fanger
Gold Member
Do you think people bringing knives and guns to a prayer place is a natural thing and should be tolerated?You go in, steal land and kill, and now you want control of the place they worshipped for centuries. You expect them to be your lapdogs. You have them fenced in like animals, and in the West Bank you are taking over kicking them out.
It's funny to me, that you;re so bothered by the fact that Muslims feel so bad about Jews stealing their mosque from them, and feel less bad about that mosque being a murder scene.
Do you think people bringing knives and guns to a prayer place is a natural thing and should be tolerated?
Can you imagine a Jew bringing knife into the Temple Mount to stab Arabs? he would immediately been banned, if not shot on the place, being called "Wicked" and his family should have felt shame.
Yet, the family's of those animalks are seen as HEROES for MURDURING people at the HOUSE OF GOD. The third holiest place to Muslims and first to Jews.
THAT is not a disturbing fact to you people?! are you all INSANE??
Can you imagine a Jew bringing knife into the Temple Mount to stab Arabs? he would immediately been banned, if not shot on the place, being called "Wicked" and his family should have felt shame.
The Cave of the Patriarchs massacre, also known as the Ibrahimi Mosque massacre or Hebron massacre,[1] was a shooting massacre carried out by American-Israeli Baruch Goldstein, also a member of the far-right Israeli Kach movement. On February 25, 1994, Goldstein opened fire on a large number of Palestinian Muslims who had gathered to pray inside the Ibrahimi Mosque at the Cave of the Patriarchs compound in Hebron, West Bank. It took place on February 25, 1994, during the overlapping religious holidays of both Jewish Purim and Muslim Ramadan.[2] The attack left 29 people dead, several as young as twelve, and 125 wounded.
Cave of the Patriarchs massacre - Wikipedia
Goldstein's gravesite became a pilgrimage site for Jewish extremists.[8] The following words are inscribed on the tomb: "He gave his life for the people of Israel, its Torah and land
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