Today the struggle for Jerusalem and for all of Israel continues without
respite, perpetuating 4,000 years of confrontation in the heart of the land
once called Canaan. Where once the ancient weapons were bronze swords,
lances, and battleaxes, they are now stun grenades, helicopter gun ships,
remotely-detonated car bombs, and suicidal young men and women armed with
explosives. Although the individuals and their weapons may have changed, the
underlying tensions and desires have not. And the end is not yet in sight.
Meron Benvenisti, the former Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem, has described the
rival Jewish and Moslem claims to the Temple Mount as "a time bomb...of
apocalyptic dimensions."
Jerusalem—a city central to three major religions and held sacred by
hundreds of millions of people throughout the world—has been under siege,
off and on, for four millennia. No other city in the world has been more
bitterly fought over throughout its history. Although frequently called the
"City of Peace," this is likely a mistranslation and certainly a misnomer,
for the city’s existence has been anything but peaceful.
There have been at least 118 separate conflicts in and for Jerusalem during
the past four millennia—conflicts which ranged from local religious
struggles to strategic military campaigns which embraced everything in
between. Jerusalem has been destroyed completely at least twice, besieged 23
times, attacked an additional 52 times, captured and recaptured 44 times,
been the scene of 20 revolts and innumerable riots, had at least five
separate periods of violent terrorist attacks during the past century, and
has only changed hands completely peacefully twice in the past 4,000 years.
Strabo, the famous geographer writing in the first century CE, described
Jerusalem as being in a spot which "was not such as to excite jealousy,
nor for which there could be any fierce contention" (Strabo 16.2.36).
How wrong he was! Battles for control of the city began as early as the
second millennium BCE, but their relevance to the modern world begins in
earnest when the Israelites, led by the young warrior-king David, engaged in
an epic battle with the Jebusites for control of Jerusalem sometime around
1000 BCE. In the three millennia that have passed since David captured the
city and made it his capital, Jerusalem has been fought over again and
again.
Why is this? Why have dozens of armies—from minor tribes as well as great
civilizations—fought to conquer and rule Jerusalem? It lay far from major
ports and did not dominate any historically important trade routes. It sat
on the edge of a barren and forbidding desert poorly suited for the building
of an important commercial center or strategic military base. The answer may
lie on a hill called the Temple Mount—known in Arabic as the Haram al-Sherif
(the "Noble Sanctuary")—that looks down upon the surrounding city; Gershom
Gorenberg has called it "the most contested piece of real estate on earth."
On this Mount stands a great rock which is central to the story of the
struggles for Jerusalem. It has seen kingdoms rise and fall, great empires
come and go. It once lay within the Temple of King Solomon and later inside
Herod’s Temple. Today, this great stone still has a commanding presence on
the Temple Mount. It now lies beneath the golden-roofed Dome of the Rock and
is a vital part of the third most sacred site of the Islamic world.
According to Moslem tradition, the Prophet Mohammed ascended to the furthest
reaches of heaven from this rock. According to Jewish tradition, this is the
rock upon which Abraham offered his son Isaac as a sacrifice to God. It was
here that David brought the sacred Ark of his people.
Legend has it that the Israelites toiled by the rock to build the great
temple for Solomon, that it was bathed with the tears of Judaeans bound for
exile in the fields of Babylon, and stained with the blood of Crusaders and
Saracens engaged in holy warfare. This is the rock that has outlasted all
those who came to besiege Jerusalem—David and Shishak, Sennacherib and
Nebuchadnezzar, Vespasian and Titus, Crusaders and Saracens, Moslems and
Mamlukes, Ottomans and British.
If the story of the rock is the story of the Temple Mount, it is also the
story of the city of Jerusalem. Most of the battles that have raged over
Jerusalem during the past four millennia were inspired by the desire of one
or another group to establish cultural and religious hegemony over the
region, whose focal point has always been the Temple Mount and the rock that
stands upon it. Thus the battles for control of Jerusalem were usually
fought because the city was an important political and religious center
rather than because of any inherent military or commercial value it had.
