Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March 2000, Pages
16-17
Anxious for Armageddon
Militant Coalition of Christian Fundamentalist and Jewish
Orthodox Cults Plots Destruction of Al Aqsa Mosque
By Grace Halsell
For three decades, Gershon Solomon, a militant Israeli who heads
an organization dedicated to the destruction of Jerusalem’s most
holy Islamic shrine, has led Zionist zealots in armed assaults on
the Muslim grounds of Haram al-Sharif, or Noble Sanctuary, that
encloses both the Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa mosque.
No Israeli political leader has spoken out against the assaults
on the mosque, holy to a billion Muslims around the world. Moreover,
no Israeli rabbi has condemned them. Indeed, beginning in 1967,
many of the assaults were led by Jewish rabbis.
I first heard about the Israeli militants’ intent to destroy the
mosque in 1979 when I went to Jerusalem. I talked at length with
Bobby Brown, a third-generation American from Brooklyn who, flying
to the Jewish state and instantly becoming a new citizen, confiscated
land from Palestinians to help build an illegal Jewish settlement.
“The mosque,” he told me, “has to go. It is a blot on our land.”
Militant Jews such as Brown and Solomon want a Jerusalem that is
“pure” Jewish—without evidence of inhabitants of the other monotheistic
faiths and their shrines. Surprisingly, millions of U.S. evangelical
Christians endorse and financially support this Jewish plan.
Although united in their immediate goal of destroying the mosque,
the Israeli militants and Christian zealots have different long-range
agendas.
Secular Jews such as Stanley Goldfoot, one of the perpetrators
of the dynamiting in 1946 of the King David Hotel which killed some
100 Christian, Muslim and Jewish civilians, want the mosque destroyed
for political reasons. Other Jews believe that the building of a
temple on the Muslim grounds will usher in the Jewish Messiah.
A growing number of Christians embrace the idea that in all history,
Israel is on center stage. They say God has planned epochs of time
(“dispensations”) such as an “in-gathering” of Jews in the ancient
land of Canaan. One epoch, they say, includes the present time when
Jews are obligated to build a Jewish temple and re-institute animal
sacrifice. Such epochs or “dispensations” are necessary, they say,
before Christ can return. Ironically, while Christian dispensationalists
place Israel as the most important nation in all the world, they
do not respect or even like Jews—as Jews. Yet, because they believe
Christ can only land in a “safe” area near Jerusalem, they make
a cult of the land. They thus give total, unquestioned support to
Israel.
Goldfoot and Solomon are welcome in countless U.S. pulpits, where
Christian Zionists give generous donations of money, as well as
their gold wedding rings and gold earrings to finance the mosque’s
destruction. They know its destruction might well trigger wars culminating
in Armageddon, but they welcome this. They push Armageddon along,
saying they, as “Born-Again Christians,” will be spared any suffering,
because they will be “Raptured,” wafted up to heaven to view the
slaughter below. “I’m not worried,” Lynchburg, Virginia televangelist
Jerry Falwell shouts. “You know why? I ain’t gonna be here!”
This dispensationalist doctrine, less than 200 years old, pervades
Assemblies of God, Pentecostal and other charismatic churches, as
well as the 16 million-member Southern Baptist Convention and countless
so-called Bible churches and mega-churches. It’s estimated that
at least one out of every 10 Americans is a devotee of this cult.
In both Israel and the U.S., a conspiracy of silence reigns as
militants lay siege to the Jerusalem mosque. No political leader—or
religious leader—in Israel or the U.S. has addressed the issue.
In the case of Israeli rabbis, if they themselves have not aided
and abetted planned assaults on the mosque, they have kept silent.
In the case of all major U.S. Christian church leaders—the voices
that are heard throughout the land—if they themselves are not raising
money to destroy the mosque, they keep silent about the conspiracy.
“I don’t favor it,” one Christian told me. “But if it happens”
–the destruction of the mosque—“it doesn’t mean I won’t support
it.”
Grace Halsell, a Washington, DC-based author, is the author
of 15 books, including Journey to Jerusalem and Prophecy
and Politics. They, along with her latest book, Forcing God’s
Hand, are available through the AET
Book Club.
