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"The Tunnel of King Je-hoia-chin and
Its Religious Significance"
by Kais Al-Kalby with Emad J.
Meerza
The patriarch of all the
believers of Allah (God), i.e. Jews, Christians, and Muslims is Prophet
Ibrahim (Abraham, PBUH). He built the Kaba in Makkah with his firstborn
son Ismael (PBUH). This was an order from Allah (SWT) that Ibrahim and
Ismael (PBUT) construct this Holy House of Allah (SWT) as a place of
worship for all the believers on earth. Ismael (PBUH) was 17 at the time
he and his father built the Kaba. Prophet Muhammad (PB UH), a descendent
of the Prophet Ismael (PBUH), would come nearly 2,500 years after Kaba
was built and repurify it as a holy place of worship according to the
teachings of the Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH). As stated in the Torah and in
the Holy Quran "all the generations will be blessed through I brahim (PBUH)"
(Genesis 12 and 18 Holy Bible, Chp 2 Verses 123-141 Holy Quran).
In Jerusalem, Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH)
also established a place of worship. This place would later be known as
The House Of Allah (God), or Beteyel. Forty years after the construction
of Kaba, Prophet Ibrahim expanded this place of worship. Isaac (PBUH),
Prophet Ibrahim's younger son, worshipped in Beteyel, but also made
journeys to Kaba in Makkah for Hajj (Pilgrimage) as did Ibrahim (PBUH).
Jacob (PBUH) the second son of Isaac (PBUH), extended Beteyel as a place
of worship for all the believers of Allah (God) in the region. The
natives of the land, the Palestinians, believers in the teachings of the
Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH), also worshipped in Beteyel or The House Of Allah
(God). Ibrahim (PBUH), referred to Beteyel as "Masjid Al-Aqsa", which
means the farthest place of worship of the One God. Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH),
was stating that Masjid Al-Aqsa was the farthest place of worship west
of Kaba in Makkah.
Some years later, Prophet
Joseph (PBUH), the son of Jacob (PBUH) attained a high position of power
in Egypt, he sent for all of his family to come live with him in Egypt
away from the poverty of Palestine. There were 33 in all, Jacob (PBUH),
his children and his grandchildren (Genesis 46 in the Torah). Because
there was no one left from Jacob's (PBUH) tribe to care for Beteyel,
Jacob (PBUH), intrusted care of Beteyel or Masjid Al-Aqsa to the natives
of the area, the Palestinians. This was acceptable due to the fact that
the natives were also followers of the Patriarch, the Prophet Ibrahim (PBUH).
The Israelites remained in Egypt for four hundred years as slaves to the
Egyptians with no connection to Palestine, the land from which they
immigrated (Genesis 15 Verse 13-17). This choice was not forced on them,
they simply chose to leave Palestine for the sake of the wealth and
riches in Egypt.
In the time of Prophet Moses (PBUH),
the Israelites were still slaves to the Egyptians. Allah (God) ordered
Moses (PBUH), after freeing the Israelites from bondage, to lead them to
Palestine. The Israelites rejected this order from Allah (God), and
preferred to live in the desert of Sinai, rather than to sacrifice
themselves for the sake of Allah (God). They believed this land belonged
to the Palestinians, the natives of the area.
For fourty years, the
Israelites wandered in the desert of Sinai. A new generation was born,
and from it came forth Prophet David (PBUH), he would lead this
generation of believers to Palestine. Prophet David (PBUH) established
his kingdom in part of Palestine, and controlled Jerusalem. His son,
Prophet Soloman (King Solomon) (PBUH) rebuilt Masjid Al-Aqsa with the
help of the natives, and next to it he built the ruler's palace. After
Prophet Solomon's death, his two sons divided his kingdom amongst
themselves. Each son established his own kingdom and each had its own
capital. From both of these kingdoms, Allah (God) raised prophets.
According to Jewish history, these kingdoms existed for nearly two
hundred years.
In 586 B.C., King Je-hoia-chin
of Jerusalem, saw that he might lose his kingdom. He was the last Jewish
king who tried to resist the Babylonians in Jerusalem. In his struggle,
his kingdom was surrounded by the Babylonians who cut off supplies from
the outside world. When the inhabitants of Jerusalem ran out of food and
water, the king made a tunnel to enable his soldiers to escape and
retrieve supplies from the outside world. Part of the tunnel collapsed,
the resistance led by King Je-hoia-chin was defeated, and the
Babylonians took over Jerusalem. The tunnel used by King Je-hoia-chin,
is the same tunnel being excavated today in Jerusalem. After the
Babylonians conquered Jerusalem, they took its inhabitants as slaves to
Babylon.
The Babylonian King
Nebuchadnezzar destroyed what King Solomon had built in Jerusalem (Kings
2 Chapters 24 and 25 of the Bible). According to the word of God in the
Torah, the Israelites were made to be slaves in both the Nile and in the
Euphrates.
After seventy years of slavery
in Babylon, King Cyrus of Persea gave the Israelites their freedom. At
that time very few of the Israelites returned to Palestine. These few
Israelites worshipped only in The House Of Allah. For generations, the
Israelites took care of Beteyel or Masjid Al-Aqsa. During the period
when the Roman Empire was in constant battle with the Persean Empire,
the Israelites aided the Perseans, and benefited when the Perseans had
control of Jerusalem. Because the Israelites supported the Persean
Empire as spies and in other ways, the Romans treated them as enemies of
the Roman Empire.
