donderdag 8 december 2011

Palestijnse Arabieren grijpen vondst oude munten aan voor nieuwe ontkenning Joodse tempel Jeruzalem

 

In het Westen wordt het oude Joodse koninkrijk in de Levant doorgaans niet gezien als een rechtvaardiging voor huidige Israelische claims, maar de Palestijnen denken daar anders over, en blijven krampachtig ontkennen dat er ooit een Joodse tempel in Jeruzalem stond, hoe absurd die ontkenning ook is...

 

Wouter

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New Temple denial from our Palestinian Arab friends

http://elderofziyon.blogspot.com/2011/12/new-temple-denial-from-our-palestinian.html
 
Robinson's Arch
A couple of weeks ago, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced an astonishing find of coins underneath the paved street near Robinson's Arch that showed that parts of the western supporting walls of the Temple Mount has been built after Herod's death. I noted at the time that the Palestinian Arabic press was saying that this was somehow proof that there was no Temple there.

Now, a hastily-convened pseudo-scientific press conference has made this Temple denial official.

A Palestinian Arab academic named Jamal Amr said that the discovery has caused much frustration to Zionist archaeologists and blew up their claims about the "legend of the temple." This distinguished expert then went on to claim that all the discoveries that have been found in the city of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount came from the Arab and Islamic Umayyad and Abbasid periods up to the Ottoman period!

I'm not sure, but he might be saying that the Herodian Temple was built hundreds of years later.

Dr. Amr seems to be a professor at Bir Zeit University. As far as I can tell, he has no specific expertise in archaeology - but rather in architecture.

But when you want to dig up an pretend archaeology expert, he's the man!

Note that no Israeli media outlet expressed any misgivings about the discovery. It is well known that Herod didn't build the Second Temple but rather he expanded it some five centuries after it was built. Temple rituals were not stopped during the construction. In no way does the discovery of the coins contradict the existence of the Temple - which has lots of archaeological evidence, and more discovered every few months.
 
 

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