The Issue of the Temple Mount
by Rabbi Levi
Zipperstein
Introduction
The common knowledge of our time is that the vast majority of Rabbis of this
generation have
prohibited the Jewish people from entering the Temple Mount
(Har HaBayit), the holiest site in Judaism. The Temple Mount is the site
of
where the Beit HaMikdash (the Jewish Temple) once stood and the place where
the Moslems have erected one mosque, the al-Aqsa and a
site of pilgrimage,
the Dome of the Rock. The supposed restriction of Jewish entrance imposed by
the rabbis has been proclaimed because
under usual circumstances, when the
Temple is standing, a level of holiness must be attained before permission
is granted to a Jew to
enter the area. There are greater and lesser
restrictions according to the place one seeks to go on the Temple Mount. The
Rabbis state
that since the actual location of the Temple structure is not
known for certain, it is unclear where a Jew may go without first
attaining
the most extreme level of purification (mandated by Jewish Law when entering
the confines of certain areas of the Mount and
when the areas are either
under the sovereignty of the Jewish people or the Temple is standing).
Therefore, Rabbis have pronounced the
prohibition that a Jew must not walk
on the entire area of the Temple Mount. The assumed conclusion regarding the
Temple Mount is that no
Jew should shoulder the risk of incurring the
punishment of Kareit. Kareit is the divine punishment of cutting off of
one's soul from
the World to come and is imposed upon a Jew entering the
confines of certain areas of the Temple Mount in an impure state. These
laws
apply during normal circumstances. Let it be clear that normal circumstances
in Jewish law assumes the existence of the Temple and
the practices that
accompany it.
It is the purpose of this article to analyze the issues and sources
concerning entering the
Temple Mount. Upon reading the following pages the
reader will, with God's help, understand the position of the Rabbis of our
generation
and compare them to the positions of the Rabbis of previous
generations. The issues are not complicated for the halakha (Jewish law)
is
clear regarding the entrance of a Jew on the Temple Mount. The
intellectually honest reader will discover that the issue of the
Temple
Mount plays a central role in the modern Jewish problem in relation to
traditional Jewish thought. Additionally, it is hoped that
the conclusions
reached in this most important analysis will foster the needed courage
required to make that which is wrong, right and
that which is a desecration,
a sanctification.
The Rabbis of Silence
The impression that world Jewry now maintains
concerning the issue of
entering and maintaining control over the Temple Mount is a false one. It is
additionally false to assume that
there is but a single voice on this
matter. In contradiction to the prevailing idea that all contemporary Rabbis
have forbidden entrance
to the Temple Mount, we find the following modern
Rabbinical opinions:
Mordechai Eliyahu, former Chief Rabbi of Israel, after
reading about Jews
going up to the Temple Mount wrote, "I am happy to hear about your yearning
for Zion, however we must protect that the
Children of Israel will enter the
permitted places in purity and holiness. Hashem should strengthen you and He
should be with you. Amen,
it should be His will."
Shlomo Goren, z"l, former Chief Rabbi of Israel, wrote: "I hereby, notify
that because of the danger of a
takeover of the Temple Mount by the Moslems
and despite the halakhic rules that would apply for the purpose of
protecting the Jewish
sovereignty it is not only permitted, but it is a holy
commandment (mitzvah) to go up to the Temple Mount. We learn that to protect
the
Temple it is permitted to enter even the Holy of Holies. So much more so
to enter the Temple Mount in order to stop an Arab takeover and
protect our
sovereignty, it is permitted and a commandment. Concerning us, when the
purpose is to free the Temple Mount from a takeover
by the goyim, the more
Knesset members and other Jews that go up will bring a greater result. The
suggestion is not to enter with leather
shoes and to go to the Mikvah the
same day."
Menachem Mendel Schneerson, z"l, the Lubavitch Rebbe, during Sukkot speech
of 5751
(1990), told the Jewish people to go to the "Place of the Temple,"
in the permitted areas, and celebrate the Simchat Beit Hashoeva
(celebration
of the water drawing) in the greatest and highest level of happiness. The
Rebbe continued, insisting that by doing so, the
rebuilding of the Temple
and coming of the Mashiach will be hastened.
Chaim David Halevi, Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv & Jaffa, wrote:
"The law
pertaining to entering the Temple Mount is one of the simplest and clearest.
It is known that we aren't allowed to make a
decree by ourselves, to forbid
the permitted. It is incumbent upon the people in charge to devote their
time and energies and make every
effort possible to allow and encourage
B'nai Yisrael to enter the permitted areas."
