The Jews consider the “Buraq Wall” a Jewish landmark and sacred to them (although it was not mentioned even remotely in the Jewish Encyclopedia in 1901). This was also denied by the International Committee, a branch of the League of Nations, in 1929.But in 1967, the Zionist enemy took the wall by force after the war of that year, and turned it into a religious Jewish landmark. ...The important thing is that this wall, which the Jews called the “Wailing Wall,” does not exist in the Torah at all. The Torah does not know the “Wailing Wall” and does not refer to it in any of its words.The truth is that the “Wailing Wall” is an incorrect innovation that appeared among religious Jews of Western European origins only 150 years ago, until the hysteria of searching for a holy land for them escalated, even if it was false and slanderous.
The Jewish Encyclopedia doesn't mention the Western Wall? That's news to me, since its entry on Jerusalem includes this engraving of the Wall by Alexander Bida, and it adds a detail: "When Napoleon came to Palestine in 1798, the Jews were accused of assisting him, and were threatened with death by the Moslems. Led by Mordecai al-Gazi they assembled at the Wailing-Wall for prayer. "
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