011 11:48:05 AM PDT by Palter
As Israeli archaeologists recover artifacts from the religious site, ancient history inflames modern-day political tensions
My stint as an amateur archaeologist began one morning on the southern slope of Mount Scopus, a hill on the northern outskirts of Jerusalem. Inside a large hothouse covered in plastic sheets and marked Temple Mount Salvage Operation, a woman from Boston named Frankie Snydera volunteer turned stafferled me to three rows of black plastic buckets, each half-filled with stones and pebbles, then pointed out a dozen wood-framed screens mounted on plastic stands. My job, she said, was to dump each bucket onto a screen, rinse off any soil with water from a garden hose, then pluck out anything of potential importance.
It wasnt as easy as it sounded. A chunk of what looked like conglomerate rock turned out to be plaster used to line cisterns during the time of Herod the Great, some 2,000 years ago. When I tossed aside a shard of green glass I thought was from a soft-drink bottle, Snyder snatched it up. Notice the bubbles, she told me, holding it up to the light. That indicates its ancient glass, because during that time, oven temperatures didnt reach as high as they do now.
Gradually, I got the hang of it. I spotted the handle of an ancient piece of pottery, complete with an indentation for thumb support. I retrieved a rough-edged coin minted more than 1,500 years ago and bearing the profile of a Byzantine emperor. I also found a shard of glass from what could only have been a Heineken bottlea reminder that the Temple Mount has also been the scene of less historic activities.
The odds and ends I was gathering are the fruits of one of Israels most intriguing archaeological undertakings: a grain-by-grain analysis of debris trucked out of the Temple Mount, the magnificent edifice that has served the faithful as a symbol of Gods glory for 3,000 years and remains the crossroads of the three great monotheistic religions.
Jewish tradition holds that it is the site where God gathered the dust to create Adam and where Abraham nearly sacrificed his son Isaac to prove his faith. King Solomon, according to the Bible, built the First Temple of the Jews on this mountaintop circa 1000 B.C., only to have it torn down 400 years later by troops commanded by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar, who sent many Jews into exile. In the first century B.C., Herod expanded and refurbished a Second Temple built by Jews who had returned after their banishment. It is here that, according to the Gospel of John, Jesus Christ lashed out against the money changers (and was later crucified a few hundred yards away). The Roman general Titus exacted revenge against Jewish rebels, sacking and burning the Temple in A.D. 70.
Among Muslims, the Temple Mount is called Haram al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary). They believe it was here that the Prophet Muhammad ascended to the Divine Presence on the back of a winged horsethe Miraculous Night Journey, commemorated by one of Islams architectural triumphs, the Dome of the Rock shrine. A territorial prize occupied or conquered by a long succession of peoplesincluding Jebusites, Israelites, Babylonians, Greeks, Persians, Romans, Byzantines, early Muslims, Crusaders, Mamluks, Ottomans and the Britishthe Temple Mount has seen more momentous historical events than perhaps any other 35 acres in the world. Nonetheless, archaeologists have had little opportunity to search for physical evidence to sort legend from reality. For one thing, the site remains a place of active worship. The authority that controls the compound, an Islamic council called the Waqf, has long forbidden archaeological excavations, which it views as desecration. Except for some clandestine surveys of caves, cisterns and tunnels undertaken by European adventurers in the late 19th centuryand some minor archaeological work conducted by the British from 1938 to 1942, when the Al-Aqsa Mosque was undergoing renovationthe layers of history beneath the Temple Mount have remained tantalizingly out of reach.
Thus the significance of those plastic buckets of debris I saw on Mount Scopus.