Many of these conflicts have reverberated down through the pages of history
to the present time. In this ancient city, the battles of yesterday have
frequently become part of the propaganda of today, and so events that took
place eight hundred or even three thousand years ago still exert a dramatic
and significant influence. Israeli officials celebrate David’s conquest of
Jerusalem from the Jebusites about 1000 BCE as marking the city’s beginnings
under Jewish rule. But such prominent Palestinians as Yasser Arafat,
describing themselves as descendants of the original Jebusites who fought
against the Israelites, see the conquest of the city by David as the first
skirmish in a three-thousand-year-long battle between the Palestinians and
the Israelis.
Similarly, Saddam Hussein hailed the destruction of Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BCE and its recapture from the Crusaders by Saladin in
1187 CE as precedents for his own actions and intentions. In Iraq, laser
shows, billboards, and statuary depicted Hussein as the modern successor to
these ancient warriors. Theodor Herzl, Max Nordau, Vladimir Jabotinsky, and
other Zionists intent on founding the modern state of Israel invoked
stirring images of heroic Maccabean warriors from 167 BCE and of Bar Kokhba
facing the legions of the Roman Empire in 135 CE. Osama bin Laden styled
himself on grainy videotapes as a latter-day Saladin, battling western
Crusaders in the Middle East a thousand years after the fact and proclaiming
his determination to bring Jerusalem under Moslem sovereignty once again.
And so military occupations and religious conflicts continue in Jerusalem,
as they have done unrelentingly for four thousand years, with no end in
sight. It seems that not much has changed in the nearly 3,400 years since
Abdi-Heba, the beleaguered Canaanite ruler of Urusalim, exclaimed to the
Egyptian pharaoh, "I am situated like a ship in the midst of the sea!"
The modern state of Israel, which only recently celebrated its fiftieth
anniversary, has been described as a besieged island surrounded by a sea of
hostile Arab forces. Will it last even as long as did the Crusader kingdom
of Jerusalem? The future of the new state of Palestine, whose birthing pangs
are still being felt, is even less certain; its twin outposts in the Gaza
Strip and the West Bank can similarly be depicted as islands surrounded by a
sea of increasingly hostile Israeli forces.
It is interesting, and a bit disquieting, to see how the biblical and other
ancient conflicts have frequently been used (and, more frequently, misused)
as propaganda by modern military and political leaders. A few examples,
given below, will suffice to show how some are still reflected in the social
and political environment of the Middle East today.2
The biblical account of David’s battle against the Jebusites and his capture
of their city of Jerusalem is a dramatic tale of skill and courage. It is
also the subject of much scholarly debate, but it is clear that one day or
night some three thousand years ago, one of the pivotal battles of history
began. The victory described set the stage for the predominance of the
Israelites in the region for the next four hundred years, until they in turn
were conquered by the Babylonians. It is a tale that still reverberates
today in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.
"Our forefathers, the Canaanites and Jebusites," declared Yasser
Arafat, chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization and president of
the Palestinian Authority, "built the cities and planted the land; they
built the monumental city of Bir Salim [Jerusalem] . . ." His trusted
confidant and advisor, Faisal Husseini, agreed. "First of all," he
said, "I am a Palestinian. I am a descendant of the Jebusites, the ones
who came before King David. This [Jerusalem] was one of the most important
Jebusite cities in the area. . . . Yes, it’s true. We are the descendants of
the Jebusites." Husseini, well-known in the Arab world as the son of a
war hero, a member of a respected Jerusalem family, and a distant cousin of
Yasser Arafat, was the Palestinian Authority minister for Jerusalem affairs
before he suffered a fatal heart attack while visiting Kuwait in May 2001.
He was especially fond of referring to himself as a descendant of the
ancient Jebusites, the "original landlords of Jerusalem."
Arafat and Husseini were using a new tactic in the attempt, begun by the
Palestinian Authority a decade or more earlier, to gain control of modern
Jerusalem. Their initial targets were the notepads and tape recorders of
news reporters. Their ultimate targets were especially Americans and also
the peoples of Europe and the Middle East. By claiming descent from the
ancient Jebusites, they were effectively avowing that the Palestinian people
can trace their lineage to a people who held an already ancient Jerusalem
when the Israelites conquered the city and made it the capital of their
fledgling kingdom. They were implying that King David’s capture of the city
from the Jebusites about 1000 BCE was simply the first time that the Jews
took Jerusalem from its rightful Palestinian owners.
