Temple Mount Controversy Continues

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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May 17, 2007, 9:03:09 PM5/17/07
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*Perilous Times

Temple Mount Controversy Continues*

by Ezra HaLevi and Hillel Fendel

(IsraelNN.com) Record numbers of Jews have ascended the Temple Mount
since a large group of religious-Zionist rabbis issued a public call to
visit Judaism’s holiest site in accordance with Jewish legal strictures.

On Jerusalem Day, for the first time in recent history, multiple groups
of 40 or more Jews were allowed to ascend the Temple Mount at once. In
the past, groups were severely limited in size – and only one allowed on
the mount at a time.

Two Jewish visitors were arrested Wednesday for belting out "Shma
Yisrael" – the Jewish declaration of faith and G-d's Oneness of
Deuteronomy 6:4. Unlike on previous occasions, the rest of the group was
not penalized, and many returned the next day to visit as well.

The religious precautions required of one who wishes to ascend the Mount
"in purity" include immersing in a mikveh (ritual bath), taking off
one's shoes, and clarifying the precise areas forbidden for entry - or
else going only with a guide who knows the area.

“There has been a marked increase in Jewish visitors to the Temple Mount
since the large group of rabbis ascended,” the Movement for the
Preparation of the Temple said in a statement. “The public is encouraged
to study the relevant laws and familiarize themselves with their holiest
place.”

However, many rabbis in the religious-Zionist camp continue to rule out
visits to the sacred site. Former Chief Rabbi Avraham Shapira, the
nonagenarian [in his 90's] dean of Yeshivat Merkaz HaRav, told the
massive crowds who came to celebrate Jerusalem Day at the yeshiva that
entry to the Mount is not permitted at this time, because of the lack of
certainty as to the exact location of the Biblically-forbidden areas on
the mount.

Former Sephardic Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu and Rabbi Shlomo Aviner
are also among those who forbid Jewish entry to the Temple Mount. It is
felt that the extreme nature of the Biblical prohibition against
entering the site of the Temple outweighs both political/nationalist
concerns and the confidence of those who claim they know the precise
location of the forbidden areas.

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