Today the Temple Mount, a walled compound within the Old City of Jerusalem, is the site of two magnificent structures: the Dome of the Rock to the north and the Al-Aqsa Mosque to the south. In the southwest stands the Western Walla remnant of the Second Temple and the holiest site in Judaism. Some 300 feet from the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in the southeast corner of the compound, a wide plaza leads to underground vaulted archways that have been known for centuries as Solomons Stablesprobably because the Templars, an order of knights, are said to have kept their horses there when the Crusaders occupied Jerusalem. In 1996, the Waqf converted the area into a prayer hall, adding floor tiles and electric lighting. The Muslim authorities claimed the new sitenamed the El-Marwani Mosquewas needed to accommodate additional worshipers during Ramadan and on rain days that prevented the faithful from gathering in the open courtyard of the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Three years later, the Waqf, with the approval of the Israeli government, announced plans to create an emergency exit for the El-Marwani Mosque. But Israeli officials later accused the Waqf of exceeding its self-stated mandate. Instead of a small emergency exit, the Waqf excavated two arches, creating a massive vaulted entranceway. In doing so, bulldozers dug a pit more than 131 feet long and nearly 40 feet deep. Trucks carted away hundreds of tons of soil and debris.
Israeli archaeologists and scholars raised an outcry. Some said the Waqf was deliberately trying to obliterate evidence of Jewish history. Others laid the act to negligence on a monstrous scale.
That earth was saturated with the history of Jerusalem, says Eyal Meiron, a historian at the Ben-Zvi Institute for the Study of Eretz Israel. A toothbrush would be too large for brushing that soil, and they did it with bulldozers.
Yusuf Natsheh, the Waqfs chief archaeologist, was not present during the operation. But he told the Jerusalem Post that archaeological colleagues had examined the excavated material and had found nothing of significance. The Israelis, he told me, were exaggerating the value of the found artifacts. And he bristled at the suggestion the Waqf sought to destroy Jewish history. Every stone is a Muslim development, he says. If anything was destroyed, it was Muslim heritage.
Zachi Zweig was a third-year archaeology student at Bar- Ilan University, near Tel Aviv, when he heard news reports about dump trucks transporting Temple Mount soil to the Kidron Valley. With the help of a fellow student he rounded up 15 volunteers to visit the dump site, where they began surveying and collecting samples. A week later, Zweig presented his findingsincluding pottery fragments and ceramic tilesto archaeologists attending a conference at the university. Zweigs presentation angered officials at the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA). This is nothing but a show disguised as research, Jon Seligman, the IAAs Jerusalem Region Archaeologist, told the Jerusalem Post. It was a criminal deed to take these items without approval or permission. Soon afterward, Israeli police questioned Zweig and released him. By that point though, Zweig says, his cause had attracted the attention of the media and of his favorite lecturer at Bar-Ilanthe archaeologist Gaby Barkay.
Zweig urged Barkay to do something about the artifacts. In 2004, Barkay got permission to search the soil dumped in the Kidron Valley. He and Zweig hired trucks to cart it from there to Emek Tzurim National Park at the foot of Mount Scopus, collected donations to support the project and recruited people to undertake the sifting. The Temple Mount Sifting Project, as it is sometimes called, marks the first time archaeologists have systematically studied material removed from beneath the sacred compound.
Barkay, ten full-time staffers and a corps of part-time volunteers have uncovered a wealth of artifacts, ranging from three scarabs (either Egyptian or inspired by Egyptian design), from the second millennium B.C., to the uniform badge of a member of the Australian Medical Corps, who was billeted with the army of British Gen. Edmund Allenby after defeating the Ottoman Empire in Jerusalem during World War I. A bronze coin dating to the Great Revolt against the Romans (A.D. 66-70) bears the Hebrew phrase, Freedom of Zion. A silver coin minted during the era when the Crusaders ruled Jerusalem is stamped with the image of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
Barkay says some discoveries provide tangible evidence of biblical accounts. Fragments of terra-cotta figurines, from between the eighth and sixth centuries B.C., may support the passage in which King Josiah, who ruled during the seventh century, initiated reforms that included a campaign against idolatry. Other finds challenge long-held beliefs. For example, it is widely accepted that early Christians used the Mount as a garbage dump on the ruins of the Jewish temples. But the abundance of coins, ornamental crucifixes and fragments of columns found from Jerusalems Byzantine era (A.D. 380638) suggest that some public buildings were constructed there. Barkay and his colleagues have published their main findings in two academic journals in Hebrew, and they plan to eventually publish a book-length account in English.
