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September 27, 1996 - Image 118

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-09-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Go against the grain.
Cut down on salt.

Serving Up • • •

Adding salt to your food
could subtract years from
your life. Because in some
people salt contributes to
high blood pressure, a con-
dition that increases your
risk of heart disease.

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DIGGING page 117

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Either way, the initiative put
Yassir Arafat on the spot. The
angry reaction in the Palestin-
ian street was predicted and pre-
dictable. Old City shopkeepers
rolled down their shutters in
protest. In scenes reminiscent
of the intifada uprising, Arab
youths clashed with Israeli po-
lice and threw stones at Jews
praying at the wall.
The Palestinians' chief nego-
tiator, Saeb Erakat, warned Mr.
Netanyahu that he was pushing
Israelis and Palestinians to-
wards confrontation and disas-
ter. "Such actions," Mr. Erakat
objected, "don't leave a peace
process to speak about. The pol-
icy of this Israeli government is
the fait accompli. Netanyahu
thinks the peace process is peace
for the Israelis, but not for the
Palestinians and the other
Arabs. He is not treating us as
partners. He is telling us we can
go to hell."
The Palestinians have con-
sistently opposed the excava-
tions, which run along a buried
extension of the Western Wall
and reveal masonry — Jewish,

On Wednesday,
the Arab
protests turned
to violence

Muslim and early Christian —
dating back to the Hasmonean
kings in the second century
BCE.
The Muslim authorities
feared that the Jews were plan-
ning an underground takeover
of the Temple Mount, which the
victorious Defense Minister,
Moshe Dayan, deliberately left
in Muslim hands after the 1967
war. But as Dan Bahat, a for-
mer Jerusalem district supervi-
sor of archaeology, said recently:
"There are not, and never have
been, any excavations on or un-
der the Temple Mount."
Palestinians were also wor-
ried about damage to medieval
Muslim buildings still standing
above the tunnel. None has been
destroyed, but some have suf-
fered cracks. UNESCO, which
Israel has accused of prejudice,
has steadily endorsed the Pales-
tinian complaints.
More prosaically, the Pales-
tinians resented the excavation
as an invasion — not the only
one — of "their" part of the Old
City. Jerusalem's Islamic High-
er Committee said in a state-
ment this week: "We reject any
kind of attack against Islamic
property in the holy city of
Jerusalem."
The Israeli timing looks like
another example of the left hand
not knowing, or perhaps not car-
ing, what the right hand is do-

(

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