TOLERANCE MUSEUM
PART II
GERSHON BASKIN
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Yesterday I went to the building site of
the museum to see first hand where it is being built and what
“progress” has been made. There was a hearing in the High Court
yesterday which not yet issued its judgment. Later in the afternoon
I participated in a public hearing in the Interior Affairs Committee
of the Knesset. The meeting in the Knesset was initiated by the
Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin. The following is what I learned
yesterday and my conclusions of what must be done:
1. There is no doubt whatsoever that the
Museum of Tolerance is being constructed on top of a very important
Muslim Cemetery.
2. As the initiators of the Museum contend,
part of the Museum is being built on what was a parking lot
constructed some 30 years ago over the cemetery by the Municipality
of Jerusalem, this is the area where most of the graves have been
found so far.
3. The Head of the Antiquities Authority
stated that they have already removed from the site 250
bodies-skeletons and skulls. The Antiquities Authority reported to
the High Court that the cemetery dates back centuries and that there
are at least 5 layers of density of graves there.
4. The lawyers of the Wiesenthal center who
appeared in the Knesset hearing appealed to the Muslims to enter
into dialogue. They propose reburying all the graves that were/are
under the location of the Museum (not necessarily in the same
cemetery) and paying for the renovation and the upkeep of the
cemetery.
5. The Muslim representatives stated that
there is no room for dialogue and that the Wiesenthal center should
consider how they would act if it were a Jewish cemetery in
question. They also asked that people consider how the plan to build
a museum over a Muslim cemetery would influence anti-Semitism in
Europe.
6. The Speaker of the Knesset appealed to
the Wiesenthal center to move the museum to a more suitable
location.
My conclusions:
1. The building of the Museum must be
stopped. There cannot be any legitimate grounds for building a
Tolerance museum on top of a Muslim cemetery and it does not matter
what was there on part of the site prior to construction.
2. I saw the anger of the Muslim officials
who spoke in the Knesset, even the most moderate of them. This is an
issue that will not go away with a court decision. If the building
of the Museum continues there is no doubt in my mind that it will
become an issue of global proportions and there is no way that the
State of Israel or even the Jewish people will come out clean.
3. In my view this is not a legal issue –
anything can be made legal. This is a moral issue and an issue
concerning the ability of people of the three faiths to live
together in this Land and in this City.
4. As a Jew and as an Israeli and I
embarrassed by the audacity to even think about building the Museum
of Tolerance on that site. I can only imagine (and hope) that the
“Knight of Justice” Shimon Wiesenthal must be turning in his own
grave if he could realize what has developed.
5. I appeal to the Rabbi Hier who raised
$250 million for this project and the Shimon Wiesenthal Center to
use their good judgment and to take the initiative to stop the
project, find a more suitable location, pay for the renovation of
the cemetery as a sign if good faith and apology. I appeal to the
donors of the Museum to raise their voice and call on the Wiesenthal
Center to stop the project immediately before more damage is done.
This project must be stopped – no good will
come from it and the longer it takes to make the decision, the worse
the situation will become.
I urge you to write letters to the Simon Wiesenthal center to
request that they move the Museum to another Jerusalem location.
Letters should be addressed to:
Rabbi Marvin Hier – Dean and Founder of the Wiesenthal Center
Fax: + 1-310 553.4521
You can also use their web page to send an email:
http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/pp.asp?c=fwLYKnN8LzH&b=242624
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