by Eli E. Hertz
Palestinian
Arabs have concentrated many of their terrorist attacks on Jews in
Jerusalem, hoping to win the city by an onslaught of terror who seek to
make life in the City of Peace unbearable. But this is not a new tactic.
Arab strategy to turn Jerusalem into a battleground began in 1920.
Unfortunately,
Arab leaders often turn to violence to gain what they were unable to
achieve at the negotiating table. When talks broke down at Camp David in
2000, Palestinian Arab leaders unleashed the al-Aqsa Intifada, which amounted to a full-blown guerrilla war against Israel.
It
began the day before Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, when Arab mobs
hurled rocks from the Temple Mount onto Jewish worshipers praying at
the Western Wall below. That rock attack turned into a steady campaign
of terrorist attacks. As the priming powder for the Intifada,
Palestinian leaders incited Palestinians and Muslims throughout the
world with fables that falsely suggested that Jews began an assault on
al-Aqsa when Ariel Sharon made a half-hour visit to the Temple Mount
during tourist hours. The truth is that Palestinians’ plans for warfare
had begun immediately after Arafat walked out of the Camp David talks.
Why do Palestinian Arabs focus terror attacks on the City of Peace?
Because Palestinians, despite their rhetoric, fully understand
Jerusalem’s symbolic and spiritual significance to the Jews. Suicide
attacks – on public buses and cafes, malls, and other crowded sites in
the heart of the city – since the 1993 Oslo Accords, are designed to
make life hell for Jewish Jerusalemites. Atrocities like the February
and March 1996 bombings of two #18 buses that killed 26 people and the
August 2001 bombing of a Sbarro pizzeria that killed 15 (including five
members of one family), are part of an ongoing 120-year-old battle that
Arabs have waged in opposition to Zionism. In April 1920, a three-day
rampage by religiously incited anti-Zionist Arab mobs left six dead and
200 injured in the Jewish Quarter. The attackers gutted synagogues and
ransacked homes. Arabs planted time bombs in public places as far back
as February 1947, when they blasted
Ben-Yehuda Street, Jerusalem’s main thoroughfare, leaving 50 dead.
This
was all done before the establishment of the State of Israel. In the
1950s, Jordanians periodically shot at Jewish neighborhoods from the
walls of the Old City. And after the city was united in 1967, Arabs
renewed their battle for the city by planting bombs in cinemas and
supermarkets. The first terrorist attack in that renewed battle came
with the 1968 bombing of Jerusalem’s “Machane Yehuda,” the open market
that left 12 dead.
Eli E. Hertz
Source:http://www.mythsandfacts.org/article_view.asp?articleID=262
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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