David Chaim Shlush, the Chief Rabbi of
Netanya, wrote: "It is good to be
accustomed to going up to the Temple Mount in our times to the permitted
places."
Avraham
Shalom David, the Rabbi of Kiryat Moshe, Jerusalem, wrote: "I read
the material on the Temple Mount and I, hereby, join the recommendation
of
the Chief Rabbi to go up to the Temple Mount to the permitted places and
Hashem will be with you. Amen, it should be his
will."
Yichya Alsheich, the Kabbalist, wrote: "The Rabbis permitted the sacrificing
of the Passover offering and the daily Tamid
offering on the spot of the
altar. We are allowed to go up to the Temple Mount to search for the spot of
the altar and to make the
preparations that are required for such. Hashem
should give you favor, kindness, and grant success so we should merit
through the
rebuilding of the Temple, speedily in our times, Amen."
Levi Nachmani, Rosh Yeshiva of Pnaecha Ya'acov, wrote: "Since the
conquest
of Jerusalem, the requirement to build the Temple and to bring sacrifices
has been renewed. There is a special requirement of
the Bet-din (Rabbinate)
of the generation and the Kohanim. Negligence in building the Temple will
bring punishment. The commandment of
conquering the Land of Israel cancels
Shabbat and therefore cancels the prohibition of impurity. It is therefore
worthy of every man and
woman to go up to the Mount and show a constant
Jewish presence and thus to prove the ownership of Am Yisrael over the
Temple Mount can
be even without going to the Mikvah. The one who goes up to
the Temple Mount after going to the Mikvah is even better. Hashem
should
allow us to witness speedily the full sovereignty of the People of Israel
over the Temple Mount, the Temple built in its place and
the sacrifices
renewed speedily in our times, Amen."
Eliyahu Shlomo Ra'anan, grandson of Rav Kook, z"l, wrote: "I, hereby,
join
the call from the Rabbis recommending to go up to the Temple Mount, into
permitted areas, because it is clear without any shadow of
a doubt. My
grandfather, Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook, z"l, and his son, Rabbi
Tzvi Yehuda HaKohen Kook, z"l, never said that the
Aliyah to the permitted
spots if forbidden. It is surely a great mitzvah to free the holiest site
from the goyim, but done in the proper
way."
Permitted Places
Most of the previously mentioned Rabbis talk about the "permitted places."
This phrase is taken
directly from the Rambam (Maimonides), Beit HaBechirah,
Laws of the Temple (7,7). The Rambam rules, "even though the Temple
is
destroyed...a Jew is obligated to revere the Temple as if it were built.
Only enter the permitted places and do not sit in the Azara
(the Temple
courtyard)...as it says, guard My Sabbath and revere My Temple, just as the
Sabbath is forever, so too is the reverence for
the Temple eternal, even
though it has been destroyed."
Given the opinion of the Rambam, there yet remains the question the
Rabbis
pose, "How do we know where the permitted areas are?"
Today the Temple Mount is three times its original size. Most of what
is
deemed the Temple Mount in our time is, in fact, no different from any other
part of Jerusalem. The extreme northern and southern
parts of the Temple
Mount are, according to all opinions, not part of the actual Mount. Nearly
all opinions maintain that the extreme
western side is not part of the Mount
(which means that the western wall is not the wall of the Temple nor is it
part of the Mount). All
opinions state that the Temple stood in or near the
center of the Temple Mount.
Should one desire to take all of the Rabbinical
opinions into account
(although some contradict one another) the majority of the land mass which
constitutes the Temple Mount today,
would remain as "permitted places." Of
the actual Temple Mount, only a small section of it housed the Temple and
the Temple
courtyards.
The following is a quotation from the Rambam, Laws of the Temple, Chapter 7,
Law 15: "the Temple Mount is holier than
it (Jerusalem) as zavim, zavot
nidot, and yoledet (impure people who require a clean week and ritual
immersion to become pure) do not
enter. You are permitted to bring a dead
body onto the Temple Mount and there is no need to even mention that a
person impure from
contact with a dead body can enter." Tractate Sota 20b.
If a person purifies himself by immersion in a mikvah (ritual bath)
or
natural spring, he may enter without any reservations into the area of the
Temple known as the women's courtyard. By studying the
diagrams of the
location of the Temple according to the different opinions it can be seen
that the majority of the Temple Mount is
accessible to every Jew. In the
diagrams, the actual Temple is the rectangular figure in the center. Almost
half of that rectangle
representing the Temple structure is the permitted
area of the women's courtyard. The Temple Mount is in the dotted square
area. Outside
the dotted area is not part of the Temple Mount and therefore
poses no question of "permitted" or "not permitted" within the
halakhic
framework.