Not to be outdone in the propaganda campaign, Israeli politicians opened
fire with a media onslaught of their own. They gave top billing to King
David in the "Jerusalem 3000" advertising campaign for celebrations that
began in 1995, and they identified David’s conquest of the city in about
1000 BCE as marking the foundation of Jerusalem. To their Palestinian
opponents, this was political propaganda that conveniently ignored the
earlier Canaanite and Jebusite occupations of Jerusalem that extend the
history of the city back an additional two thousand years. David’s capture
of Jerusalem three thousand years ago is thus relevant—or claimed to be
relevant—to the conflict between Jews and Arabs in Israel today. The modern
contestants are stretching and embroidering the faded cloth of history. The
ancient conflict between the Israelites and Jebusites is now being recast as
the original battle between Jews and Palestinians for control of Jerusalem.
In February 2001, Ariel Sharon was elected Prime Minister of Israel. The
next day Saddam Hussein announced the formation of a "Jerusalem Army" to be
made up of seven million Iraqis who had "volunteered to liberate Palestine"
from Israeli rule. At first many analysts dismissed this as propaganda "in
the fantasy drama staged by Saddam." However, in August 2001 the
Associated Press reported that thousands of Iraqis had taken to the streets,
waving guns and calling for the "liberation of Palestine" under the
leadership of Hussein. The banners of the demonstrators read "Here we
come Saddam ... here we come Jerusalem." By February 2003, as members of
the "Jerusalem Army" marched again in Mosul, official Iraqi sources claimed
that two and a half million recruits had completed their training in the
previous two years.
This was not a new theme for the President of Iraq. In 1979, Saddam Hussein
was quoted in an interview with Fuad Matar, his semi-official biographer:
"Nebuchadnezzar
stirs in me everything relating to pre-Islamic ancient history.
And what is most important to me about Nebuchadnezzar is the link
between the Arabs’ abilities and the liberation of Palestine.
Nebuchadnezzar was, after all, an Arab from Iraq, albeit ancient Iraq.
Nebuchadnezzar was the one who brought the bound Jewish slaves from
Palestine. That is why whenever I remember Nebuchadnezzar I like to
remind the Arabs, Iraqis in particular, of their historical
responsibilities. It is a burden that should not stop them from action,
but rather spur them into action because of their history. So many have
liberated Palestine throughout history, before and after the advent of
Islam."
Although Nebuchadnezzar was neither Arab nor Moslem, Saddam Hussein’s
"Nebuchadnezzar Imperial Complex," as psychologist Erwin R. Parson called
it, was remarkably consistent. In the late 1980s, he promoted the Iraqi Arts
Festival called "From Nebuchadnezzar to Saddam Hussein." He also had
a replica of Nebuchadnezzar's war chariot built and had himself photographed
standing in it. He ordered images of himself and Nebuchadnezzar beamed, side
by side, into the night sky over Baghdad as part of a laser light show. He
spent millions rebuilding the ancient site of Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar's
capital city, provoking excited anticipation among Christian fundamentalists
who saw this as one of the signs of the End Times and the imminent approach
of Armageddon.
In forming his so-called "Jerusalem Army" to "liberate Palestine," Saddam
Hussein appeared to be positioning himself not only as the successor to
Nebuchadnezzar but also as a successor to Cyrus the Great. Just as Cyrus
ended the Babylonian Exile of the Jews in 538 BCE, so Saddam boasted that he
would end the exile of the Palestinian refugees.
Although analysts frequently dismissed Saddam Hussein’s actions as mere
propaganda in a "fantasy drama," some who remember the past recalled
that Nebuchadnezzar successfully laid waste to Jerusalem 2500 years ago.
Even if Saddam Hussein’s "Jerusalem Army" was more wishful thinking than
serious threat, his stated intention to "liberate" Jerusalem was hard to
ignore. Was he planning to make history repeat itself? To many people around
the world, it certainly seemed a distinct possibility, but the capture of
Saddam Hussein by U.S. forces in December 2003 ensured that he, at least,
would not be repeating Nebuchadnezzar’s destructions of Jerusalem.