But Natsheh, the Waqfs chief archaeologist, dismisses Barkays finds because they were not found in situ in their original archaeological layers in the ground. It is worth nothing, he says of the sifting project, adding that Barkay has leapt to unwarranted conclusions in order to strengthen the Israeli argument that Jewish ties to the Temple Mount are older and stronger than those of the Palestinians. This is all to serve his politics and his agenda, Natsheh says.
To be sure, the Mount is a flash point in the Middle East conflict. Israel seized East Jerusalem and the Old City from Jordan in 1967. While Israelis saw this as the reunification of their ancient capital, Palestinians still deem East Jerusalem to be occupied Arab land (a position also held by the United Nations).The Temple Mount is precariously balanced between these opposing views. Although Israel claims political sovereignty over the compound, custodianship remains with the Waqf. As such, Israelis and Palestinians cautiously eye each other for any tilt in the status quo. A September 2000 visit to the Temple Mount by the Israeli politician Ariel Sharon was interpreted by Palestinians as a provocative assertion of Israels sovereignty, and helped spark the second intifada uprising, which, by some estimates, claimed as many as 6,600 lives, as rioting, armed clashes and terrorist bombings erupted throughout the Palestinian territories and Israel. At its core, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict represents rival claims to the same territoryand both sides rely on history to make the case for whose roots in the land run deepest.
For the Israelis, that history begins 3,000 years ago, when the Temple Mountbelieved by many biblical scholars to be the mountain in the region of Moriah mentioned in the Book of Genesiswas an irregularly shaped mound rising some 2,440 feet among the stark Judean Hills. The summit loomed above a small settlement called Jebus, which clung to a ridge surrounded by ravines. The Old Testament describes how an army led by David, the second king of ancient Israel, breached the walls of Jebus around 1000 B.C. David then built a palace nearby and created his capital, Jerusalem. At the site of a threshing floor atop the mountain, where farmers had separated grains from chaff, David constructed a sacrificial altar. According to the Second Book of Kings and the First Book of Chronicles, Davids son, Solomon, built the First Temple (later known as the Beit Hamikdash) on that site.
The Temple Mount was the Parthenon of the Jews, says Barkay, describing how worshipers would have climbed a steep set of stairs to get to it. You would feel every step of the climb in your limbs and your lungs.
Still, we know nothing about the First Temple, because there are no traces of its physical remains, says Benjamin Kedar, a history professor at Hebrew University and chairman of the board of directors at the IAA. Scholars, however, have pieced together a tentative portrait of the Beit Hamikdash from descriptions in the Bible and architectural remains of sanctuaries elsewhere in the region built during the same era. It is envisioned as a complex of richly painted and gilded courts, constructed with cedar, fir and sandalwood. The rooms would have been built around an inner sanctumthe Holy of Holieswhere the ark of the covenant, an acacia-wood chest covered with gold and containing the original Ten Commandments, was said to have been stored.
Until recently, Palestinians generally acknowledged that the Beit Hamikdash existed. A 1929 publication, A Brief Guide to the Haram al-Sharif, written by Waqf historian Aref al Aref, declares that the Mounts identity with the site of Solomons temple is beyond dispute. This too is the spot, according to universal belief, on which David built there an altar unto the Lord, and offered burnt and peace offerings. But in recent decades, amid the intensifying quarrel over the sovereignty of East Jerusalem, a growing number of Palestinian officials and academics have voiced doubts. I will not allow it to be written of me that I have...confirmed the existence of the so-called Temple beneath the Mount, Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat told President Bill Clinton at the Camp David peace talks in 2000. Arafat suggested the site of the Temple Mount might have been in the West Bank town of Nablus, known as Shechem in ancient times.