SIDEBAR
Assaults on the Mosque
Two groups in particular are dedicated to the destruction of Jerusalem’s
most sacred Islamic shrine: the militant Bloc of the Faithful or
Gush Emunim, led by rabbis such as Moshe Levinger; and Ateret Cohanim,
a Jewish yeshiva composed of militant Jewish students and their
rabbis. Fundamentalist, militant Christians, who also want the mosque
destroyed, give support and financial aid to both of these Israeli
organizations, as do wealthy American Jews.
Beginning in 1967, when Israel militarily seized Arab East Jerusalem,
Jewish terrorists on more than 100 occasions have laid siege to
the Muslim mosque. Here are a few of the assaults:
- August 1967. Chief Chaplain of the Armed Forces Shlomo
Goren—later Israel’s chief rabbi—leads 50 armed extremists onto
Haram al-Sharif. “It is a holy commandment,” Goren said, for Jews
to go to the Muslim grounds, which Jews call the Temple Mount.
Writing in an Israeli publication, Eti Ronel reports: “Many rabbis,
including members of the Council of the Chief Rabbinate, support…Jewish
sovereignty” over Haram al-Sharif.
- August 21, 1969. Jewish extremists set fire to Al Aqsa,
destroying a priceless wood and ivory pulpit sent from Aleppo
by the Muslim ruler Saladin. The arson prompts the United Nations
Security Council to condemn Israel’s failure to curb terrorist
attacks on Islam’s shrine. Four months later (12/19/69) a group
of militant Jews storm their way to Haram al-Sharif, in order,
they claim, “to conduct Hanukkah prayers.”
- March 3, 1971. Gershon Solomon leads Temple Mount Faithful
followers onto Haram al-Sharif. After struggling with Palestinian
guards, they are expelled. Three years later (3/3/74) Solomon
again, with followers, storms the mosque. Again (7/14/78) Solomon
leads militant Jews onto the Islamic holy grounds. Palestinians
stage protests. Israeli troops hurl tear gas to quell the rioting.
- August 10, 1980. Three hundred Gush Emunim fanatics,
heavily armed, overcome Palestinian police and storm the grounds,
but are later dispersed. A month later (9/15/80) armed Gush Emunim
settlers associated with Stanley Goldfoot and the Temple Mount
Faithful again force their way onto the mosque grounds. After
scuffling with police they are evicted.
- April 11, 1982. Alan Goodman, an Israeli citizen with
a U.S. passport, marches into Al Aqsa with an M-16 rifle and opens
fire on worshippers, killing two Palestinians and wounding others.
In November 1997, the Israeli government releases Goodman. Unrepentant,
Goodman boasts, “I fulfilled my mission.”
- July 25, 1982. Yoel Lerner, a member of the militant
Meir Kahane Kach movement, storms the mosque grounds with plans
to dynamite and destroy the Dome of the Rock.
- March 10, 1983. Armed Gush Emunim fanatics climb walls
onto Haram al-Sharif, attempting to overcome security guards and
take the mosque by storm. They have in their possession large
quantities of explosives, automatic rifles and pistols. Twenty-nine
are charged and held for trial.
- September 21, 1983. An Israeli court acquits the 29 Jewish
terrorists who six months earlier had laid siege on the mosque.
- January 27, 1984. In the most ambitious plot to dynamite
and destroy the mosque, Jewish terrorists, armed with 250
pounds of explosives, including dozens of grenades, boxes of dynamite
and 12 rounds of mortar, attempt to dynamite and destroy the
mosque. They are led by Rabbi Moshe Levinger, one of the most
militant of Jewish extremists.
- 1994. The Israelis appoint Meir Davidson, a senior official
of Ateret Cohanim, as a municipal adviser on Palestinian properties.
This signals the Israeli government will work closely with an
organization whose aim is destruction of the mosque.
- September 1996. Ateret Cohanim, funded largely through
tax-exempt dollars donated by rich American Jews, including Miami
millionaire Irving Moskowitz, opened a tunnel—excavated in secret
night-time operations—that runs the length of the Al Aqsa complex.
The controversial tunnel sparked intense fighting which claimed
the lives of 60 Palestinians and 15 Israeli soldiers. Israeli
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu proudly visited the tunnel,
as have fundamentalist Christian leaders.
- October 18, 1998. Gershon Solomon, with followers waving
Israeli flags and blowing rams’ horns, mounts a ramp to the mosque
grounds. “The time has come to rebuild the Jewish Temple,” said
Solomon. To underscore his point, Solomon parked near an Old City
gate a flatbed truck carrying a 41—G.H.
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