Speech Marking 45th
Anniversary of the Reunification of Jerusalem
(May 20, 2012)
Just days ago, I visited the Altneu Synagogue in Prague,
the Maharal's [Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel] synagogue. Three months
ago, I visited the Portuguese Synagogue in Amsterdam. These are two
of the most remarkable synagogues in the world. One has been serving
the Jewish community of the Czech Republic for nearly 800 years. The
second has served the Jewish community of Holland for 350 years. One
is Ashkenazi, the other Sepharadic. One is small and intimate. The other
is large and magnificent.
But what connects them is what connects every synagogue
around the world. When Jews pray in Prague or in Amsterdam, in New York
or in Moscow, in Mexico City or in Hong Kong, in Haifa or in Beer Sheva,
the face the same direction our people have faced for thousands of years.
They face Jerusalem.
They face the place that has always been the center
of our national and spiritual life, the place that reminds us of our
glorious past and serves as the focus of our hopes for the future. And
we will not turn our backs on those who have faced Jerusalem for generations.
We will preserve Jerusalem because an Israel without Jerusalem is like
a body without a heart. It was on this hill, 45 years ago, that the
heart that unites our people began to beat again with full strength;
and our heart will never be divided again.
There are people who believe that if we just divide
Jerusalem, which means eventually conceding the Temple Mount –
they believe we will have peace. They believe that, but they are wrong.
I am doubtful, to put it mildly, that if we grant other forces control
over that square above the Temple Mount, we won't see the situation
deteriorate so quickly that will devolve into a religious and sectarian
war. I also know that this is the lesson of the ages – that only
under Israeli rule, under Israeli sovereignty – access and freedom
of religion and freedom of worship for all religions has been and will
continue to be ensured. Only under Israel. Only under Israel will the
quiet be maintained; only under Israel will peace between the religions
be maintained.
Sustainable peace is made with strong nations, and
an Israel without a unified Jerusalem will be like a body with a weak
heart. I want to say something else: a nation that is willing to sacrifice
its heart will only convince its enemies that it lacks the willpower
to fight for anything.
Forty-five years ago, this place saw our people's determination
and the iron will of our fighters. They fought like lions in these trenches,
against wave after wave of machine gun and heavy fire. They fought like
lions, but more than that, they fought for Jerusalem and they won.
During that same fierce battle, 36 of our best men
perished – and in all of Jerusalem, 182 IDF fighters died, and
Jewish history changed forever. A city divided became whole –
and it will remain so.
Our generation has been granted a great privilege:
we are witnesses to the fulfillment of the words of the prophets. We
saw the resurrection of Zion; we saw the restoration of the sovereignty
of the people of Israel here in the Land of Israel; we saw the ingathering
of the exiles; and we saw the unification and rebuilding of Jerusalem.
Our generation also bears the tremendous responsibility of ensuring
that we safeguard this transformation for future generations.
The prophet Isaiah said: "Wake, wake! Arise, O
Jerusalem." Well, Jerusalem has arisen. After centuries of repression
and intolerance by other faiths, Jerusalem has arisen and been unified.
I remember the day when Motta Gur said that the Temple
Mount was in our possession. Whose heart did not tremble? Who did not
think then about David and Solomon, about Isaiah and Jeremiah, about
the prophesies of hope and the lamentations of destruction? Who did
not feel the prayer of generations that beats within us? I felt it and
so did you.
And with this great power, we ushered in a transformation
here that could not be imagined. What was less than a century ago a
forgotten, impoverished and neglected backwater has now become a bustling,
vibrant, developed and advanced metropolis, the greatest requisite of
Israel – and the united capital of our nation.
Jerusalem is where our past has been uncovered and
our future has been built, the place where our unparalleled spiritual
treasures reside, a place of world-renowned universities and museums,
a place where unprecedented numbers are studying our heritage and where
the genius of our people is expanding the limits of science, medicine,
technology, the material sciences and the life sciences, and many other
sciences.
For 45 years, we have built and developed Jerusalem
– North and South, East and West. We will continue to build Jerusalem.
We will continue to develop our capital and we will
continue to ensure that its golden light continues to light the future
of our people and shine a light across the world – the light of
Jerusalem.
Sources: Prime Ministers Office |