On Monday, chunks of rock still peppered the
entrance to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, Islam's third
holiest site. Volunteers worked to remove shards of
glass and metal, but parts of the crimson and gold
carpet were charred by stun grenades hurled into
the holy site by Israeli forces, who also fired
rubber-coated metal bullets at Muslim worshippers.
Clashes broke out Sunday when soldiers cleared
the way for Israelis, including a cabinet minister, to
visit the Al-Aqsa compound on Tisha B'Av, a Jewish
holiday marking the destruction of two Biblical
temples.
This has become a reoccurring scene, with ominous
implications, which has ignited Palestinian fears of
an Israeli takeover of the holy esplanade. Jews call
the esplanade the Temple Mount and consider it
their holiest site, and Muslims refer to it as the
Noble Sanctuary or al-Haram al-Sharif.
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Approximately 30 Palestinians were injured and
treated - most for tear gas inhalation, others for
injuries sustained from beatings - according to the
Islamic Waqf authorities, which administer the
affairs of Al-Aqsa Mosque and other religious sites.
At least three others were reportedly detained. In a
statement, Israeli police said they stormed the
compound because Palestinian protesters hurled
stones at them.
"Masked Palestinians inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque
threw rocks at police officers at the Mughrabi
[Moroccan] Gate," said Israeli police spokesperson
Micky Rosenfeld, adding that a number of police
were wounded. "Our police units entered inside the
Temple Mount area to deal with the disturbances
and quickly took control of the situation."
For years, religious figures and politicians have
been warning that any Israeli move to change
Muslims' exclusive control of the site would add an
explosive religious angle to the political conflict,
with Jerusalem at its core.
"The Al-Aqsa Mosque compound is a very sensitive
area. You can say it's the most volatile in the
world," said Abdel Azim Salhab, chairman of the
Islamic Waqf Council in Jerusalem. "[Al-Aqsa] is the
centre of the conflict in Jerusalem and in Palestine.
Tensions here will have implications globally."
Non-Muslim prayer has been banned at the
compound for centuries, and attempts by Jews to
pray there were few and far between. In the
aftermath of the Six-Day War, a status quo evolved
wherein Jews were sometimes allowed to enter the
compound under the protection of Israeli forces -
through the Mughrabi Gate - but not to pray there.
Israeli moves to alter the status quo would add an
explosive religious angle to the political conflict,
with Jerusalem at its core [Getty]
In recent years, however, there have been more
attempts by both right-wing and even secular
Jewish groups to enter the compound for
worshipping, with the support of Israeli politicians
and under the protection of soldiers.
"Unfortunately, since the 1967 war, the Israeli
occupation has been trying to impose their own
rules and policies on the Al-Aqsa Mosque
compound," Salhab said. "They are trying to alter its
character."
But the Waqf and others say the real shift began
after the second Intifada, following a visit by Ariel
Sharon, Israel's opposition leader back then, to the
Noble Sanctuary.
Samar Nimer, a Jerusalemite who works on ancient
manuscript restoration, said the frequency of
clashes has increased since September 2000. At the
Al-Aqsa Mosque, she points to a glass display case
that contains spent tear gas canisters and bullet
casings dating back to that time. "It's the same
scene repeating itself,” the 27-year-old said.
"The Palestinian youth barricade themselves inside
the mosque and the soldiers shoot tear gas inside.
Now, in what's become more frequent on Jewish
holidays, Muslims - even Waqf employees - are
prevented from entering Al-Aqsa. Meanwhile, the
Moroccan Gate is open for settlers and extremists,
provoking Muslims' feelings."
Nimer said that over time, the discussion over
entry to the compound has shifted to one focusing
on freedom of worship - with Israeli groups arguing
that Jews, like Muslims, should be allowed to pray
there.
"This is not about prayer,” she argued. "We are
worried by the entry of extremists who want to
demolish our mosque and build their temple.
There's been an increase in the number of attempts
to do so in recent years."
Israeli forces raided the mosque and fired
rubber-coated metal bullets at Muslim
worshippers [EPA]
In 1990, Israeli border police killed 22 Palestinians
during a demonstration triggered by an attempt by
Jewish extremists to lay the cornerstone for a new
temple in the compound.
Several years earlier, two members of an
organisation called the Jewish Underground (who
were founding figures in the pro-settlement Gush
Emunim movement), were caught trying to bomb
the two sites with the hope that the Third Temple
would be built on their ruins.
The issue of the compound was recently addressed
by the Brussels-based International Crisis Group,
which suggested that Jews wishing to visit should be
permitted to do so without being allowed to pray.
"Access for all communities is the best way to
ensure access for each," the report states.
The group reported discussions between Israel and
Jordan, which has custodial rights at the
compound, over the possibility of allowing non-
Muslim visitors. There's been no confirmation on
the Jordanian side to this report, and an Israeli
official in the Israeli prime minister's office has
denied it, according to Israeli daily Haaretz .
"There are no negotiations and no change in the
status quo at the Temple Mount," the official said.
The Crisis Group also recommended that Israel
communicate with the Palestinians on issues
related to access to the esplanade, especially after
it had effectively banned any official Palestinian
presence in East Jerusalem in the years following
the second Intifada.
One analyst said that excluding Palestinians has only
strengthened the stubborn impasse. "As long as
there is no political solution that includes and is
satisfactory to all, we will continue to see scenes
from Al-Aqsa like the ones we saw [on Sunday],"
said Esmat Mansour, a West Bank-based expert on
Israeli affairs.
Palestinians have expressed fears that changes to
the status quo at Al-Aqsa were imminent, with
some believing Israeli authorities would impose a
division on prayer times or space [Getty]
Israeli authorities have repeatedly said they do not
want the arrangement they have had with Jordan
since 1967 to change. But last year, when Yehuda
Glick, a right-wing advocate of Jewish prayer at the
compound, was shot and critically wounded by a
Palestinian man, unrest in Jerusalem
heightened sharply.
Glick's weekly attempts to enter the esplanade had
regularly sparked dozens of demonstrations by
Muslim protesters, but the attempt on his life was
followed by an unprecedented closure of the Al-
Aqsa Mosque and a security beef-up by Israeli
authorities.
This heightened Palestinian fears that changes to
the status quo were imminent, with some believing
that Israeli authorities would impose a division on
prayer times or space, with Jews worshipping at
certain hours and places, and Muslims at others.
There is precedent for this apprehension, as Israeli
authorities partitioned the Ibrahimi Mosque, or
Cave of the Patriarchs, a site holy to both Muslims
and Jews located in the Old City of Hebron. After an
Israeli settler killed 29 Palestinians during Friday
prayers in 1994, the site was effectively divided two
years later.
"There have been rumours circulating about this
change for a long time,” Nimer said. "God knows
what will happen if this turns out to be true."
Source: Al Jazeera


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