Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November/December
1996, pgs. 16-17
The Jerusalem Tunnel—Two Inside Views
An American Journalist
Attempts to Destroy the Haram al-Sharif Have
a Long History
By Stephen J. Sosebee
The violent clashes that left 70 dead in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip are both the result of Arab frustration over
the lack of progress in the so-called peace process and an example
of how greatly Palestinians fear for the security of the Dome of
the Rock and Al-Aqsa mosque, which make up the Haram al-Sharif.
Their fear for Islams third holiest site, called the Temple
Mount by Jews, is not unfounded. Palestinians have seen 29 years
of violent provocations by Jewish extremists seeking to end the
Islamic occupation of the Temple Mount. They fear that
the Netanyahu governments effort to settle the political issue
of Jerusalem unilaterally will ally them with violent zealots eyeing
Al-Aqsa.
Following the Israeli capture of East Jerusalem in
1967, Israel announced it would respect the status quo of the religious
sites in Jerusalem. At that same time, however, a movement began
among religious nationalists in Israel to gain a foothold on the
Haram al-Sharif in order to build a new temple there on what they
claim is the site of the destroyed first and second Jewish temples.
During a conference on Jerusalem, Dr. Z. Wahrhatig, the Israeli
minister of religious affairs, stated that while he did not object
to the idea of rebuilding the temple, the time had not yet come.
An earthquake would occur, he said, to ruin the mosques
and enable Israel to rebuild the temple there.
Swiss Ambassador E. Thalman made a fact-finding tour
of Jerusalem in late 1967 and reported fear among Arabs concerning
Israeli intentions on the Temple Mount. Statements by Israeli
official representatives and Jewish personalities concerning Jewish
claims and plans in the temple area had an alarming effect
on him and the Arabs, Thalman said. He also expressed concern about
Dr. Wahrhatigs provocative statements that sooner
or later Israel would rebuild their temple on the Dome of
the Rock. At the same time, prominent rabbis formed an organization
called el Har Adoni, which was devoted to regaining
Jewish sovereignty over the Temple Mount.
In 1969, an Australian set fire to Al-Aqsas
southeastern wall. Though linked to messianic groups, the man was
declared insane and deported.
There has been a serious growth in right-wing religious
nationalism in Israel over the past 29 years. Settlements are built
on biblical sites and religious rationales employed by the right
wing to justify political policies that violate international law.
Within this emergence of the settler movement in Israel
is the creation of several groups devoted to reclaiming
the Temple Mount for the Jewish people. There are adherents to a
school of thought in Israel who believe that the coming of the messiah
cannot occur without first rebuilding the temple. Unfortunately,
they want to place it on the land administered by an Islamic trust
known as the Waqf.
In the 1970s extremist groups devoted to retaking
the Temple Mount began a campaign of provocation and violence against
the Haram al-Sharif, including the digging of tunnels, attempts
to enter the area by force and, increasingly, efforts to bomb the
two mosques. Between 1978 and 1982, the Waqf documented 200 acts
of desecration and provocation on or near the Haram al-Sharif by
Israeli extremists.
In 1982, Allan Goodman, an Israeli soldier with an
American passport, charged into the Haram al-Sharif, spraying worshippers
with gunfire, killing two and wounding 30. According to Israels
Maariv newspaper, Goodman was recently seen trying to enter
the area with tourists during one of his 48-hour releases from prison.
Goodman has not shown any remorse for the murders, saying that his
actions were not bad because no Jews were killed.
In the early 1980s, the Haram al-Sharif was seriously
targeted for destruction by Israeli underground terrorist groups.
In January 1984, a terror cell was arrested while trying to scale
the walls around Al-Aqsa carrying arms and explosives. Several months
later, members of a larger cell were arrested as they placed bombs
under Arab buses in Jerusalem. Calling themselves Terror Against
Terror, they bombed three West Bank mayors cars, killed
students in a machine gun attack on Hebron University and put bombs
in Arab markets and sports stadiums. This group of settlers had
detailed plans and the explosives to blow up both mosques, Al-Aqsa
and the Dome of the Rock. Palestinians are well aware that despite
their records of murder and their serious threats to Arab religious
sites in Jerusalem, the last members of this terror cell were released
from prison by Israeli presidential pardon in 1990. None expressed
remorse for the violence, and one leader, Yehud Itzion, is back
leading a group devoted to desecrating the Haram al-Sharif.
The massacre of 17 unarmed Palestinian civilians
and the wounding of hundreds more by Israeli soldiers at the site
in 1990 was sparked by a group called The Temple Mount Faithful,
who were marching to set a cornerstone for the building of a temple
on the site of Islams third holiest shrine. These zealots
are led by Jerusalem councilman Gershon Solomon, who is connected
to the Likud political establishment in Israel. Since the massacre,
there have been almost weekly marches by extremists around and on
the Haram al-Sharif, often resulting in clashes near the site.
This August, an Israeli court reversed a 28-year policy
and ruled that The Temple Mount Faithful would be allowed
to enter the Islamic areas to pray on the Jewish holiday of Tisha
Beav. Despite protests from Muslim leaders, the group entered
al-Haram with police protection, but left quickly due to opposition
from worshippers outraged that a group calling for the destruction
of the Haram al-Sharif was permitted near its sacred sites.
The Netanyahu government may claim the new tunnel
entrance is harmless, but such diggings have caused serious damage
to Islamic property at the Haram al-Sharif in the past. In 1969,
14 Waqf properties were damaged by Israeli digging in the area.
In 1971, a tunnel partially collapsed the Rabat Kurd building on
the Mount. Three years later, serious cracks were discovered in
the wall of Al-Juwhariya School due to tunneling. Other tunnels
dug by extremist groups to get near the Mount to pray have caused
damage and clashes in Jerusalem in the past.
Recent history shows that the actions of extremist
groups on all sides can undermine the stability of the entire region.
Mix provocation by religious zealots with deep frustration over
the lack of progress in the peace process and there is little wonder
that the West Bank and Gaza turned back so quickly into a killing
zone. For the peace process to succeed, the Netanyahu government
must denounce and prevent desecration of religious sites in Jerusalem
and begin the final status negotiations under the Oslo framework.
Otherwise, the Oslo accords also are a casualty from the bloodletting
following the tunnel opening. |