A Prayer Minyan On The Temple Mount!


Yom Shleeshee

Tuesday

17 Nisan 5781

March 30, 2021

The News on the Israeli Street

The daily Corona (Covid-19) update . . .

Please note that these numbers encompass from 8pm Monday to 8pm Tuesday:

832,639 Israelis have been confirmed with the virus since the pandemic began last March.

There are 571 newly confirmed cases.

405 are in critical condition—a decrease of 36

203 of the most critically ill are on ventilators—no change

6,196 have died–no change

There are currently 7,888 active Corona cases.

5,235,732 have been vaccinated (4,763,476 of these have received two shots).

It will be very interesting to see if the low newly confirmed rate and the low daily death rate will continue as Pesach continues.
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TODAY’S BLOG

A Prayer Minyan On The Temple Mount!

(with acknowledgment to Aviad Visoli)

Your humble servant was so excited about the post of Aviad Visoli today on rotter.net that he has decided to present it as Today’s Blog:


“We were privileged today to pray in a minyan on the Temple Mount. A full prayer in the minyan . . .

Prayer in all its details and grammar, including for the first time in our lives . . . ‘Blessed be the glory of his majesty from the world to the world’ for all the blessings of the eighteenth prayer*.

In all the decades I have been ascending the Temple Mount I have not had the privilege of saying a prayer in the minyan openly. The policemen today looked at us and knowingly allowed full prayer. Including those who blessed the sick.

All the state’s arguments in the 54 years of the Temple Mount High Court against the prayer of Jews, were rolled to the winds, in the face of a quorum of Jews praying openly and peacefully on the Temple Mount, including the special blessings that can only be said on the Temple Mount.

This is the most significant advance in the rights of the Jews on the Temple Mount since the destruction of the Second Temple. It is not possible to withdraw from this. The Temple Mount is in our hands!

Congratulations to the joint headquarters and the police who enable the upheaval of Jewish prayer in the minyan on the Temple Mount. You have bypassed the State Attorney’s Office and the High Court in a big way.”

Of course we can excuse Aviad’s exuberant exaggeration (at numerous times since the destruction of the 2nd Temple, Jews have prayed on the Mount–and one prayer can hardly mean that we have wrested power away from the Islamic Wakf.

Nevertheless, the news from the Mount today is wonderful and to be relished!

*The 18th prayer also known as the Amidah, Tefilat HaAmidah or Shemoneh Esreh, is the central prayer of the Jewish liturgy. It is recited in each of the three prayer services on a typical weekday: the Shacharit, Mincha, and Ma’ariv.

This entry was posted in News and tagged is the central prayer of the Jewish liturgy, Israel, maariv, Mincha, prayer minyan, Shemoneh Esreh, temple mount, The 18th prayer, the Shacharit, the Tefilat HaAmidah, three prayer services on a typical weekday. Bookmark the permalink.

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