CONQUEST
Perhaps the most important aspect of the Temple Mount issue deals with the
concept of
"conquest." That is to say, gaining and maintaining control over
the Temple Mount. The Rabbis maintain that the law on entering only
the
permitted places applies during normal circumstances. However, the Rabbis
rule that there are times when this law is nullified by
more important
considerations. There are situations mandating that a person enter the
holiest of places in the Temple despite the fact
that he is neither Kohen
(priest) nor spiritually pure. As an example of this idea our Sages tell us:
"to build the Temple, to make
repairs and continued maintenance, or to
remove something impure all constitute positive reasons for entering the
forbidden areas of the
Temple. (Tractate Eruvim 105a, Torat Kohanim Emor
3,11 and the Rambam, Laws of the Temple 7,23, etc.).
The rationale behind
permitting impure people the entrance to the holiest
areas of the Temple Mount is quite simple. A person entering these areas in
order to
fulfill one of the above-mentioned tasks is doing so for the sake
of the entire people, not for his own self-aggrandizement.
Therefore,
service in the Temple for the sake of the nation nullifies any impurity that
the person may have. This rule also applies to
other commandments connected
to serving the people of Israel.
There remains little question that the law of conquest applies as
one of the
reasons for entering the holy areas while impure. In order to conquer the
Temple Mount from the hands of the enemy, the
impurity is nullified. This
idea was mentioned in the decree by Rabbi Levi Nahmani concerning the verse,
My Sabbath you shall guard and
My Temple you shall revere...(Leviticus,
16,30).
Both the guarding of the Sabbath and the revering of the holiness of
the
Temple appear in the same verse; we therefore draw a connection between the
two. As we know from the book of Joshua 5:15, the Jews
conquered Jericho on
the Sabbath (to teach us that conquest takes precedence over the Sabbath).
The same rule, therefore, applies to the
Temple Mount. The act of conquering
that which Hashem has instructed supersedes that which can be attained or
adhered to at another time.
There is not act of impurity as long as the
Temple Mount remains out of our hands. Conquering the Mount takes precedence
over
impurity.
The reader may pose the following: "Since the Temple Mount has already been
conquered from the hands of the enemy, there
is no longer a commandment to
conquer the area." In other words, the impurity of the soldiers who
conquered the Mount during the Six-Day
War was nullified as is the impurity
of the soldiers and police who continue to guard it, but an ordinary Jew,
not in uniform, will not
be fulfilling the commandment of conquest simply by
entering the Mount.
To answer this question properly we must first fully
understand the concept
behind the commandment of conquering the Land of Israel. The Ramban
(Nachmanides) in the Sefer Mitzvot states that
the conquest of the Land of
Israel is the fulfillment of the commandment to settle the land. It is not
enough, according to the Ramban,
for a Jew to merely live in the land; he
must remove the enemies from within it. Rashi, in his commentary on the
verses, Numbers
33:52-53, writes, that to live in the Land of Israel you
must first conquer and expel your enemy.
Thus, we find in the book of
Joshua 3:10, as the Jews stand poised to enter
the waters of the Jordan River, the words of Joshua to the Jewish nation:
"Hereby you
shall know that the living God is among you, and that He will
without fail drive out from before you the Canaani, and the Hitti, and
the
Hivvi, and the Perizzi, and Girgashi, and the Emori and the Yevusi [all
inhabitants of the Land]."
In the Tractate Gittin,
8b, the Rabbis permitted a Jew to tell a gentile to
write a deed of sale on Shabbat in order for the Jew to buy the land of the
gentile
in Israel. The Rabbis justified this undoing of Rabbinic prohibition
because of the performance of the great mitzvah of "settling the Land
of
Israel." Rashi adds: "for the sake of settling the Land of Israel, to expel
the gentiles and to settle Jews in place of them." The
Ribash (a
contemporary of the Ba'al Turim) wrote in a responsum on this gemara: "the
Jew who buys a field from a gentile is better than
the one who goes to live
in the Land, because the aliyah is only for himself and for the here and
now...but settling the Land (buying the
field) is a deed that holds merit
forever and serves the purposes of the entire People of Israel in order that
the Holy Land not remain
in the hands of the impure."
