The matter reached the highest of
official levels this month when Israel asked Jordan, which administers
Muslim religious affairs at the site, to consider allowing limited
Jewish worship there, according to a Jordanian official.
The
visits have unnerved Muslim authorities, who fear that Israel is
quietly trying to upset a fragile status quo and encroach upon the site.
Similar tensions in the past have boiled over into deadly violence.
"If
this happens, there will be lot of bloodshed," said Azzam Khatib,
director general of the Waqf, Jordan's Islamic authority that manages
the Jerusalem holy site, about the possibility of organized Jewish
prayers there.
The site, known
to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount, is
ground zero in the territorial and religious conflict between Israel and
its Arab neighbors.
Revered
as Islam's third holiest spot, the site's iconic gold-topped Dome of the
Rock enshrines the rock where Muslims believe the Prophet Mohammad
ascended to heaven.
Jews
believe the rock may be where the holiest part of the two ancient
temples stood about 2,000 years ago -- and where religious Jews pray a
third temple will one day be built.
The
site is so holy that Jews have traditionally refrained from praying on
the hilltop, congregating instead at the adjacent Western Wall. In
recent weeks, Israel's chief rabbis, as well as the rabbi of the Western
Wall, have issued directives urging people not to ascend the Temple
Mount, arguing that the temple's former location on the mount is unclear
and that Jews at the site could inadvertently enter the holiest area of
the once-standing temple, where it was forbidden to tread.
Attitudes
among Orthodox Jews have been evolving, however, as archaeologists have
weighed in about the precise location of the ancient temples -- and of
places where Jews would be allowed to tread.
According to figures the Israeli
newspaper Makor Rishon said it obtained from the police, Jewish visits
to the holy site have jumped from about 5,700 in 2009 to some 8,300 in
2011. Last year, the number dropped slightly to about 7,800 and this
year rose to nearly 8,000.
The
Temple Institute, an organization that has led efforts to allow Jewish
prayer at the site, attributes the drop in 2012 and this year to police
closures during religious holidays when many Jews usually visit. There
was no immediate comment from the police to confirm the statistics.
In
one of the strangest security measures in the Holy Land, visitors
identified as Jews receive police escorts and are banned from praying.
Rabbi
Chaim Richman of the Temple Institute, a group that has for years been
advocating for Jewish prayer at the holy site, said police often harass
and remove Jews who ascend the mount and recite prayers. He called for
Jewish religious freedom at the site.
"I'm asking for the right to move my lips," Richman said.
Israeli
officials declined comment on the matter, but an aide to Israel's
deputy minister of religious affairs said the religious affairs ministry
has drafted a proposal that would allow for limited Jewish prayer at
the site.
"We see great
importance to allow equality in freedom of religion" at the site, said
the Idit Druyan, the aide to Deputy Minister Eli Ben-Dahan. "There is no
reason why one religion is allowed and another religion is not."
Muslims
at the site have protested in recent weeks over what they call Jewish
encroachment, and Muslim clerics warn against allowing separate hours
for Jewish and Muslim prayer at the site, an arrangement that exists at a
Hebron holy site and that Druyan said the religious affairs ministry
has considered.
A Jordanian
official said Israel asked Jordan this year to consider allowing limited
amount of Jews to pray in a small area at the site, according to a
Jordanian official. The Israeli request was rebuffed, said the official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a
classified diplomatic matter.
The Jordanian official said
Jordanian King Abdullah II has asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu several times, most recently two weeks ago, to prevent Jewish
worship at the compound, warning that such a move would provoke Muslims
and rekindle anti-Israel sentiment around the Muslim world.
Israeli officials declined to comment on those talks, citing the extreme sensitivity of the matter.
Israel
captured the site, located in the walled Old City, and the rest of east
Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war. An Israeli flag was
enthusiastically raised on the peak of the Dome of the Rock and a
military commander announced what later became an iconic catchphrase:
"The Temple Mount is in our hands."
But
the flag was quickly taken down, and Israel conceded administrative
control of the compound to the Waqf, the Islamic religious body in
Jerusalem, to keep the peace. The Western Wall, a remnant of the
retaining wall of the ancient second Jewish temple just below the
compound, was cemented as Israel's central Jewish pilgrimage site.
When
hawkish former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon ascended the mount in 2000
in a demonstration of Israeli sovereignty over the site, it helped
trigger the second Intifada, or Palestinian uprising. More than 3,000
Palestinians and 1,000 Israelis were killed in several years of
fighting.
The Palestinians
claim east Jerusalem, and the Old City, as the capital of their future
state. The status of the site remains perhaps the most sensitive and
explosive issue in U.S.-brokered peace talks.
Despite
the tensions, the Jewish visits continue. Early one morning last week,
during limited hours open for tourist visits, eight Orthodox Jews
ascended the compound in groups of one and two.
An
Israeli police officer and a Waqf representative shadowed the Jewish
visitors to ensure they did not break the ban on Jewish prayer. When
their minders were distracted, the visitors murmured psalms.
The
Jewish visitors said they often resort to tricks to circumvent the
police-enforced ban on prayer. Some pretend to talk on the phone but
recite prayers instead. Others secretly prostate themselves in prayer
while bending down to observe shrubbery, pick up dropped keys or take a
photo low to the ground.
Pinchas Rosenfelder, a
44-year-old Toronto native who moved to Israel, said his monthly visits
to the site were to uphold Israeli sovereignty of the site.
"If you're not in a place, you lose it," Rosenfelder said. "The lack of a Jewish presence here is not a good thing."
Rabbi
David Rosen, an Israeli interfaith activist, said Jews should be
allowed to pray at the site in the framework of an Israeli-Palestinian
peace deal, but allowing Jewish prayer before peace was reached could
torpedo current negotiations.
"The
fact something is a right doesn't mean you have to exercise it," Rosen
said about Jewish prayer at the site. "It doesn't take much to light
this tinderbox."
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