yesterday, i cried , page-26

  1. 5,748 Posts.
    gz last post on the topic from me The Mosque in the background is the Dome of the Rock.............built by the Muslims many centuries later....something like 1,500 years......on top of the Temple Mount of whuch the Western (Wailing) Wall remains today.

    That's the problem.....We're stuck with it......Imagine if Muslims destroyed St Pauls Cathedral....and built a moque over it....... and then Christians regained control.......Care to speculate what would happen to that mosque?

    We know we can't destroy the Dome of the Rock......but let's not forget how it got there either........ nor what was destroyed in order to put it there........



    When Rome destroyed the Second Temple in 70 C.E., only one outer wall remained standing. The Romans probably would have destroyed that wall as well, but it must have seemed too insignificant to them; it was not even part of the Temple itself, just an outer wall surrounding the Temple Mount. For the Jews, however, this remnant of what was the most sacred building in the Jewish world quickly became the holiest spot in Jewish life.

    Throughout the centuries Jews from throughout the world made the difficult pilgrimage to Palestine, and immediately headed for the Kotel ha-Ma'aravi (the Western Wall) to thank God.

    The prayers offered at the Kotel were so heartfelt that gentiles began calling the site the "Wailing Wall." This undignified name never won a wide following among traditional Jews; the term "Wailing Wall" is not used in Hebrew.

    The Western Wall was subjected to far worse than semantic indignities. During the more than one thousand years Jerusalem was under Muslim rule, the Arabs often used the Wall as a garbage dump, so as to humiliate the Jews who visited it.

    For nineteen years, from 1948 to 1967, the Kotel was under Jordanian rule. Although the Jordanians had signed an armistice agreement in 1949 guaranteeing Jews the right to visit the Wall, not one Israeli Jew was ever permitted to do so.

    One of the first to reach the Kotel in the 1967 Six-Day War was Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, who helped revive a traditional Jewish custom by inserting a written petition into its cracks.

    It was later revealed that Dayan's prayer was that a lasting peace "descend upon the House of Israel."

    The custom of inserting written prayers into the Kotel's cracks is so widespread that some American-Jewish newspapers carry advertisements for services that insert such prayers on behalf of sick Jews. The mystical qualities associated with the Kotel are underscored in a popular Israeli song, a refrain of which runs: "There are people with hearts of stone, and stones with hearts of people."

    A rabbi in Jerusalem once told me that the Hebrew expression "The walls have ears" was originally said about the Western Wall.

    In addition to the large crowds that come to pray at the Kotel on Friday evenings, it is also a common gathering place on all Jewish holidays, particularly on the fast of Tisha Be-Av, which commemorates the destruction of both Temples. Today the Wall is a national symbol, and the opening or closing ceremonies of many Jewish events, including secular ones, are conducted there.

 
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