Five years after the Camp David talks, Barkays sifting project turned up a lump of black clay with a seal impression inscribed with the name, in ancient Hebrew, [Gea]lyahu [son of] Immer. In the Book of Jeremiah, a son of ImmerPashuris identified as chief administrator of the First Temple. Barkay suggests that the seals owner could have been Pashurs brother. If so, its a significant find, he saysthe first Hebrew inscription from the First Temple period to be found on the Mount itself.
But Natshehsipping Arabic coffee in his office at Waqf headquarters, a 700-year-old former Sufi monastery in the Muslim Quarter of the Old Cityis dubious. He says hes also frustrated by Israeli dismissal of Palestinian claims to the sacred compound where, he says, the Muslim presenceexcepting the Crusader period (A.D. 1099-1187)extends for 1,400 years. Natsheh wont say if he believes in the existence of the First Temple, given the current political climate. Whether I say yes or no, it would be misused, he tells me, fidgeting. I would not like to answer.
According to contemporary accounts, the Babylonian Army destroyed the First Temple in 586 B.C. The ark of the covenant disappeared, possibly hidden from the conquerors. Following the conquest of Jerusalem by the Persians in 539 B.C., the Jews returned from exile and, according to the Book of Ezra, constructed a Second Temple on the site.
In the first century B.C., King Herod undertook a massive reshaping of the Temple Mount. He filled up the slopes surrounding the mounts summit and expanded it to its present size. He enclosed the holy site within a 100-foot-high retaining wall constructed of limestone blocks quarried from the Jerusalem Hills and constructed a far more expansive version of the Second Temple. Herods attitude was, Anything you can do, I can do better and larger, says Barkay. It was part of his megalomania. He wanted also to compete with God.
Barkay says he and his co-workers have turned up physical evidence that hints at the grandeur of the Second Temple, including pieces of what appear to be opus sectile floor tileselements of a technique in Herods time that used stone of various colors and shapes to create geometric patterns. (Describing the temple, the ancient historian Josephus wrote of an open-air courtyard laid with stones of all sorts.) Other discoveries might offer glimpses of daily religious ritualsnotably ivory and bone combs that could have been used in preparation for a ritual mikvah, or purifying bath, before entering the courts sanctified interior.
On a cloudless morning, I join historian Meiron for a tour of the Temple Mount. We enter the Old City through the Dung Gate and then arrive at the Western Wall plaza. When the Romans destroyed Herods temple in A.D. 70, they knocked the retaining wall down piece by piece. But the stones from the top tumbled down and formed a protective barrier that preserved the walls lower portions. Today, hundreds of Orthodox Jews are gathered in devotion before the remnant of that walla ritual that perhaps first occurred in the fourth century A.D. and has been practiced continually since the early 16th century, after the Ottoman conquest of Jerusalem.
During the Ottoman Empire and the British Mandate, this area was a warren of Arab houses, and Jews who wanted to pray here had to squeeze into a 12-foot-wide corridor in front of the Herodian stones. My father came here as a child and he told me, We used to go through alleys; we entered a door; and there was the wall on top of us, Meiron tells me. After Israel claimed sovereignty over East Jerusalem in 1967, it demolished the Arab houses, creating the plaza.
Meiron and I climb a temporary wooden walkway that leads above the Western Wall to the Mughrabi Gate, the only entry point to the Temple Mount for non-Muslimsand a symbol of how any attempt to change the sites geography can upset the delicate status quo. Israel erected the wooden structure after an earthen ramp collapsed in 2004, following an earthquake and heavy snowfall. In 2007, the IAA approved the construction of a permanent bridge that would stretch from the Old Citys Dung Gate to the Mughrabi Gate.