In 70 A.D., the Romans
destroyed (burned) Beteyel, and converted it into a place of Roman idol
worship (Jupitor,etc.). In 315 A.D., when the Roman Emperor Constantine
converted to Christianity, the Romans had no regard for Beteyel. It
became a place were the inhabitants of Jerusalem, including the Jews
threw their garbage. The Jews no longer considered Beteyel a Holy
Shrine.
The Persean Empire defeated the
Romans in 614 A.D., the Jews were now able to worship where they wished,
but chose not to worship in Beteyel or Masjid Al-Aqsa. The Perseans
controlled Jerusalem until 624 A.D. The Jews, who were in a position of
power during this period, tortured the Arab Christians. Jerusalem was in
need of a just ruler. Both the Christians and the Jews had suffered
under different empires, and both knew that the Holy Scriptures promised
the coming of a ruler to save them from all this unjust torture and
aggression.
The Israelites were awaiting
the coming of the Messiah, who would be king and ruler, and would defeat
all the evil empires, as promised by Allah (God). The only Prophet in
history to have accomplished this task, was Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and his followers defeated all the empires of
the time, establishing the Kingdom Of God (Islamic State) throughout the
region. This included Jerusalem as promised by Allah to the Muslims
(Daniel 2 Verse 44 and Mathew 21 Verse 43). The Israelites had tried to
fulfill this prophecy in 165 B.C., under the leadership of Judah Makabi.
Within three years, he was defeated by the Romans, who regained complete
control of Jerusalem. Prophet Jesus (PBUH), was also unable to
accomplish this task mentioned in the Holy Scriptures. It was the
Prophet from Arabia, Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) who fulfilled this
prophecy.
In 621 A.D., the Prophet
Muhammad (PBUH) ascended to the heavens in the night known as Israa and
Mirag to the Muslims (Malachi 3 Verse 1-14). In that night, Prophet
Muhammad (PBUH) led all the Prophets of Allah (PBUT) in prayer in the
Holy Mosque (Masjid Al-Aqsa). For this reason, Masjid Al-Aqsa is a holy
place of worship for the Muslims, along with Kaba in Makkah and The
Prophet's (PBUH) Mosque in Medina. These are the three most important
Mosques to the Muslims.
In 637 A.D., the Christian
leader of Jerusalem, Snaifors, realized through the holy Scriptures (Zeckariah
9 Verses 9 and 10), that the second leader of the Islamic State, Umar
ibn Al-Khatab, fits the description of the one who would open Jerusalem
and free it from the evil empires. Snaifors surrendered peacefully. Umar
ibn Al-Khatab and the Muslims, after securing Jerusalem, again
established Masjid Al-Aqsa as a holy place of worship. Both the
Christians and the Jews were pleased with the arrival of Umar and the
Muslims, and with the just rule under the Islamic State.
In the eleventh century, the
European Christians in the crusades, tortured the Jews and the Muslims.
They burned the Jews in the their Temples and they burned the Muslims in
Masjid Al-Aqsa. The European Christians even tortured the Arab
Christians and destroyed their churches. The Jews fled to Indulis
(Spain), to receive protection under Islamic rule or a Muslim society.
In 1189 A.D., the leader of the Muslim army, Salah Aldeen Al-Ayobi
expelled the European Christians from Jerusalem, and returned Jerusalem
to Islamic rule. The Christian, Jews, and Muslims lived in harmony under
Islamic rule.
In 1948, with the help of the
western powers, the Jews were able to fulfill the promise of the British
foreign minister, Bill Ford. This promise was made in 1917 regarding the
Jews' return to the holy land, Palestine. In the time of Moses (PBUH),
when ordered by Allah (God) to return to Palestine, the Israelites
disobeyed the will of Allah (God). Once the Jews again controlled
Jerusalem, they expelled and tortured the natives of Palestine from
their land, and the area returned to a state of unrest (Haggie 2 Verse
7-9).
In the 1980's, the Israelis
started an archaeological project in the area of the Dome of the Rock (Masjid
Al-Aqsa). They began excavation claiming that they were searching for
the Temple Of King Solomon. They were unable to locate the Temple Of
King Solomon, but in the process discover ed the tunnel of King Je-hoia-chin.
The Israelis claimed that the search was a success only because they
discovered the collapsed tunnel of King Je-hoia-chin, which is in no way
related to the Temple of King Solomon. This tunnel has no religious
significance, it only has historical significance. The entrance was then
sealed and today has been reopened without justification. The
significance to the Muslims is well understood, they fear for Masjid Al-Aqsa
and its foundation, and that in some way this excavation can damage the
Holy Mosque. The significance of this dig to the Jews is not yet
understood, clearly there is no religious significance. Prime Minister
Netanyahu has said this openly is his news conference at the White
House. The question thus remains, why if this archaeological dig can
lead to so much unrest, do the Israelis insist that it remain open?
Conclusion
First - all the children of
Israel left Jerusalem in the time of Jacob by their own will.
Second - they were
unwilling to support Moses (PBUH) and return to the holy land for
the sake of Allah (God).
Third - King Je-hoia-chin's
tunnel has no religious significance to the Jews, it is merely a
historical site. The Israelis continued excavation of the tunnel,
may result in damage to Masjid Al-Aqsa.
Fourth - the Israelites
abandoned Beteyel in 614 A.D., while under Persean rule.
Fifth - they took Palestine
by force and aggression in 1948, and subsequently tortured many
Palestinians in the process.
Finally - the Jews do not
appreciate all the just treatment that they received from the
Muslims throughout history, and as we see today, the Israelis have
little concern for the Muslim people, their places of worship, and
their property.
http://www.stanford.edu/~jamila/Aqsa.html
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