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Rabbi I Have a Problem

Should we campaign for the right of Jews to pray on the Temple Mount?

Rabbi, I have a problem

November 5, 2015 13:24

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

3 min read

Question: Should we be mounting a campaign to recognise the right of Jews to pray on the Temple Mount, because the current policy of restraint seems like capitulating to intimidation?

Rabbi Naftali Brawer

Naftali Brawer is the CEO of the Spiritual Capital Foundation.

In 1967, within hours of the Israeli conquest of Temple Mount, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate issued a ruling that Jews were halachically prohibited from ascending the mount. While halachah prohibits only Jews from entering areas where the actual Temple once stood, the Chief Rabbis took a conservative position owing to the fact that one could not be certain where precisely the Temple buildings were once located.

However, there is a wide consensus that the Temple did not stand on the northern and southern expanses of the mount. On this basis IDF Chief Rabbi (and later Israeli Chief Rabbi) Shlomo Goren argued vigorously for Jews to be able to pray in these areas. Rabbi Goren even went so far as to announce plans for prayer services on Yom Kippur. Defence Minister Moshe Dayan and Chief of Staff Yitzchak Rabin intervened, and the service never took place. Instead a “status quo” arrangement was agreed, in which Jews would be restricted to the Kotel while the Muslim religious authority, the Waqf, would have autonomy over Temple Mount.