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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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February 2, 2017
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Palestinians
Turn Jerusalem Into a Tool of Terror
by Noah Beck
Special to IPT News
February 2, 2017
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Palestinian and
other Arab leaders threatened violence in response to President Trump's
pledge to move the U.S. embassy from Tel-Aviv to Jerusalem. While Bill
Clinton and George W. Bush also promised such a move as candidates, each
backed off.
The terrorist who killed four Israelis in Jerusalem Jan. 8 by mowing
them over with his truck expressed agitation after hearing a sermon at a
local mosque criticizing Trump's embassy relocation promise.
The Palestinian Authority (PA) leadership reportedly instructed the mosques it controls to focus
their religious sermons on the embassy relocation. Worse still, the PA
promised the terrorist's widow a lifetime,
$760-per-month stipend for her husband's "martyrdom for Allah."
Arab reactions to Trump's embassy plans are more heated than they were
to those of candidates Bush and Clinton perhaps because of Trump's pledge to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital and
relocate the embassy there from Tel Aviv, not only as a candidate
(including during his address at last year's AIPAC Policy Conference) but also as
president-elect, issuing public reassurances on the issue. Trump even planned to visit the Temple Mount as a candidate,
although the visit never materialized and – as president – he said last Thursday that it was "too early" to
discuss moving the U.S. Embassy.
Nevertheless, Palestinian and Arab leaders have warned that moving the
embassy could lead to unrest and violence. Influential Iraqi Shiite
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr called the idea "a declaration of war against
Islam." PA President Mahmoud Abbas said he could revoke the PLO's
recognition of Israel, while his Fatah party warned the move "would open
the gates of hell."
Such declarations by political and religious leaders give a green light
to Palestinians to react violently, as the Jerusalem terrorist truck attack
shows.
Palestinian leaders, including the "more moderate" Palestinian
Authority, regularly deny that Jews have any historical or religious
connection to the Temple Mount.
PA Jerusalem Affairs Minister Adnan al-Husseini demanded an apology Sunday after United Nations
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said it was "completely clear that
the Temple that the Romans destroyed in Jerusalem was a Jewish
temple." The statement "violated all legal, diplomatic and
humanitarian customs and overstepped his role as secretary general,"
al-Husseini said.
This is not the first time that the Palestinians, including the
"more moderate" Palestinian Authority, manipulated Jerusalem into
an incendiary trigger for terror.
As Palestinian Media Watch reported, Abbas led calls in
2015 for Palestinians to act violently to "defend" Muslim holy
sites. He blessed "every drop of blood that has been spilled for
Jerusalem" and presented violence in "defense" of holy sites
and against the Jews' "filthy feet" as a religious imperative.
Indeed, the "stabbing intifidah" was launched in 2015 by false
rumors that Israel was trying to change the status quo on the Temple
Mount.
"Arabs are convinced that Israel is set on destroying, desecrating
or 'Judaizing' Haram al-Sharif, the Jerusalem compound that includes
al-Aqsa, Islam's third-holiest site," Benny
Avni wrote in the New York Post. Such incitement persists,
Avni noted, even though "Israel points out that the arrangements that
have existed since 1967, when it seized control of the Temple Mount,
Judaism's holiest site, are intact, and will remain so: A Jordanian trust,
the Waqf, maintains the Mount. Jews can visit, but not pray
there."
Even worse, President Obama's State Department reinforced the
dangerously false incitement about Jerusalem promoted by Palestinians.
Writing about the 2015 "Stabbing Intifida," journalist Jeffrey Goldberg rightly pointed out that it was
"prompted in good part by the same set of manipulated emotions that
sparked the anti-Jewish riots of the 1920s: a deeply felt desire on the
part of Palestinians to 'protect' the Temple Mount from Jews."
In the 1929 Arab riots, Arabs killed more than 130 Jews, and
nearly as many Arabs died when British police responded. Among the
findings of a subsequent investigation by the Shaw Commission was that "the Mufti was influenced
by the twofold desire to confront the Jews and to mobilise Moslem opinion
on the issue of the Wailing Wall" (in Jerusalem) and that one of the
chief causes of the riots was "Propaganda among the less-educated Arab
people of a character calculated to incite them."
Arab incitement against Jews happens regularly, often without the
explosive element of Jerusalem. In a sermon broadcast on Hamas's Al-Aqsa TV
in early January, a Hamas leader name Marwan Abu Ras, accused Jews of sending
"AIDS-infected girls to fornicate with Muslim youths." He also
claimed that Israel was allowing drugs to be smuggled through tunnels into
Gaza, while blocking the entry of essential goods. "Their state is
about to disappear," Abu Ras said. "...My brothers, know that
people, stones, and trees all hate [the Jews]. Everyone on Earth hates this
filthy nation, a nation extrinsic to Mankind. This fact was elucidated by
the Quran and the Sunna."
But adding Jerusalem to Arab incitement against Israelis can make the
resulting violence even more explosive.
Qanta Ahmed, a pro-Israel Muslim reformer who visited both the Jewish
and Muslim holy sites at the Temple Mount, eloquently noted the Islamist thinking that
enables the weaponization of Jerusalem: "Forbidding worshippers from
entering holy sites in Islam, including non-conforming or pluralist Muslims
who reject both the ideology and accouterments of Islamism is an
impassioned pastime of fervent Islamists who foolishly believe only they
are the keepers of our Maker..."
Unfortunately, Jerusalem has a long and bloody history of being
manipulated by Muslim leaders into an explosive tool of incitement. But if
Islam truly is a religion of peace, its leading practitioners should stop
turning religious holy sites into weapons of war, and instead embrace
Doctor Ahmed's tolerance.
Noah Beck is the author of The Last
Israelis, an apocalyptic novel about Iranian nukes and other
geopolitical issues in the Middle East.
Related Topics: Noah Beck, Palestinian
incitement, Jerusalem,
U.S.
Embassy, Palestinian
Authority, Adnan
al-Husseini, Antonio
Guterres, Palestinian
Media Watch, Shaw
Commission, Hamas,
Marwan
Abu Ras
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