But members of both the Jewish and Muslim communities opposed the plan. Some Israeli archaeologists raised an outcry over the bridges proposed path through the Jerusalem Archaeological Parkthe site of excavations conducted in the Old Citysaying the construction could damage artifacts. The late Ehud Netzer, the archaeologist who discovered King Herods tomb in 2007, argued that moving the entrance ramp could effectively cut off the Western Walls connection to the Temple Mount, thereby undermining Israels claims to sovereignty over the sacred compound. And the Israeli activist group Peace Now warned the project might alarm Muslims since the new route and size of the bridge (three times the original ramp) would increase non-Muslim traffic to the Mount.
Indeed, when Israel began a legally required archaeological survey of the planned construction site, Palestinians and Arab Israelis joined in a chorus of protest. They claimed the Israeli excavationsalthough conducted several yards outside the walls of the sacred compoundthreatened the foundations of the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Some even said that it was Israels covert plan to unearth remains of the First and Second Temples in order to solidify its historic claim to the Mount. For the time being, non-Muslim visitors continue to use the temporary wooden bridge that has been in place for seven years.
Such disputes inevitably send ripples throughout the international community. Both the Jordanian and Turkish governments protested Israels plans for the new walkway. And in November 2010, the Palestinian Authority created a diplomatic kerfuffle when it published a study declaring the Western Wall was not a Jewish holy site at all, but part of the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The study contended, This wall was never part of the so-called Temple Mount, but Muslim tolerance allowed the Jews to stand in front of it and weep over its destruction, which the U.S. State Department called factually incorrect, insensitive and highly provocative.
Today, the scene is calm. At various spots on the wide, leafy plaza Palestinian men gather in study groups, reading the Koran. We ascend steps toward the magnificent Dome of the Rockwhich was built during the same period as the Al-Aqsa Mosque to the south, between A.D. 685 and 715. The Dome of the Rock is built on top of the Foundation Stone, which is sacred to both Jews and Muslims. According to Jewish tradition, the stone is the navel of the Earththe place where creation began, and the site where Abraham was poised to sacrifice Isaac. For Muslims, the stone marks the place where the Prophet Muhammad ascended to the Divine Presence.
On the east side of the Temple Mounts retaining wall, Meiron shows me the Golden Gate, an elaborate gatehouse and portal. Its provenance remains a subject of debate among historians, pitting the majority, who claim early Muslims built it, against those who insist it is a Byzantine Christian structure.
Historians who argue that the Byzantines didnt build the gate point to ancient accounts describing how early Christians turned the Mount into a garbage heap. The Byzantines, scholars say, saw the destruction of the Second Temple as vindication of Jesus prophecy that not one stone shall be left here upon another and as a symbol of Judaisms downfall. But other historians counter that the eastern entrance to the Mount, where the Golden Gate was built, was important to the Byzantines because their interpretation of the Gospel of Matthew holds that Jesus entered the Temple Mount from the Mount of Olives to the east when he joined his disciples for the Passover meal. And in A.D. 614, when the Persian Empire conquered and briefly ruled Jerusalem, they took back to Persia parts of the True Cross (believed to be the cross of the Crucifixion) from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Fifteen years later, after defeating the Persians, Heraclius, a Byzantine emperor, is said to have brought the True Cross back to the holy citypassing from the Mount of Olives to the Temple Mount, and then to the Holy Sepulchre. Thus you had two triumphant entrances: Jesus and Heraclius, says Meiron. Thats enough to explain why the Byzantines would invest in building that gate.
While Barkay is in the camp that believes the Golden Gate is an early Muslim structure, Meiron thinks the sifting projects discovery of Byzantine-era crosses, coins and ornamental columns supports the theory that the gate was built by the Byzantines. Now were not so sure the Temple Mount fell into disrepair, Meiron says. In addition, Barkay has found archival photographs taken during renovations of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the late 1930s that appear to reveal Byzantine mosaics beneath the structurefurther evidence that some sort of public building had been constructed at the site.
