










| “Jerusalem has been the center
of Jewish life, of Jewish yearning for over 3000 years. That is the
reason that the State of Israel has rededicated the Jewish holy city
to be its indivisible capital.î |
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Jerusalem (I)
Whose city whose "holy city" is
it?


It is thirty-nine years since Israel’s victory
in the Six-Day War in 1967, that the city of Jerusalem, which had
been divided for nineteen years, has been reunited under Israeli
rule. But there is still much talk, and many people insist, that
solution of the “Middle East Problem” will not be possible
until Israeli Jews relinquish their “occupation” and
restore the holy city — or, at the very minimum, its eastern
part — to its “rightful owners”, the Moslem Arabs.
What are the facts?
A city of many nationalities. Before the end of
the 1967 Six-Day War, during which the Israeli Defense Forces re-conquered
Jerusalem from the Jordanians, claims to Jerusalem being a Moslem holy
city were rarely, if ever, asserted. Jerusalem had always been a city
in which many religions and nationalities lived side by side. It was
only after the old city was back in Jewish hands that the Moslem Arabs
declared their willingness to wage “jihad” (holy war) to
bring the city back into Arab possession.
The notion to call Jerusalem an Islamic holy city has only
come about in modern times, especially after the Arabs lost the city
to Israel in the Six-Day War. It now has gained currency by dint of constant
repetition. The basis for the claim is that Jerusalem does indeed contain
an Islamic holy site, namely the Temple Mount (sacred to both Moslems
and Jews) with its two mosques, El Aksa and the Dome of the Rock. It
is the place from which Mohammed is believed to have ascended to heaven.
Mohammed never set foot in Jerusalem. But aware that it was the holy
city of Christians and Jews, and wishing to convert them to his new religion,
he commanded his followers to build a mosque in Jerusalem. But never
in Moslem history did this mosque compare in significance to the Moslem
holy cities of Mecca and Medina — cities that no “infidel” may
visit.
A tenuous Moslem claim. It’s on the basis
of this religious tradition that the Moslems designated the entire Jewish
Temple Mount to be their holy site. The Israeli Government, in its constant
spirit of accommodation to Moslem sensibilities, has largely acceded
to this tradition and has put the area in and around the two mosques
entirely under Moslem control. But how would Christians feel if, instead
of from the Temple Mount, Moslem tradition had Mohammed ascend from the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and if the Moslem Arabs were to claim that
site as their property? The Christian world, often ready to consent to
Moslem claims against Jews and Israelis, would be greatly astonished
and would certainly resist such claim. But Moslem Arab assertiveness
doesn’t end there. On the tenuous claim of their right to the Temple
Mount, they have construed a claim to the entire city of Jerusalem (or
at the very least to its eastern part), which they have declared to be
their “third holiest city”. And it would be an insult to
all Moslems and all Arabs to leave the city in the hands of the “infidel
Jews”.
Jerusalem: Never an Arab capital. But the city of
Jerusalem — in contrast to Baghdad, Cairo, and Damascus — has
never played any major role in the political and religious lives of the
Moslem Arabs. It was never a political center, never a national or even
a provincial or sub-provincial capital of any country since biblical
times. It was the site of one Moslem holy place, but otherwise a backwater
to the Arabs. The passion for Jerusalem was not discovered by the Moslem
Arabs until most recent history.
A center of Jewish life. Jerusalem has stood at
the center of the Jewish people’s national life since King David
made it the capital of his kingdom in 1003 BCE. It remained the capital
until the kingdom was conquered by the Babylonians 400 years later. After
the return from Babylonian exile, Jerusalem again served as the capital
of the Jewish people for the next five and a half centuries.
Jews are not the usurpers in Jerusalem. They have been
living there since the Biblical era and have been the majority population
since the 19th century. Jews have synagogues and other holy sites in
most cities of the world. But do they claim sovereignty over those cities
because of it? Of course not! It would be preposterous and people wouldn’t
accept it. And the Moslem Arab claim to Jerusalem, based on the mosques
on the Temple Mount, is just as untenable. Jerusalem has been the center
of Jewish life, of Jewish yearning, and of Jewish thinking for over 3000
years. That is the reason that the State of Israel has rededicated the
Jewish holy city to be its indivisible capital.
This ad has been published and paid for by


Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President

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