Yesterday took my heart away

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So, you probably celebrated yesterday as Mother’s Day. I know that the Phillies managed to give away ladies pullovers to those women over the age of 15 who went to the game- despite the rain, and a lengthy delay. (Yes, the Phils won!)

But, yesterday was really a very special day for me. It was Yom Yerushalayim ( יום ירושלים‎ ). The celebration of the day that Jerusalem and the Kotel (the Western Wall, aka the Wailing Wall) were completely back under Jewish control after some 1800 years without.

The Western Wall

 

While the original partition plan developed by the United Nations called for Jerusalem to be an international city, that never happened. Once Israel became independent, the Arab nations attacked the region. And, when the armistice was declared, the original portion of Jerusalem (called Ir ha’Atika, the old city) was under the control of the Kingdom of Jordan (along with what is now termed the West Bank).

 

Once it gained control, Jordan destroyed all the synagogues in the old city- and plundered the tombstones of the ancient Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives to construct the Seven Arches Hotel, a property personally owned by the king. (Notice the similarity of what was done to what ISIL did in Iraq and Syria. Notice that there was no world-wide condemnation for the King of Jordan?)

But, even after being warned NOT to join in with his Arab brethren, King Hussein also participated in the Six Day War. During which Israel took over Jerusalem (after the first 24 hours) and the rest of the West Bank that had been under his control for decades.

Moshe Dayan, the General leading the Israeli forces declared on what is now known as Yom Yerushalayim in 1967:

This morning, the Israel Defense Forces liberated Jerusalem. We have united Jerusalem, the divided capital of Israel. We have returned to the holiest of our holy places, never to part from it again. To our Arab neighbors we extend, also at this hour—and with added emphasis at this hour—our hand in peace. And to our Christian and Muslim fellow citizens, we solemnly promise full religious freedom and rights. We did not come to Jerusalem for the sake of other peoples’ holy places, and not to interfere with the adherents of other faiths, but in order to safeguard its entirety, and to live there together with others, in unity.

(By the way, as you saw in the above video,  Israel maintains the churches and mosques in Jerusalem and the West Bank for members of their faiths. No destruction, no desecration.)

Consider this.  These soldiers, amidst a battle for the existence of Israel, stopped and prayed at the Wall.  And, then continued their battles.

Salvator Dali, who was visiting Israel after the war, spending time with a local Israeli artist he knew, was mesmerized by those folks who were finally able to visit (after a 20 year hiatus) what was then still called the Wailing Wall. One approached the wall via a narrow path, between hovels and piles of garbage, only to be immediately struck with the appearance of the wall. Then, only about 8 courses of brick were visible. (Note: These ancient bricks are some 3 to 4 feet tall, not like the bricks we use to make our homes.) And, almost every visitor comes to pray at the wall and leaves a message in the cracks between the bricks. (I’ve done so every time i’ve visited- since right after the 6 day war to my visit last year. )

Dali- WesternWall
A later version of the painting I own

One year after the Six Day War, Israel declared the 28th of Iyar to be a new holiday- but it took some 30 years before it was established as a national holiday.

Im eshkachech Yerushalayim,            If I forget thee, O Jerusalem,
Tishkach yemini.                                       Let my right hand forget her                                                                                                        cunning.
Tid’bak leshoni lechiki.                          Let my tongue cleave to the roof of                                                                                         my mouth

The above words from the Psalms comprise the Pledge of Allegiance, since 1948.

Roy A. Ackerman, Ph.D., E.A.

By the way, this holiday has nothing to do with the fact that the USA has finally moved its embassy to Jerusalem (converting the Consulate to an Embassy).  

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6 thoughts on “Yesterday took my heart away”

  1. Although I realize your post is not about the embassy, I have to admit to mixed feelings about the embassy being moved. Several years ago there was an alternate history novel written called “The Yiddish Policemen’s Union” by Michael Charbon. Sometimes, I do wish the Homeland was in Alaska, not in the middle east (you’ll have to read the book to know what I mean – a fascinating take on “what might have been).
    Alana recently posted..Mothers – #MusicMovesMe

    1. I found the Chabon book like his other one- cute, cute, cute, in a stupid ass way. (Sorry, Jacques Brel for bastardizing your music.) And, there is and was zero chance that any land other than Israel would have been acceptable to the Jewish people. (There were many suggestions over the years.)

  2. I’ve been watching the coverage of Israel and Palestine unfold today on CNN due to the opening of the US Embassy. I’m really interested in the politics and history of the region and always trying to read more to understand the conflict and why it’s so impossible to reach a resolution 🙁

    1. I agree with you- unfortunately, Megan. However, with the insertion of Iran into the equation, more of the Arab nations now realize that they need an alliance with Israel. Which will attenuate some of their funding of the Palestinian leadership- and especially Hamas- that have been diverted to uses that don’t benefit the citizenry.

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