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Reports: Iraq De-Judaizing Ezekiel's Tomb want to turn it into Muslim Mosque PDF Print E-mail

by Hillel Fendel
Israel National News

(IsraelNN.com) Early reports that Iraq plans to retain the Jewish nature
of the Tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel are apparently false. Sources in
Baghdad say that the government plans to turn it into a mosque and erase
all Jewish markings.

Iraq announced earlier this year that it would revamp the ancient burial
site, which is located in Al-Kifl, a small town south of Baghdad. The
U.S.-backed government announcement implied that its Jewish nature would
continue to be emphasized.

Since then, however, reports have surfaced that the government is
actually planning to build a mosque there, including removing the
ancient Hebew inscriptions that adorn the site. Some reports say that
all or some of the lines of Hebrew script have already been erased.

Ezekiel (Yechezkel, in Hebrew), lived in the sixth century BCE, having
accompanied the exiled Judeans to Babylon. His prophecies include the
Vision of the Dry Bones, as well as the future return of Jewish People
to the Land of Israel even if they are not deserving (Chapter 36:
22-25). Thousands of Jews often visited the site of his tomb annually
before Iraqi Jewry came to an abrupt end in the middle of the 20th
century, and Moslems and Christians continue to visit it even today.

Shelomo Alfassa, Director of Justice for Jews from Arab Countries,
reports that Islamic political parties have pressured the government to
remove the Jewish inscriptions. He quotes the Iraqi news agency Ur News
as reporting that the writing and ornamentations “are being (or have
been) removed… under the pretext of restoring the site.”

Alfassa quotes sources to the effect that Iraq’s Antiquities and
Heritage Authority “has been pressured by Islamists to historically
cleanse all evidence of a Jewish connection to Iraq - a land where Jews
had lived for over a thousand years before the advent of Islam.”

Professor Investigates

Four months ago, a German-based Iraqi journalist tipped off the
Association of Jewish Academics from Iraq in Israel (AJAII) that plans
were afoot to build a mosque on the site of Ezekiel’s Tomb. AJAII asked
Dr. Jabbar Jamal al-Din, a lecturer in Jewish Thought at Kufa University
in Iraq, to investigate these reports – and he said that he believes
them to be untrue.

Baghdad Sources: Room for Concern
Sources in Baghdad, however, feel otherwise. Prof. Shmuel Moreh - Israel
Prize Laureate in Arabic Literature and Professor Emeritus at Hebrew
University of Jerusalem - told Israel National News that he had received
worrisome phone calls from non-Jewish friends in Baghdad. Prof. Moreh,
who serves as the Chairman of the Association of Jewish Academics from
Iraq, said that the plans are to turn the holy site into a mosque, and
“some told me that they are taking off the Hebrew inscriptions.”

Alfassa provides the following translation of the relevant report in Ur
News: “The officials of the Department of Antiquities and Heritage say
that their restoration programme will continue until 2011 and is
designed to carry out essential maintenance and prevent the dome and
roof from collapsing. But their hidden purpose, sources say, is the
removal of features that emphasize a historical connection with the Jews
who built the shrine and lived in the city for hundreds of years after
the Babylonian exile.”

Though well over 100,000 Jews lived in Iraq a few decades ago, this
number has now been decimated to no more than eight, Prof. Moreh said.
“There are others,” he added, “but they barely know that they are Jews;
in many cases, their parents did not tell them.”

Alfassa concludes: “Iraq - the Biblical Mesopotamia -is almost as rich
in Jewish history as the Land of Israel. The tomb of the prophet Ezekiel
dates back to the Babylonian exile in the sixth century BCE. It was
there in Iraq that Abraham discovered monotheism, and it is where the
prophets Ezra, Nehemiah, Nahum, Jonah and Daniel are all buried.”



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