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Judaism

The Temple has been rebuilt - in the words of the Prophets

The Temple site has become a place of discord when it should be the focus of harmony

July 28, 2017 12:33
Women of the Wall holding a Rosh Chodesh service at the Kotel (photo: Hila Shiloni)
3 min read

The fast of Tishah b’Av, which begins tomorrow night, is the most melancholy day in the religious calendar, commemorating the destruction of the Temples. According to rabbinic tradition, the Second Temple fell because of sinat chinam, causeless hatred — infighting among Jews.

How ironic, then, that what remains of the Temple compound, the Kotel, the outer western wall, should have become such a focus of Jewish discord. When the Israeli government retreated last month from a plan to upgrade the egalitarian prayer space at the site, campaigners for religious pluralism reacted furiously.


Currently, a temporary platform for non-Orthodox services exists by Robinson’s Arch, which is to the south of the main prayer area and separate from it. The government agreed early last year to expand the egalitarian enclosure, extend the plaza by the Wall to reach round to it and to allow Israel’s Reform and Masorti movements a role in its supervision.


The government backtracked in the face of pressure from Orthodox parties in Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition, although the plan may yet go ahead since the Israel Supreme Court is shortly to rule on it.

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