A new Jewish interfaith initiative launched last week argues
building the Third Jewish Temple in Jerusalem
would not necessitate the destruction of the Dome of the Rock.
"God's Holy Mountain Vision" project hopes to
defuse religious strife by showing that Jews' end-of-days vision could
harmoniously accommodate Islam's present architectural hegemony on the TempleMount.
"This vision of religious shrines in peaceful proximity
can transform the Temple Mount from a place of contention to its original
sacred role as a place of worship shared by Jews, Muslims and Christians,"
said Yoav Frankel, director of the initiative.
The Interfaith Encounter Association at the Mishkenot Sha'ananim's
KonradAdenauerConferenceCenter
in Jerusalem is sponsoring the
program, which includes interfaith study and other educational projects.
According to Islamic tradition, the Dome of the Rock, built
in 691, marks the spot where Muhammed ascended to Heaven.
But according to Jewish tradition, MountMoriah, now under the Dome of the
Rock, is where the Temple's Holy of
Holies was situated.
Until now Jewish tradition has assumed that destruction of
the Dome of the Rock was a precondition for the building of the third and last Temple.
However, in an article that appeared in 2007 in Tehumin, an
influential journal of Jewish law, Frankel, a young scholar, presented a
different option.
His main argument is that Jewish doctrine regarding the
rebuilding of the Temple emphasizes
the role of a prophet.
This prophet would have extraordinary authority, including
the discretion to specify the Temple's
precise location, regardless of any diverging Jewish traditions.
Frankel considers the scenario of a holy revelation given to
an authentic prophet that the Temple
be rebuilt on the current or an extended TempleMount in peaceful proximity to the
dome and other houses of prayer such as the Aksa Mosque and nearby Christian
shrines.
However, both Muslims and Jews have expressed opposition to
the initiative.
Sheikh Abdulla Nimar Darwish, founder of the Islamic
Movement in Israel,
said it was pointless to talk about what would happen when the mahdi, the
Muslim equivalent of the messiah, would reveal himself.
"Why are we taking upon ourselves the responsibility to
decide such things?" Darwish said in a telephone interview with The
Jerusalem Post. "Even Jews believe that it is prohibited to rebuild the Temple
until the messiah comes. So what is there to talk about.
"The mahdi will decide whether or not to rebuild the Temple.
If he decides that it should be rebuilt, I will go out to the TempleMount and help carry the rocks."
Darwish warned against any attempt to rebuild the Temple
before the coming of the mahdi.
"As long as there is a Muslim alive, no Jewish Temple
will be built on Al-Haram Al-Sharif [the TempleMount]. The status quo must be
maintained, otherwise there will be bloodshed."
In contrast, Baruch Ben-Yosef, chairman of the Movement to
Restore the Temple, made it clear
that the Temple had to be built
where the Dome of the Rock presently stands.
"Anybody who says anything else simply does not know
what he is talking about," he said. "A prophet does not have the
power to change the law which explicitly states the location of the Temple."
Ben-Yosef also rejected the idea that rebuilding of the Temple
had to be done by a prophet.
"All you need is a Sanhedrin," he said.
Mainstream Orthodox rabbis have opposed attempts to rebuild
the Temple since the Mount came
under Israeli control in 1967.
The Chief Rabbinate of Israel
even issued a decree prohibiting Jews from entering the area due to ritual
purity issues.
However, several grassroots organizations such as the
Movement to Restore the Temple, and maverick rabbis, including Rabbi Israel
Ariel, head of the capital's Temple Institute and a leading member of the
revived Sanhedrin led by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, have called to take steps to
renew the sacrifices on the Temple Mount and rebuild the Temple.