I visited Barkay at his modest apartment in East Talpiot, a Jewish suburb of East Jerusalem. The grizzled, chain-smoking archaeologist was born in Budapest in 1944, the very day the Nazis sent his family to the citys Jewish ghetto. After the war his fatherwho had spent a year in a Nazi forced labor camp in Ukraineestablished the first Israeli delegation in Budapest, and the family emigrated to Israel in 1950. Barkay earned his doctorate in archaeology at Tel Aviv University. In 1979, exploring a series of ancient burial caves in an area of Jerusalem above the Valley of Hinnom, he made a remarkable discovery: two 2,700-year-old silver scrolls delicately etched with the priestly blessing that Aaron and his sons bestowed on the children of Israel, as mentioned in the Book of Numbers. Barkay describes the scrolls, which contain the earliest-known fragments of a biblical text, as the most important find of my life.
Barkay and I get into my car and drive toward Mount Scopus. I ask him about Natshehs charge that the sifting project is infused with a political agenda. He shrugs. Sneezing in Jerusalem is an intensely political activity. You can do it to the right, to the left, on the face of an Arab or a Jew. Whatever you do, or dont do, is political.
Still, some criticism of Barkay stems not from politics but from skepticism about his methodology. Natsheh is not the only archaeologist to raise questions about the value of artifacts not found in situ. The dirt excavated by the Waqf is landfill from previous eras. Part of that landfill, Barkay says, comes from the Mounts eastern section, which the Waqf paved over in 2001. But most of it, he says, was taken from vacant parts of the Mount when an entrance to Solomons Stables was blocked, sometime between the reign of the Fatimid and Ayyubid dynasties. Collectively, he says, the landfill includes artifacts from all periods of the site.
But Israeli archaeologist Danny Bahat told the Jerusalem Post that, since the dirt was filler, the layers do not represent a meaningful chronology. What they did is like putting the remains in a blender, adds Jerusalem region archaeologist Seligman about the Waqf excavation. All the layers are now mixed and damaged. Archaeologist Meir Ben-Dov, a specialist on the Old City, has raised doubts as to whether all the landfill even originated on the Temple Mount. Some of it, he suggests, was brought there from Jerusalems Jewish Quarter.
Barkay, not surprisingly, rejects this suggestion, citing the frequent finds of Ottoman glazed wall-tile fragments from the Dome of the Rock, dating back to the 16th century, when Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent repaired and beautified the shrine. And, though the excavated soil is not in situ, he says that, even if one were to discount the scientific value of the artifacts by 80 percent, we are left with 20 percent, which is a lot more than zero.
Barkay identifies and dates the artifacts through typology: he compares his finds with similarly made objects in which a timeline has been firmly established. For instance, the opus sectile pieces Barkay found in the soil were precisely the samein terms of material, shape and dimensionsas those that Herod used in palaces at Jericho, Masada and Herodium.
We arrive at Barkays salvaging operation, and he greets a handful of staffers. Then he leads the way to a worktable and shows me a sampling of a single days efforts. Heres a bowl fragment from the First Temple period, he says. A Byzantine coin here. A Crusader arrowhead made of iron. This is a Hasmonean coin, from the dynasty that ruled Judah in the second century B.C. Barkay tells me that volunteers by the hundreds arrive each week to help with the siftingeven ultra-Orthodox Jews, who traditionally oppose archaeological excavations in the Holy Land. They say all the evidence is in the [scriptural] sources, you dont need physical proof. But theyre willing to make an exception, because its the Temple Mount. Barkay pauses. If I look at some of the volunteers, and I see the excitement in their eyes, that they with their own fingers can touch the history of Jerusalem, this is irreplaceable. He admits the project has attracted very few Palestinians or Arab Israelis.
