by David M. Weinberg
I salute Ari and Naomi
Zivotofsky for tenaciously pursuing the American government to have
their son registered as having been born in Jerusalem, Israel -- a case
which they are now taking for a second time to the U.S. Supreme Court.
But the real struggle
over Jerusalem as Israel's capital is underway every day in Jerusalem
itself. At present, Israel is evincing a weak hand and losing the
battle.
Last Friday, Tova
Richler of New York arrived in Israel to attend her father's funeral in
the ancient Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives in eastern Jerusalem.
En route to the burial site, near the Gethsemane Church junction, her
car was pelted with rocks and bricks by 10 Arab youths, smashing the
windows. She escaped, but missed the internment.
In recent years, such
attacks have become commonplace in and around the hallowed cemetery, and
many people are afraid to travel to funerals and memorial ceremonies
there.
The French Hill
neighborhood, which borders the Hadassah Mount Scopus Hospital, has also
become unsafe. Residents are harassed by Arab youths from nearby Arab
neighborhoods, and there have been many robberies, repeated arson
attacks and car stonings, a firebombing, and a stabbing.
Anybody who has
traversed the new road from Benzion Netanyahu junction through Beit
Hanina also knows the dangers. Stoning is not uncommon, and red traffic
lights are apparently mere decorations to the neighborhood's Arab
residents.
The greatest affront of
all has been playing itself out almost every day this month on the
Temple Mount in the Old City, where Arab youths regularly accost Jewish
visitors to the site, and have taken to almost-daily stoning of Israeli
police. The Arabs have even been caught stocking stones and other riot
gear inside the mosques. Outrageously, the police response to these
attacks has been to close the site to Israeli-Jewish visitors and
tourists, instead of closing it to Arab visitors.
And of course, illegal
Waqf excavations continue on the Temple Mount without Israeli
archaeological supervision. We know that over the past decade the
burrowing-out by the Wakf of the underground "Solomon's Stables" has
wantonly destroyed thousands of years of Jewish relics and history.
It seems that the
Palestinians are neither willing to countenance live Jews on the Temple
Mount nor dead Jews on the Mount of Olives.
The radical Arab imams
behind these disturbances and provocations have the full backing of
Mahmoud Abbas' supposedly moderate Palestinian Authority. PA Religious
Affairs Minister Mahmoud Al-Habbash and Mufti Muhammad Hussein
constantly propagate lies about Israeli plans to undermine and destroy
the Muslim shrines on the Temple Mount.
The former Chief
Justice of the PA's Religious Court, Sheikh Tayseer Al-Tamimi, recently
declared that the PA's Islamic belief and political position is that
Jews should not only be prohibited from praying on the Temple Mount but
at the Western Wall of the Temple Mount too, since the wall is part of
the "blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque" and not part of any "alleged" ancient
Jewish temple.
All the while, Arab
residents of greater Jerusalem enjoy the full gamut of Israeli civil
rights and privileges, including freedom of speech without threat from
Abbas' goons, full Israeli national insurance and health coverage, and
municipal social services. Arab Jerusalemites can also be found by their
thousands shopping happily in every mall in the city and picnicking in
every park, free of threat.
Undoubtedly, the
troublemakers are a minority of Arab Jerusalemites. But Israel's
hesitancy in dealing toughly with the provocateurs and their PA
government sponsors leaves us with a deleterious and deteriorating net
result: Israel's control (never mind sovereignty) over the united city
is fraying.
Government caution in
managing Jerusalem's delicate political and security affairs is
understandable, given the tinderbox status and contested future of the
city. Yet it seems that the Netanyahu government has let things slide
too far. It has become too accepting of Palestinian violence in the city
and too tolerant of Waqf chutzpah on the Temple Mount.
Like his political
party boss, Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch (Yisrael
Beytenu) is good at talking, but has taken little action. Why aren't the
Israel Police, for which he is responsible, decisively enforcing law
and order in the city? If Aharonovitch and the police commissioner can't
muster the determination to tackle the string of security incidents,
they should be replaced. Safety and security on all roads and at all
sites in the city is a basic right of Israeli citizens of all religions
and ethnicities, and the state has an elementary duty to provide this,
even in Jerusalem -- especially in Jerusalem.
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's responsibility goes further. Beyond beefing-up Israel's
security presence in the trouble spots and ending Palestinian violence,
the Netanyahu government must act proactively to cement Israel's hold in
the city, to signal the world that we are serious about keeping
Jerusalem united under Israeli sovereignty. The government should move
to establish a (long-overdue) Jewish prayer facility alongside the
Muslim mosques on the vast Temple Mount plaza, and to build the
strategic E1 quadrant that connects Jerusalem to its eastern security
anchor in Maaleh Adumim.
These initiatives will
engender Palestinian (and American) resistance, but with both
resoluteness and sensitivity Israel can succeed and overcome the
opposition. The initiatives will also give Israeli and Palestinian
diplomats something to talk about besides the release of Palestinian
terrorists and other outrageous, never-ending Palestinian demands.
Only when Israel acts in concrete fashion to shore up its stake in Jerusalem can the city be secured.
David M. Weinberg
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8171
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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