Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Jordan's Desecration of Jerusalem (1948 - 1967)



Arabs desecrating Jewish graves and the Tomb of Joseph


Using headstones for roads and building structures destroying houses of worship, had anyone desecrated Arab graves or houses of worship they would commence riots.

History of Jerusalem:
Jordan's Desecration of Jerusalem

(1948 - 1967)


History of JerusalemTable of Contents | First Temple | Second Temple

Before the United Nations voted in favor of the Partition Plan on November 29, 1947, the Arab Legion of Jordan attacked Jerusalem. Their forces blocked Jerusalem's roads and cut off the city's access to water. After bitter fighting, the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City fell to the vastly superior arms and numbers of the Arab Legion. The surviving Jewish inhabitants fled to the "New City," the four-fifths of the capital that Israel successfully held.

The Old City, including the Jewish Quarter, officially fell to Jordan on May 27, 1948. Nearly twenty years later, during the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel's army liberated Jerusalem's Old City, finding the area completely neglected and virtually destroyed.
The following is photographic evidence of a sample of the destruction. All but one of the thirty five synagogues within the Old City were destroyed; those note completely devastated had been used as hen houses and stables filled with dung-heaps, garbage and carcasses. The revered Jewish graveyard on the Mount of Olives was in complete disarray with tens of thousands of tombstones broken into pieces to be used as building materials and large areas of the cemetery leveled to provide a short-cut to a new hotel. Hundreds of Torah scrolls and thousands of holy books had been plundered and burned to ashes.

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  • The Mount of Olives when the Jews were taking care of the cemetery
  • The Mount of Olives when the Jews were taking care of the cemetery
  • Jordanian hotel built on the Mount of Olives. In the background is the road cut through the cemetery.
  • Gravestones were used by the Jordanians as cheap building material.
  • The Jordinians decied that gavestones would make good stairs. You can see Hebrew inscriptions on the stones.
  • Road made of Jewish tombstones.
  • Tombstones used as pavement in the Azaria Arab Legion camp on the Jerusaelm-Jericho road
  • Tombstone used as a bench at the Azaria Arab Legion camp on the Jerusaelm-Jericho road
  • Tombstones used for a wall terrace in Jerusalem
  • The Jordanians used Jewish tombstones from the Mount of Olives for extensive army purposes. This is the inside of an Arab Legion Barrack at the Azaria Camp.
  • This synagogue, once a beautiful structrure in the Old City, was reduced by the Jordanians to rubble.
  • This used to be a place were students would learn and people would sit and pray. These broken walls are all that remain.
  • The pile of stones used to be a gate to this synagogue. This gate has beautiful designs and was an attraction of this place of worship.
  • This synagogue has been ripped apart. The back wall used to be the ark with many Torah scrolls. More than 300 men used to pray here every Shabbat.
  • One of the first synagogues the Jordanians destroyed. It used to be an imposing structure on the skyline that could be seen from miles away.

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