Finally, Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook was once asked why we do not
make a blessing on Aliyah
to Israel. His answer was: "the fundamental
purpose of the commandment to settle Israel is to redeem the land from the
strangers and the
gentiles...for this reason there was not enacted a
blessing for Aliyah as is only the first step and not completion of the
commandment."
(Shulchan Aruch of Rabbi Maimon, 5734, page 427).
As our Rabbis have demonstrated, the Jewish people have failed in
the
performance of the obligation of settling the Land as long as Arabs control
any part of Eretz Yisrael, let alone the Temple Mount.
When dealing with the
Temple Mount, the place where God reveals his majesty to his people and the
entire world, how is it possible that
the Jewish people allow a continued
foreign occupation? Indeed, we find that the commandment of conquest is
incumbent on every Jew,
whether a soldier, a policeman, or a concerned Jew.
Every act of removing foreign ownership, possession, and, sovereignty over
any part
of Israel, especially the Temple Mount, is an act of conquest.
All those who venture up to the Mount will soon realize that it is
the
Arabs, under the auspices of the Moslem religious trust, that are in
virtually complete control of our Holiest Site. Jews are
forbidden to pray
on the Temple Mount. Jews are forbidden to perform any Jewish rituals on the
Temple Mount. Jews are forbidden to walk
freely on the Temple Mount. Jews
are not permitted the same freedoms that tourists are given while on the
Temple Mount. Is the very act
of ascending the Mount, wearing a skullcap or
hat and tzitzit, in themselves, acts leading to conquering the Mount and
redeeming it from
the hands of the enemy?
There are two ways of answering this question. First, this question should
be approached from an aspect of
Jewish Law. The question arises in the
Tractate Baba Batra, 100a. In this gemara the Rabbis debate the issue of
demonstrating ownership.
Can a person show ownership by walking over the
area in question or are other acts required? It is apparent from the
Shulchan Aruch
(Chosen Mishpat 192) that the law is similar to that where
the Rabbis hold to show ownership an individual must do more than merely
walk
on a piece of land. However, the Rabbis do concur with Rabbi Eliezer
concerning the path of the grape-pickers (i.e., a public path). The
Meiri
points out that the public shows possession over a path by simply walking.
Since any Jew ascending the Temple Mount is not trying
to attain personal
ownership of land, but, is reclaiming the ownership for the entire Jewish
people, the actual walking on the Mount is
an act of conquest. Second, mere
common sense dictates that if masses of Jews were to simply go up to the
Mount we would express our
desire for Jewish sovereignty.
HISTORICALLY
For almost 1,500 years after the destruction of the Second Temple there
are
historical accounts of a Jewish presence on the Temple Mount. The following
are citations from the Sefer Har HaBayit by Shaul Shefer,
pages 341-345:
363 C.E. Julian Caesar, the Byzantine, returns Jerusalem to the Jews in the
days of Hillel the third and allows
them to build a Temple. An earthquake
destroyed the building materials stored in Solomon's Stables.
640 C.E. Kalif Omar
Ibn-Chatub cleans and repairs the Temple Mount allows 70
Jews to settle there and build a Yeshiva.
940 C.E. The Karaite
writer, Solomon Ben-Yerucham, writes about a synagogue
on the southern side of the Temple Mount and the arguments between the
Rabbis and
Karaites caused the Jews to lose their foothold on the Mount.
1000 C.E. Rabbi Avraham Berachia wrote about a synagogue and
yeshiva built
by Jews on the Temple Mount.
1165 C.E. The Rambam visits Jerusalem and prays on the Temple Mount.
1287 C.E. The Meiri writes of the custom is to enter the Temple Mount.
1476 C.E. Jews enter al-Aqsa for a
hearing about the Ramban synagogue.
These accounts disprove the contention of the popularly held views of the
masses and
their rabbis. The reason Jews have refrained from entering the
Mount for the past several hundred years is that of the prohibition of
the
Turks and Arabs. It is disgraceful that an anti-semitic decree has been
turned into a self-imposed rabbinic
prohibition.
THE PUNISHMENT (Kareit)
The Chief Rabbinate of Israel, as well as the rabbis of the Eda Charedit,
have
stressed their fear of Jews entering the Mount while impure and risking
the punishment of Kareit (cutting off of the soul). As has been
stated
above, if a Jew ascends the Mount to fulfill the commandment of conquest or
other public duties concerning the Temple or
sacrifices, the impurity is
nullified. For this reason, there is no punishment of Kareit. Moreover,
there remains a doubt as to whether
an impure person who enters the Mount
not for the sake of the public or of conquest will be punished with Kareit.
