Prime Minister Harper who has been a staunch supporter of Israel and a
shining example of moral leadership in an increasingly dark era
experienced up close and personal the brutal oppression of Islamic
apartheid.
This is the very definition of racism, hate and intolerance and yet
the world sanctions it. Islamic Jew hatred, just part of the passing
parade.
Imagine if someone tried to keep the Prime Minister of a out of a
synagogue or mosque (the Temple Mount is the holiest site to the Jewish
people) or anywhere for that matter because one of his guards were
Muslim.
Muslims will never address the sickness in their culture until the world demands it of them.
Their supremacism is vicious.
Islamic Waqf Revises History: ‘Temple Mount, Kotel are Muslim’.
It’s bad enough the Jews are prohibited from visiting their holiest site –
now
they claims the great Jewish King Solomon was Muslim, and the Western
Wall is holy to Islam. And these are Islamic authorities.
The Muslim Waqf reportedly vetoed Canadian PM’s planned tour of the Temple Mount, because some of his guards are Jews.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen
Harper planned to tour the Temple Mount after visiting the Western Wall
(Kotel) Tuesday, but the visit was torpedoed at the last minute
by the Muslim Waqf, which said it would not allow Harper’s security
detail onto the Mount, since some of the bodyguards are Jewish, leading
Temple activist Yehuda Glick told Arutz Sheva in an exclusive interview. Bnei Brith Canada confirmed the story.
There are also alternative versions of
the events, however, and it cannot yet be said with complete certainty
which is the correct one.
Members of Harper’s entourage had made a
preliminary tour of the Mount Sunday morning. The Waqf’s announcement
that it would not allow the Jewish bodyguards in was made at the last
moment, supposedly because the Waqf did not know earlier that some of
the guards were Jewish.
Harper would not enter the Mount without
the bodyguards and the visit was cancelled, according to a press
statement by B’nai Brith Canada.
“It is a shame that the Prime Minister’s
visit to the Kotel was marred after he learned that his security detail
would not be allowed in to the Dome of the Rock
because they are Jewish,” said Frank Dimant, CEO, B’nai Brith Canada.
“B’nai Brith delegations have also faced moments of discrimination and
harassment on previous missions. We have raised this issue with Canada’s
Office of Religious Freedom. Equal access must be given to Jewish
worshipers wishing to ascend the Temple Mount. This incident serves as a
stark reminder of the religious discrimination going on at the hands of
the Islamic Waqf responsible for administering the site.”
Version 2
However, the Huffington Post has a different version of what happened.
“Planning and logistics required on a
trip like this can be complicated and unfortunately we weren’t able to
make it work in a manner that satisfied the security organizations
involved,” Harper spokesman Jason MacDonald said of the decision to
cancel the visit, according to the publication.
“Specifically,” he is cited as saying,
“Shin Bet (the Israel Security Agency) would not guarantee that they
would not enter the mosque.”
While the Huffington Post quote
is ambiguous, MacDonald was apparently saying that the Shin Bet refused
to promise that if disturbances occur, its men would refrain from
entering the Al Aqsa Mosque. It is not clear whether the people
demanding this commitment were the Waqf or the Canadians.
Version 3
Arutz Sheva spoke to sources in the Foreign Ministry who
confirmed that the Waqf had cancelled Harper’s visit. However, their
version was that the Waqf simply refused to allow Canadian security men
into the Temple Mount.
Glick, a prominent Temple activist and LIBA project coordinator, told
Arutz Sheva Wednesday
that he spoke to sources within Harper’s entourage who confirmed that
the Waqf refused to allow Jewish bodyguards into the Mount.
On Sunday, Glick accompanied a former
Canadian minister on a tour of the Temple Mount. Stockwell Day, who
served as Canada’s Minister of Public Safety between 2006 and 2008,
visited the Temple Mount following a coincidental meeting with a resident of Jerusalem, Yosef Rabin, who regularly visits the Temple Mount
compound.
An accompanying video shows Arabs –
apparently fom the Waqf – shouting and employing a threatening tone as
Glick and the Canadian group conducted the preliminary tour on Sunday.
Rabin said that his meeting with Day took place over Shabbat, when he visited friends for a Shabbat meal also attended by Day.
During the meal, Rabin told Arutz Sheva,
he told the former Canadian minister about the situation on the Temple
Mount where police, in an attempt to appease the Muslim Waqf which was
left in charge of the compound after the 1967 Six Day War, ban Jews from
praying or performing any other form of worship. Police sometimes close
the Mount to Jews altogether in response to Muslim riots – for days or
weeks at a time – despite evidence that such violence is usually planned in advance for the specific purpose of forcing Jews out.
“When I told Day about the situation on
the Temple Mount, it pegged his interest and he asked me to arrange a
visit for him,” said Rabin.
“This trip has been an amazing experience
with the visit to the Kotel being one of the most touching,” said Eric
Bissell, national president, B’nai Brith Canada. “As Prime Minister
Harper approached the Western Wall, I could not help but think about how
the Jewish people struggled for thousands of years for the freedom to
pray at our holiest site. As a child survivor on the run during the
nightmare of the Holocaust, this moment is more than I could ever have
imagined or hoped to have been part of. To witness such support is a
true miracle.”
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