Israel's Eternal Capital New York e all hear much these days about competing Jewish and Muslim claims to Jerusalem and how a political division of the city is necessary if there is to be any peace. But what if the Muslim claim to Jerusalem is largely contrived and inflated? The evidence shows that it is. Whereas Jerusalem is Judaism's holi- est city, mentioned over 600 times in the Bible and in dozens of prayers and rituals, Jerusalem is not mentioned once in the Quran, nor has it ever served as a Muslim or Arab capital. Nor have Arabs or Muslims been a majority in the city in recent times: Jerusalem has been majority Jewish since the middle of the 1800s. Whereas Jews face Jerusalem in prayer and major Jewish rituals — including the conclusion of the Pesach seder and Yom Kippur — end with the age-old affirma- tion,"Next year in Jerusalem;' Muslims undertake pilgrimage to Mecca and face it in prayer. Whereas Jerusalem has served as the capital of one people — the Jews — three times in history, it has never been the capital of another people. When Jordan controlled the historical eastern half of the city (1948-67), it became a backwater, Amman remained Jordan's capital and no Arab leader other than Jordan's King Hussein ever even visited the place. Today, Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah, which controls the Palestinian Authority (P.A.), talks endlessly about liberating Jerusalem and its terror wing is named the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade (after the name of one of the two mosques built by Muslims upon Temple Mount). However, significantly, neither the Palestine Liberation Organization nor Fatah charters that were drafted during Jordan's control of the city even mention Jerusalem. Yet it is seriously suggested that Israel should re-divide the city. It is often sug- gested that this only means making the Arab neighborhoods of the city into a Palestinian capital, with the rest remain- ing under Israeli control. This is an illusion. Jews constitute a majority even in the eastern half of the city. All the Jewish holy sites, including the Temple Mount, are in eastern Jerusalem — precisely the areas that Palestinians are demanding that Israel give up — not the modern suburbs of western Jerusalem. Moreover, Arab rulers have never respected or protected Jewish holy sites, including Jordan, regarded today by many as among the most mod- erate and responsible of Arab regimes. During Jordanian rule, the 58 synagogues in the old city were destroyed and 40,000 ancient Jewish grave- stones were used to pave roads and Jordanian army latrines. Despite signed agreements, Jordan did not permit Jews to visit Jerusalem's holy sites. Therefore, any division of Jerusalem not only carves out part of the heart of the Jewish people, but would also endanger Israel by introducing terrorists within rocket and rifle range of the western half of the city. And, of course, if concessions are made over Jerusalem's holy sites, one can only imagine — after witnessing the torching and destruction of Joseph's Tomb and the Jericho synagogues, once Israeli forces were withdrawn — what fate lies in store for Jewish sites once the P.A. obtains control. — Israel forgot its own motto. A good part of the government's case revolved around charges that Rosen and Weissman had discussions with represen- tatives of the Israeli government about what the duo learned from U.S. officials. Being able to prove that Israeli officials already had learned of the information directly from U.S. officials or had been the original source of the information that the U.S. officials had told Rosen and Weissman was critical to the defense. So one would assume that Israel would make the officials with whom Rosen and Weissman spoke available for interviews and possible testimony. That assumption would be wrong. Request after request to the Israeli Embassy in Washington and its attorneys, and to officials in Israel were denied. They would not agree to an interview, even in Israel; they would not agree to an exchange of information, even through attorneys; they would not agree to help in any way. This was not the case of Jonathan Pollard or anything similar; yet the Israeli government, like American Jewish groups, reacted as if it were. How was it fair for the Israeli government to benefit from the work of these AIPAC employees when it was convenient and then abandon them when there was a little controversy? Was this a result of U.S. pressure? Now U.S. v. Rosen and Weissman is over. The government has admitted defeat; the two men and their families are left to try to pick up the pieces after a four-year struggle. A number of things that would have been revealed at trial will now stay under wraps, perhaps forever. But some things do not have to be for- gotten; and for that to happen, there are questions that must be answered. ❑ Actually, we do not even need to imag- ine — the Muslim waqf, which controls Jerusalem's Temple Mount, has undertak- en renovations and construction programs that have already destroyed priceless Jewish antiquities on that site. Various P.A. officials over the years have also denied the Jewish religious and his- torical connection to the city. The former P.A. minister of religious affairs, Hassan Tahboub, asserted, "The Western Wall is Muslim property. It is part of the Al Aqsa Mosque. Once we control it, Jews must remain six feet away from our holy wall." Muslim claims to Jerusalem are largely invented. Jerusalem interests Muslims only insofar as they want to divest the Jewish people of it. Giving the P.A. a slice of Jerusalem will not bring either justice or peace. ❑ Morton A. Klein is national president of the Zionist Organization of America. The Michigan Region hosted Klein and National Executive Director Gary Ratner on June 17 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Southfield. Before an audience of 130 people, Klein spoke on "The Future of Jerusalem - Whose City is it?" To learn more about the ZOA-Michigan Region, contact (248) 282-0088 or e-mail info@mizoa.org . Ex-AIPAC Staffers from page C2 AIPAC at the time, and representatives of three other major Jewish organizations. The defense sought help from the repre- sentatives of the organizations attending the dinner to show that the information at issue already was public and being openly discussed by U.S. officials. One of the attendees had his organiza- tion decline the invitation to meet and be interviewed; one agreed to meet but said he did not remember any details of the meeting (despite its critical importance at the time); and one agreed to meet but was reluctant to testify about what he had heard. How could all these community groups cause their officials to run from simply telling the truth of what happened when doing so could have made the difference between jail or freedom for one of their colleagues? Finally, AIPAC and the American Jewish community as a whole were not the only ones to ignore the Israeli principle of never leaving a soldier on the battlefield Abbe D. Lowell represented Steve Rosen, who has filed a defamation lawsuit against AIPAC. Baruch Weiss and John Nassikas served as defense attorneys for Keith Weissman. Answering Israel's Critics The Charge The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohammed El Baradei, said last month that Israel hampers the agency's work and violates international law. The Answer El Baradei was referring to the reported Israeli attack on Syrian nuclear facilities last year. Without that attack, most analysts agree that the nuclear race in the Middle East would be even more advanced. — Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit @ Jewish Renaissance Media July 16, 2009 C3