The Rambam does not
state anywhere that entering the forbidden areas while
the Temple is destroyed will be punished with Kareit. The Meiri, also, makes
this
point as does the Migdal David.
It is ironic, that these rabbis are not concerned with the risk of Kareit
resulting from not
sacrificing the Passover offering. It is clearly stated
in the Torah that a ritually pure person who knowingly does not bring
the
Passover lamb on the 14th day of Nissan is punishable by kareit. The
Passover offering can be brought when the entire nation is
impure from
contact with the dead, as is the case with every public offering.
WHAT IS WRONG WITH THE RABBIS?
How can one
explain the inaction of those rabbis who agree that we can enter
the Temple Mount? How can one explain those who distort the truth
and
prohibit the entrance of Jews to the Temple Mount? After 2,000 years of
prayers asking that God return us to Zion and speedily
rebuild the Temple,
what excuse could there be for preferring the Wall of Tears over the House
of God?
The best answer can be
found in the book, Ame Banim Smecha, written by Rabbi
Yisachar Teichtel. Rabbi Teichtel was a Chasid who lived in Hungary and
perished in
the holocaust. While on the run from the Nazis, he wrote a
powerful book quoting his sources from memory. He confronts the question
that
haunts many Jews: "why were so many religious Jews and Torah scholars
killed during the holocaust?" His answer is unequivocal, the religious
Jews
and the Torah scholars watched the secular Zionists return to Zion; and they
did not learn from their actions. Jews who prayed
thrice daily for the
return to Zion should have immediately realized that if secular Jews are
leaving the exile, how much more so should
they. By turning their backs on
the Land of Israel, Rabbi Teichtel writes, their fate was sealed. God hates
hypocrisy and punishes those
who invoke his name in vain. And so they stayed
in exile to be consumed by the fires of the Holocaust.
Many religious Jews yet
maintain the false interpretation of Jewish texts
that the Temple will fall from heaven when God deems it proper. This belief
is akin to
those who maintained that while sitting in exile there would
appear the wings of an eagle, which would scoop them up and whirl them
off
to the Land of Israel. Obviously, the latter never happened and the former
is even less likely to occur. The literal interpretation
of parabolic
literature is forbidden by Jewish thought. However, it is not the purpose of
this work to delve into the intricacies and the
failings of contemporary
religious and Torah thought. It is enough that we realize that this thought
has caused the Torah world to miss
the opportunity to define the meaning of
the return to the Land as it ought to be defined, in Torah terms. They
turned their back on the
building of a nation while leaving it in the hands
of those whose socialist visions clouded their thoughts and blurred their
vision.
Added to this disgrace, the Torah world has now left the Temple
Mount in the hands of those that would not recognize a Jewish concept
even
if it were placed in red dressing gowns. It is those self-hating Jews who
have now turned over the holiest place in Judaism to the
enemies of the
Jewish people. The Temple remains in ruins while alien buildings of other
nations sit in its
place.
CONCLUSION
There is but one way to redeem the Temple Mount and but one way to renew the
sacrifices and build the
Temple. We must act in an authentically Jewish
manner. Remaining in a state of atrophy will not only allow the status quo
to continue, it
will cause needless and unimaginable suffering to the Jewish
people. Just as we witnessed the destruction of six million Jews because
of
inaction concerning the return to Zion, so will we endure terrible tragedy
should we opt for the same inaction concerning the Temple
Mount.
This is not an argument between Jew and Arab, nor between Judaism and Islam,
but rather it is a question of religious
fulfillment. If the Mount is
redeemed and the Temple replaces the desecrations that now stand in its
place, then the Jewish obligation to
the God of Israel is attained, but
should we leave the mosques in place and the Mount in the hand of the
stranger, then we will be
desecrating God's name by declaring that the
Jewish people are unable and unwilling to do that which God has commanded.
The fate and
destiny of the Jewish people are in the hands of each and every
Jew. All that is required is will and faith of Jews to enter the
Temple
Mount in large numbers until the day, with God's help, that we are able to
demand its return to its rightful owners. If every one
would make the
commitment needed to redeem the Mount it will surely and speedily be in our
hands.
(This article appeared in
the Winter, 1996, edition of B'tzedek, The
Journal of Responsible Jewish Commentary, which magazine was available in
the Jewish
Quarter)