Leading me outside the plastic-covered building, Barkay squints into the sunlight. We can see the Temple Mount in the distance, the sunlight glinting off the golden-topped Dome of the Rock. Weve been working for six years, and weve gone through 20 percent of the material, he says, pointing to huge heaps of earth that fill an olive grove below the tent. We have another 15 to 20 years to go.
"The Temple Mount was the Parthenon of the Jews," says archaeologist Gaby Barkay.
Non-Muslims use a wood ramp to enter the complex, home to the gilded Dome of the Rock, an Islamic shrine, and the Western Wall, holy to Jews.
When Israel captured East Jerusalem in 1967, it proclaimed the act reunified its ancient capital. Palestinians say Israel is occupying Arab land.
The Temple Mount is precariously balanced between rival views.
Zachi Zweig, a third-year archaeological student, with students at the Temple Mount Sifting Project, believed important artifacts had been discarded.
Bags awaiting delivery to the archaeologists' sifting site contain soil removed from the Mount and dumped in the Kidron Valley.
Palestinian archaeologist Yusuf Natsheh charges that the Israeli researchers' Temple Mount project has a political agenda.
Koranic study groups meet regularly in the courtyard between the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock.
Both sides watch for any tilt in the status quo that threatens their claims to the Mount.
The Dome of the Rock shrine stands on the north side of Temple Mount.
Temple Mount is at the crossroads of the three great monotheistic religions and has been an important religious symbol for 3,000 years.
A distant view of the walled compound within the Old City of Jerusalem.
Orthodox Jews pray at the Mount of Olives Cemetery just above the Kidron Valley
A Koranic study group.
The Temple Mount has seen more momentous historical events than perhaps any other 35 acres in the world.
Zweig gives a lecture to schoolchildren at the sifting project tent.
A tourist walks through the Jerusalem Archaeological Park.
Temple, ping.
Very cool article.
From the article: “Nonetheless, archaeologists have had little opportunity to search for physical evidence to sort legend from reality. For one thing, the site remains a place of active worship. The authority that controls the compound, an Islamic council called the Waqf, has long forbidden archaeological excavations, which it views as desecration.”
So much for truth and science, eh?
Has anyone ever found one single “Palestinian” artifact?
A scroll. A tablet, Marriage certificate, list of rulers..anything?
Don’t these bitch-ass infidels know that if these 2000-5000 year old artifacts fail to look like 500-year old Mohammedan pieces their whole project could be defunded? LOSE that monotheistic idiocy and GO FOR THE GOLD! Allahu Akbar, MoFo!
Yes. The capital of “Syria Palestina”... is ROME.
Also the muslim claims aren’t true. Jerusalem isn’t even mentioned at all in the Koran, not one single time.
I think today would be a good time in history for Israel to remove Islam from her borders. Every damned polluted and abomnible stone.
I understand your sentiment, but think it would be a better idea if God removed Islam from Israel’s borders.
I pray He will, in His own time.
What is Beneath the Temple Mount?
That’s an easy one - Jimmy Hoffa.
Have you seen those videos of the UFO hovering over the Dome? Kinda interesting with that whole “Muhammed rose to the heavens on a winged horse” claim.
“....it would be a better idea if God removed Islam from Israels borders.”
.
And from the rest of the world.
>Kinda interesting with that whole Muhammed rose to the heavens on a winged horse claim.<
.
Muslims are just copying the OT where it is written that the prophet Elijah ascended upward and disappeared.
Pilgrimage memories ping
What a bunch of crap. The Muslims have been caught dumping tons of Jewish history into dumpsters and carting it away. And it is all the Israelis own fault for permitting this historical crime, which only harms their legitimate claims, and aides the imaginary one of the Islamists. Just disgusting to see those footbaths defiling where the altars of Solomon's Temple once stood.
HaKotel ping
Well, the good news about all the crazy increased seismic activity is that any day now, that Dome of Abomination could be reduced to ruble in about a minute and a half.
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