'
Dear Mr Hague:
I write in support of a petition I have
recently signed, asking the British Foreign Office to alter its
position on what has become an unnecessarily vexed question concerning
the capital of Israel. As you know, Israelis are unanimous in regarding
Jerusalem as their capital, not Tel Aviv (where the British embassy is
currently located), nor Haifa nor Jaffa nor Petah Tikva nor anywhere
else in the country.
It is not hard to understand why the
first Israeli parliament chose Jerusalem as its seat, even before it had
built an edifice suitable to the needs of the men and women who sat in
its chamber. For many centuries, Jews in the Diaspora had clung to a
hope, not only of a return to the Holy Land, but to Jerusalem in
particular, the erstwhile home of its holiest Temple and the scene of so
many primary events in Jewish and Christian history. This might be
dismissed on the grounds that religious belief should not determine a
city’s status, but many cities derive their significance from their role
as religious centres, from Mecca and Medina (the latter having been the
first capital of Islam), to Karbala’ and Mashhad, to Varanasi (Benares)
and the Vatican City. This original attachment, intensified by daily
prayers while facing Jerusalem and repeated wishes to return there, was
later supplanted by the governmental, educational, trading, defensive,
legal and bureaucratic concerns of the capital of a secular state.
As a people who have been deeply
wronged in the past, Jews have tried to build their own state along
lines of equal citizenship, a single legal system, human rights, and the
protection of all holy places. But when Jordan occupied East Jerusalem
from 1949 to 1967, Muslim holy places were renovated while 58 synagogues
were destroyed and 38,000 Jewish graves were demolished. In addition,
Jews were not allowed to set foot in their own holy places, notably on
the Temple Mount. By contrast, when Israel retook Jerusalem in 1967, the
Temple Mount was handed to a Muslim authority on account of two Islamic
structures built on top of it, the al-Aqsa mosque and the Qubbat
al-Sakhra or Dome of the Rock.
Such depredations and a lack of
reciprocity have made Israelis wary of a Muslim takeover of East
Jerusalem, where the holiest sites are located: the Temple Mount, the
Western Wall (the Kotel), the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Mount of
Olives, and the famous Jewish graveyards, still vandalized horribly by
Arab criminals.
But the Palestinians have made it their
business to turn Jerusalem into a bastion of Islamic holiness, not just
because the al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock are there, but
because they now claim that there has never been any Jewish connection
to the city or to the land of Israel. There was, they boast, no Jewish
Temple there. All Biblical references to the Temple and to Jerusalem as a
city built by King David are summarily and ahistorically dismissed.
Given that Muslims have demolished the
holy places of more than one religion, the Jews are rightly concerned
lest Jerusalem fall under Islamic control. In Saudi Arabia for decades
now, the government has been engaged in the destruction of Islamic holy
places in Mecca and Medina. Lest you think me in the grip of some
obscure fantasy, I should explain that the Wahhabi form of Islam, which
governs Saudi Arabia, is utterly ruthless in its condemnation of
anything that may be worshipped instead of God. They have demolished
over 200 historical sites to prevent pilgrims praying at them. In Mali, a
similar form of Islam – Salafism – has recently demolished dozens of
shrines belonging to the Sufi form of Islam. And in Iran, the government
has demolished all the holy places and cemeteries of the persecuted
Baha’i religion. Israel, by way of contrast, protects and nourishes the
large international headquarters and two holiest shrines of the Baha’is,
places now recognized as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
Is it surprising that the Israelis,
backed by Jews and others like myself round the world, are desperate to
maintain the integrity of the city, knowing as they do that Muslim Arab
rule would carry a greatly heightened risk to the Old City and its
environs? Israel has been generous towards Muslims and their holy
places, but they fear that if increased pressure were to come from Saudi
Arabia or Iran or, nearer to hand from Hamas, everything Jewish might
be eliminated. Palestinians have taken control of the Jewish Tomb of
Rachel, the third holiest site for Jews. They have commandeered most of
the Ma’arat Ha-Machpelah, the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron and made
access for Jews to a tiny space very difficult, as I can personally
attest. This is the second holiest site for Jews, containing as it does
the tombs of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Sarah, Rebecca, and Leah.
In the earliest days of Islam, the
Prophet Muhammad adopted from his Jewish neighbours the practice of
turning towards Jerusalem during the five daily prayers. But in the year
622, a few months after his arrival in Medina, he did an about turn
during one prayer session and from then on directed his followers to
pray towards his home city of Medina. He severed all direct ties with
Jerusalem, and in the centuries that followed Jerusalem was never a
provincial capital, nor the heart of a Muslim country or empire. Medina
in the first years, then Damascus, Baghdad, Istanbul and other cities
became the capitals of Islam. Cairo was the major city in North Africa,
Fez and Rabat capitals of the west, Esfahan, Tabriz, Tehran and others
the royal cities of Iranian dynasties. And so on. But Jerusalem was
never given such signal importance. This is significant. Palestinian
wishes to make Jerusalem defy centuries of insignificance would lock us
into a dispute that could last one thousand years.
For this reason, Jews everywhere will
refuse to relinquish a city that was theirs from the beginning, and they
will not reward people who have tried to take what was never theirs,
who have tried to deny the historical record concerning the Jewish
presence in a city that has been Jewish for 3000 years.
To confirm the place of Jerusalem at the heart of Jewish life and
prayers and as the eternal capital of their only homeland, Jews and
Israelis appeal to honest governments to do the right thing and
recognize that Jerusalem is the city where all the key aspects of
Israeli life converge. No Israeli regards Tel Aviv as his or her
capital. It is demeaning to treat Israelis as children by telling them
this or that foreign government knows better than they and their
government when it comes to designating Jerusalem their capital. I do
not think you treat any other capital city in this way. You do not call
Cork the capital of Ireland, nor Glasgow the capital of Scotland, nor
the cathedral city of St. David’s the capital of Wales, nor Marseilles
the capital of France. I do not believe the Foreign Office means to be
insulting in this matter; but if foreigners called Birmingham the
capital of England and the UK, would you not feel aggrieved?
Israel’s enemies call in all
seriousness for the destruction of the country. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has
called on all Islamic nations to ‘exterminate Israel’ (my translation).
The Arabs, faced by their repeated failure to achieve this by military
means or terrorism, have turned to secondary means, saying that there
never any Jews in Israel, that they themselves were there first, an
impossible 9000 years
ago, and that Jerusalem was always an Arab city (a claim that directly
contradicts the accounts of Arab historians like al-Tabari). It is a
cheap and dishonest attempt to rewrite history itself and to introduce
confusion into a simple narrative. Denying the historicity and modern
reality of Israel, of Jerusalem, and of Israelis by refusing to liberate
the city from the string of fictions that has tied so many in knots,
allows falsehood and deceit to rule in international affairs. Britain is
still a great country that is admired the world round for its probity. I
do not doubt that you, like myself, wish to see that image remain
untarnished. But I have to say that it is in some measure tarnished when
you try to steal the Israeli capital from the Israelis themselves.
Yours sincerely,
Dr. Denis MacEoin'
This letter has been sent by Denis MacEoin to William Hague and others at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Please spread the word... I wonder if Tarik Kafala, the BBC's Middle East Editor, could usefully learn something from this letter?
Nothing but a rant and absolutely full of historical inaccuracies. Name one...?
ReplyDeleteMuslims turned in prayer from Jerusalem to Mecca not Medina...enough said.
Lion Heart