96

Temple Mount prayer does not belong solely to right-wingers – opinion

View this email in your browser

The Jerusalem Post   10.08.2022

Temple Mount prayer does not belong solely to right-wingers – opinion

This Tisha Ba’av, I was one of 2,201 Jews who visited the Temple Mount — possibly the largest group of Jews to visit that sacred site on our national day of mourning, since the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE. I did not need to see all the huge kippot and wild-settler-youth side-curls surrounding me to know that this visit appeared partisan. But after waiting two hours, when we entered the Temple Mount, the thrill I felt was spiritual, historical, and ideological – not political.

If you take it seriously, you don’t go casually to the Temple Mount – it’s a pilgrimage. Thus, the night before I went to a ma’ayan, an oasis, as my mikvah. I am not a particularly pious guy. But dunking three times in the bracing cold water under the Jerusalem half-moon, felt cleansing. That I dipped days after ending a seven-week stretch of wearing a cast and a brace over a still-healing broken wrist, enhanced the sense of rebirth a meaningful mikvah experience offers.

Walking with two friends and my son from my house at 6:55 AM – and reaching the Kotel twenty minutes later – reminded me once again how lucky we are to have Jerusalem’s Old City as our front yard. To my surprise, hundreds were already waiting, but in good spirits, without shoving or shouting.

Despite the Gaza violence, despite friends’ advice to cancel my visit, despite the solemnity of the day, the atmosphere was carnival-like. Every few minutes some Hareidi intoned: “The sages forbid Jews on the Temple Mount.” Others yearned for the return of sacrifices, or a speedily-rebuilt Temple. But most took all the political hawking in good spirits.  

I knew that most of my fellow pilgrims were far to my right politically and religiously. I could imagine how many would rant about “the Arabs” if I asked. But on a day when we remember the Second Temple’s destruction because of the sin of Sinat Chinam – senseless hatred – I focused on our common bonds not our various wedges. And when I saw the banner proclaiming: Har HaBayit, Lev HaTzionut – The Temple Mount, the Heart of Zionism – rather than perceiving aggression or imperial ambition, I felt the historical power of that long longing.

I recalled Uri Zvi Greenberg’s chilling poem after the 1948 Independence War, lamenting that this miraculous new state would be missing “the holiest mountain,” that mountain “that props you up in the world.”

“Israel without that Mount,” Greenberg concluded, “is-not Israel.”

It was therefore, a true tikun, a healing, to wander the Temple Mount as a free Jew, as a proud citizen of democratic Israel, on Tisha Ba’av. I imagined how many Jews dreamed of this moment, which I arranged so easily, 2608 years after the Babylonians trashed the First Temple, 2092 years after the Romans demolished the Second Temple, 74 years after the Jordanians seized the Jewish Quarter illegally, and 55 years after Israeli troops reunited Jerusalem.

Admittedly, packed into that sentence is the political TNT that often threatens to tear the Jewish people apart. Too many right-wing Jews think they can undo history completely, while too many left-wingers think they can ignore history completely. Those who legitimize the Palestinians’ sweeping land claims to all the territory Jordanian troops hijacked in 1949, don’t understand why I would “impose” myself on the Temple Mount. But if we Jews are supposed to respect at least some Palestinian claims – why can’t all Jews acknowledge our deep bonds to the land – especially to the Temple Mount?

Once on the Temple Mount, the site’s enduring spiritual power was far more awe-inspiring than any passing political concerns. I was surprised at how openly we were allowed to pray – I even laid hands on my son’s head during the Priestly Blessing. I was equally surprised by how quickly the police chided us whenever we deviated just a bit to get a better photo-op.

Clearly, relations on the Temple Mount are fraught. And the police are caught in the middle, doing their best. I cannot quarrel with them. My son noted that anyone who would call them “anti-Semitic” for preventing Jewish prayer there is a fool. But I was dismayed to see someone temporarily detained afterwards for saying the kaddish prayer for the dead too long and too loudly.

I wondered what the charge could be: “Mourning without a license?” “Disorderly spirituality?” “Illegal Possession of a Jewish historical sense or Jewish pride?” “Reckless transcendence?” Or, perhaps, “Praying under the influence of our ancestors?”

Ironically, only in Jerusalem’s Holy Basin do women risk arrest for praying below – and men risk arrest for praying above.

Despite the wait, the heat, and the fast, we walked home jazzed. Frankly, the drama around visiting, and the infrequency of such visits, makes a Temple Mount pilgrimage feel extra-meaningful, especially on Tisha Ba’av. Nevertheless, Uri Zvi Greenberg’s warning resonated: If we abandon this anchor of the collective Jewish soul, we betray ourselves.

The more we abdicate, the weaker our claim looks. No Jew should allow Waqf-stirred bullies to stop us from praying freely there. And just as The Holy Temple did not belong to one faction or another, we must not let the Temple Mount become solely right-wing property. That’s why every Jewish visitor who comes respectfully, law-abidingly, and sincerely spiritually, reaffirms our enduring bonds with the Jewish people’s national and spiritual headquarters, in Biblical times, throughout millennia of exile, and now that we are home, too.

Recently designated one of Algemeiner’s J-100, one of the top 100 people “positively influencing Jewish life,” Gil Troy is the author of the newly-released The Zionist Ideas , an update and expansion of Arthur Hertzberg’s classic anthology The Zionist Idea, published by the Jewish Publication Society and a 2019 National Jewish Book Award Finalist.. A Distinguished Scholar of North American History at McGill University,and the author of nine books on American History, his book, Never Alone: Prison, Politics and  My People,  co-authored with Natan Sharansky was just published by PublicAffairs of Hachette.

–>

–>

This email was sent to >” target=”_blank” style=”color:#404040 !important;”><>

why did I get this?     unsubscribe from this list     update subscription preferences

Prof Gil Troy · 20 Derech Bet Lechem · Apt 2 · Jerusalem 9310925 · Israel