UNESCO says no Jewish history on Temple Mount; Hebron and Bethlehem 'Integral part of Palestine'
Netanyahu: UNESCO resolution ‘ignores unique Jewish connection to Temple Mount’
PM: UNESCO's decision ignores a 'fundamental part of human history'
Unclear who will benefit from polemical decision.
Temple Mount
Israeli flag and Temple Mount . (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
UNESCO,
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Association,
announced a number of resolutions just before the weekend started.
One,
submitted by the Russian Federation, called for defining UNESCO’s role
in safeguarding and preserving Palmyra and other Syrian World Heritage
sites. Another was about “Enhancing UNESCO’s contributions to promote a
culture of mutual respect and tolerance.”
A third was simply
entitled “Occupied Palestine” and addressed the Jerusalem Old City
hotspot that Jews refer to as the Temple Mount and Muslims call Haram
Al-Sharif, the Noble Sanctuary. Except that the Jewish link to the site,
considered the holiest place for Jews, went unmentioned.
In
the context of Jerusalem’s Old City, the document refers to Israel
solely as “the occupying power” and refers to the site itself, the world
famous esplanade flanked by the Western Wall - considered by many
experts to be the last existing retaining wall of the mount that once
held the ancient Jewish temples - only by its Islamic moniker.
The
decision refers to the plaza fronting the Western Wall only in
quotation marks, except when using one of its Arabic names, Al-Buraq, a
reference to the Prophet Mohammed’s ascent to heaven.
The Israeli government responded with fury.
“This
is yet another absurd UN decision,” an incandescent Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement released late on Saturday.
“UNESCO ignores the unique historic connection of Judaism to the Temple
Mount, where the two temples stood for a thousand years and to which
every Jew in the world has prayed for thousands of years. The UN is
rewriting a basic part of human history and has again proven that there
is no low to which it will not stoop.”
Carmel Shama Hacohen,
Israel’s representative to UNESCO, that has its seat in Paris, issued a
press release declaring that “even if UNESCO passes dozens of
resolutions, and decides to continue passing thousands more, Jerusalem
will always remain as part of the capital of Israel and the Jewish
people.”
On Saturday night, addressing Jordan, Algeria, Egypt,
Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, and Sudan, the nations which presented
the resolution, Shama Hacohen averred that, “As you continue on this
path of incitement, lies and terror you will be sending UNESCO down a
path towards irrelevance.”
The Jordan Times reveled: “Jordan triumphant in ‘diplomatic showdown’ over Jerusalem at UNESCO.”
Jews
are permitted to visit the site at pre-arranged times, but under
international agreements signed in 1967, when Israel captured the area
from Jordan in the 1967 war, Jewish worship is banned.
Without
citing specifics, the resolution also condemned Israel for “planting
fake Jewish graves in other spaces of the Muslim cemeteries” and for
“the continued conversion of many Islamic and Byzantine remains into the
so-called Jewish ritual baths or into Jewish prayer places.”
Among
the states supporting the decision were Argentina, France, Spain,
Slovenia, Sweden, India and Russia, several of which enjoys ostensibly
warm relations Israel.
A UNESCO spokesman declined to comment on the decision.
The Israeli government also declined to comment beyond the statement issued by the Prime Minister’s Office.
The
resolution, considered a victory for anti-Israel hard-liners, also
affirms that Hebron, a city that according to a most histories has a
3000-year history of Jewish life, and Bethlehem, the birthplace of
Jesus, are “are an integral part of Palestine.”
Referencing
“ongoing Israeli illegal excavations, works, construction of private
roads for settlers and a separation wall inside the Old City of
Al-Khalīl/Hebron, that harmfully affect the integrity of the site, and
the subsequent denial of freedom of movement and freedom of access to
places of worship,” UNESCO also urged “Israel, the occupying Power, to
end these violations in compliance with provisions of relevant UNESCO
conventions, resolutions and decisions.”
This resolution is not
the first attempt to designate anew holy sites in what may be the most
contested spot in the Middle East.
In October, 2015, facing the
rejection of Russia, China and even Cuba, that usually joins
anti-Israel initiatives, the Palestinian delegation to UNESCO withdrew a
proposed resolution that would have defined the Western Wall itself as
an “integral part” of the compound holy to Muslims.
Anwar Ben
Badis, a professor of Arabic and Aramaic at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem and at Al-Quds University, who often leads tours of the
esplanade, said the decision was “unequivocally political, not legal or
binding in any way, but at attempt to support and further the
Palestinian struggle.”
Speaking with The Media Line, Ben Badis
said he believes “that every decision provides international support to
everything the Palestinians are doing to free Al-Aqsa and all of
Palestine.”
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