Liberating the Temple Mount: apocalyptic tendencies among Jewish temple activists

Authors

  • Maria Leppäkari Sydväst Polytech, School of Health and Social Care, Turku

Keywords:

Temple Mount (Jerusalem), Jerusalem Temple, Arab-Israeli conflict, Apocalypticism, Violence, Judaism, Terrorism

Abstract

Every now and then instances of violence are played out at the Temple Mount area in Jerusalem, also known as the Haram-esh-sharif. Some of the cases are referred to as results of the so-called ‘Jerusalem syndrome’, incidents when individuals’ manifestations of pre-existing psychopathology culminate in violent actions. Israeli psychiatrists and others have treated such incidents as examples of when peoples’ expectations of a heavenly Jerusalem collide with the very earthly reality in the city. For some people, such encounters may create anxiety that may threaten the victim’s very sanity. In such situations, an apocalyptic mission may become the only way for them to cope with the situation at hand. But the Temple Mount does not only attract lone-acting individuals, it also attracts organized groups who refer to the very spot as an important identity marker. In this article, the author draws on her field research material and interviews with Jewish Third Temple activists in Jerusalem collected on and off between 1998 and 2004. Here Yehuda Etzion’s, Gershon Salomon’s and Yoel Lerner’s theology and activities are studied in light of apocalyptic representations, and how these are expressed in relation to religious longing for the Third Temple in the light of the Gaza withdrawal. Not all those who are engaged in endtime scenarios act upon their visions. In Jerusalem, there have been, and still are, several religious-political groups that more or less ritually perambulate the Temple Mount area. 

How to Cite

Leppäkari, M. (2006). Liberating the Temple Mount: apocalyptic tendencies among Jewish temple activists. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 19, 193–212. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67309