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The
Temple Mount Bombers
by
Uri Avnery
The Security Service is haunted
by a terrible fear: that another Israeli Prime Minister will be
assassinated. The extreme right-wing, which does not hide its admiration
for Yigal Amir and his deed, harbors some who dream of a similar action.
After all, if Amir succeeded in murdering the
Oslo
process, why shouldn’t another Amir succeed in
murdering the process of dismantling the settlements in the Gaza Strip?
But the Security Service also
entertains an even greater fear: that a Jewish terror group will bomb
the mosques on the
Temple
Mount
.
Years ago, a Jewish underground
organization was preparing to do exactly that. It was uncovered before
it could carry out its plans. Now similar plots are afoot.
The Security Service believes
that this action is intended to put an end to Ariel Sharon’s
disengagement plan. Bombing the al-Aqsa Mosque and/or the Dome of the
Rock would inflame the whole Arab and Muslim world. It would cause
profound upheavals, bring down Arab regimes, perhaps ignite a
fundamentalist revolution throughout the region. In such a situation,
who would think about evacuating settlements?
All this is true, but it does
not touch the roots of the conspiracy. The bombing of the Haram al-Sharif
mosques is an enterprise that goes well beyond topical issues – it is
a revolutionary act that would change the Jewish religion itself. From
the point of view of the potential bombers, that is the main thing.
In
Israel
, Jewish history is divided into three “houses,”
meaning three temples:
The
First
Temple
was supposedly built by King Solomon in the Tenth
Century BC and destroyed by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar in the
year 568 BC. The people of
Judea
were taken as captives to
Babylon
and about 50 years passed before they were allowed
to return to
Jerusalem
and build the temple again.
The building of the
Second
Temple
was finished in 516 BC. It was renovated and
expanded by King Herod around 20 BC and destroyed by the Roman general
Titus in 70 AC.
The
Third
Temple
does not exist, but the new Jewish community that
started to establish itself in
Palestine
in 1882 often calls itself the “Third House.”
(When Moshe Dayan became hysterical at the beginning of the Yom Kippur
war, he started lamenting the “Destruction of the Third House”). But
this is only a symbolic term – not one of the Zionist movement’s
Founding Fathers nor any of the founders of the State of Israel, dreamed
of building a new temple.
The reason for this is rooted
in the events of 1,934 years ago. When the Romans besieged
Jerusalem
, before the town fell and was destroyed, a leading
rabbi, Yokhanan Ben-Zakkai, was smuggled out in a coffin. He approached
the Roman commander and succeeded in getting permission from him to
establish a Jewish religious center in Yavneh, between
Jaffa
and Asdod.
That was the beginning of a
revolution in the Jewish religion.
“The First House” was a
rather insignificant edifice. Contrary to the Bible, there is no
historical evidence whatsoever that the empire of David and Solomon ever
existed.
Jerusalem
was a mere hamlet,
Judea
a negligible entity. The Jewish religion as we know it came into being
only in the Babylonian exile, and since then two thirds of the Jews (as
they have been called since then) lived outside of
Palestine
.
The “Second House,” too,
began as a rather insignificant affair, as attested by a contemporary
prophet, but it spread in the course of time. King Herod, a great
builder, tried to win the hearts of his detractors by converting the
Temple
into a magnificent structure.
Even before that, a priestly
aristocracy had sprung up around the
Temple
and established its position in the Jewish community
of
Judea
. Its political expression was the Sadducee party.
Against it an opposition party, the Pharisees, was formed. They allowed
for a much wider interpretation of the holy scriptures and believed in
another world. At the time of this struggle, Jewish religious creativity
flourished and the Bible was written. Since the priestly establishment
was in power, the
Temple
plays a central role in the Bible. The ritual
sacrifice of animals accompanied other practices connected with the
Temple
, the symbolic habitation of the Almighty.
Jesus, a Jewish revolutionary,
rebelled against the commercialization of the
Temple
, as
did many of the Pharisees. The Hasmonean dynasty, which was based on the
priestly aristocracy, considered the Pharisees its enemies and executed
many of them.
All this changed when the
Temple
was destroyed. The structure disappeared, together
with the cult of sacrifices. The Jerusalemite aristocracy was
eliminated, the priests lost everything. The Jewish religion changed
course.
From then on, the rabbis,
successors of the Pharisees, were dominant in the Jewish community and
its religion. Long before the destruction of the
Second
Temple
, the great majority of Jews lived outside
Palestine
. After the destruction (and the futile Bar-Kokhba
rebellion of 135 AC), the Jewish community in
Palestine
dwindled.
Jerusalem
became a dream, and all significant events in the
development of the Jewish religion occurred far away from there.
After the destruction of the
temple, the Jewish religion became a matter of laws and commandments
unconnected with any particular territory. The
Land
of
Israel
and
Jerusalem
became more symbols than a territorial reality.
Judaism did not even demand that its believers make a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem
, as Islam requires its believers to travel to
Mecca
at least once in their life.
Until the advent of modern
Zionism, Jews never once tried to return en masse to
Palestine
– indeed, this was explicitly forbidden by their
religion. When half a million Jews were expelled from Catholic Spain in
1492, they dispersed throughout the Muslim Ottoman Empire, but only a
few went to
Palestine
which, too, was an Ottoman province. Napoleon’s
call to the Jews to set up a Jewish State in
Palestine
fell on deaf ears. The first proponents of the
modern Zionist idea, long before the appearance of Theodor Herzl, were
Englishmen and Americans motivated by Christian religious impulses.
During the last few centuries,
European-American Judaism became more and more a religion imbued with a
universal moral message. Jewish thinkers believed that it was the
“mission” of the Jews to bring universal ethics to the nations of
the world, seeing that as the real substance of Judaism.
Zionism came into being as a
part of the nationalist revolution in
Europe
and as a reaction to its generally anti-Semitic
character. It originated the theory that the Jews are a nation like
other European nations, and that this nation must set up its own state
in the country now called
Palestine
. Not by accident did the teachings of Herzl arouse
the violent and vocal opposition of almost all the great rabbis of his
time, whether Hassidim or their opponents the Mitnagdim, whether
orthodox or reformist.
But when the Zionist community
in
Palestine
established a state, something happened to Judaism
there. The connection with the territory, the soil, changed the face of
the religion, as it did to all other parts of national life. It is no
exaggeration to claim that the Jewish religion in
Israel
underwent a mutation, which has become more and more
extreme in recent years.
A religion with a universal
message became a tribal cult. A religion of ethics became a religion of
holy places. Yeshayahu Leibowitz, a Jew of the old kind, defined the
religion of the settlers as a pagan, idolatory cult.
The new cult of the temple is
the climax of this process. The practical preparations for the
destruction of the mosques and the restoration of the temple, together
with animal sacrifices and other temple cults, constitute a break with
the last two thousand years of Jewish religion. It is a religious
revolution of historic dimensions.
If this tendency becomes
dominant in the State of Israel, it will not, I believe, lead to the
building of the
Third
Temple
but to the destruction of the “Third House.” The
Second
Temple
, together with the Jewish people in this country,
came to a violent end because a small minority of fanatical Zealots, who
were very similar to today’s extremist settlers, came to power in the
Jewish community and dragged it into a mad, hopeless war. That can
happen again.
On the eve of Yom Kippur,
something to think about.
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