Just imagine if this were a synagogue in say
Iran (which has the largest Jewish community in the Middle East outside
Israel).  Dozens of security forces invade the place of worship, fire tear
gas and stun grenades, injure a number of worshippers and cause much
destruction.
What
would be the reaction?  Many people would undoubtedly start drawing an
analogy with Krystalnacht, the Nazi pogrom in Germany in November 1938.
 People would undoubtedly cry 'anti-Semitism' and quite rightly so.
 We would have Obama, Cameron and other hypocrites decrying this attack on
the right to worship of peaceful Jews.  Yet what is the reaction to what
Israel has done?  Nothing, except silence.
Of
course none of this excuses the murderous Saudi regime, busy slaughtering
fellow Muslims in Yemen and causing an utter human rights catastrophe there.
 They are supposed to be the protectors of Muslim places of worship but in
practice their only concern is how best to loot Arab oil wealth and keep their
own population and migrant workers under the thumb.
Tony Greenstein
Israeli forces, right-wingers storm Aqsa Mosque compound
July 26, 2015 10:04
A.M. (Updated: July 27, 2015 5:42 P.M.) 
(MaanImages)
|  | 
| Uri Ariel MK from Jewish Home was allegedly one of the invaders | 
Dozens
 of Palestinian worshipers were reportedly hit with rubber-coated 
bullets and suffered excessive tear gas inhalation, while Israeli police
 officers were reported to have attacked worshipers with pepper spray, 
rods and rifle butts.

At least three Palestinians were reportedly detained.
The
 officers entered the compound through the Moroccan Gate, Chain Gate and
 Hutta Gate and clashed with worshipers, witnesses said, before Israeli 
soldiers then shut down the compound’s gates with chains. 
Israeli
 soldiers also reportedly stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque itself and fired 
rubber-coated bullets inside the holy site. The compound's Palestinian 
security guards were assaulted and prevented from moving, witnesses 
said.
Israeli police claimed that they entered the mosque 
after "masked rioters" threw stones at them, "with the aim of preventing
 further injury to police."
Israeli media reported that four police officers were injured, with two moved to hospital for treatment.
As the clashes subsided, right-wing Jews began to make their way into the compound in groups via the Moroccan gate.
Israel's
 minister of agriculture, Uri Ariel, was reportedly among the 
right-wingers to tour the compound under heavy police escort. Ariel is a
 member of Naftali Bennett's ultra-right Jewish Home party.


Israeli police said that a young Jewish man on Sunday attempted to enter while wearing phylacteries -- small leather boxes containing sacred texts worn by Orthodox men at prayer.
(Islamic Endowment)
(MaanImages)
Israeli police said that a young Jewish man on Sunday attempted to enter while wearing phylacteries -- small leather boxes containing sacred texts worn by Orthodox men at prayer.
When told to remove them, the man resisted and grabbed hold of railings, biting a policeman who tried to remove him before he was arrested.
Sunday marked Tisha 
B'Av, an annual Jewish fast day that commemorates the destruction of the
 First and Second Jewish Temples. The fast day is considered the saddest
 day in the Jewish calendar. 
Earlier in the morning, Israeli forces imposed strict restrictions on entry of Palestinians Muslim worshipers into the compound.
Earlier in the morning, Israeli forces imposed strict restrictions on entry of Palestinians Muslim worshipers into the compound.
Witnesses
 said that at dawn, Israeli officers allowed only women and men over the
 age of 50 to enter the compound. After 6:30 a.m. all Palestinians were 
reportedly denied entry.
The Al-Aqsa Mosque compound has 
seen rising tensions in recent days, with Jewish organizations calling 
for the compound to be open to Jews for the week after Tisha B'Av and 
others seeking to celebrate unconfirmed reports that Israel is 
negotiating the reopening of the compound to non-Muslim worship.
At
 the end of June, International Crisis Group reported discussions 
between Israel and the Islamic Endowment that controls the mosque 
compound on allowing non-Muslim worship at the site, although the move 
has not yet been confirmed.
The third holiest site in 
Islam, the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound is also venerated as Judaism's most 
holy place as it sits where Jews believe the First and Second Temples 
once stood.
Following Israel's occupation of East Jerusalem
 in 1967, Israel has maintained an agreement with the Islamic Endowment 
not to allow non-Muslim prayer in the area.
Jewish prayer is allowed at the neighboring Western Wall, which is the last remnant of the Second Temple.
However, Israeli forces regularly escort Jewish visitors to Al-Aqsa, leading to anger among Muslim worshipers.
The
 last time Israeli police entered the mosque itself, in November last 
year, Jordan -- one of the very few Arab states with diplomatic 
relations with Israel -- recalled its ambassador.
AFP contributed to this report.
 
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