Jewish Visitors Allowed to Bring Printed Prayer Sheets Onto Temple Mount for First Time, Marking Shift in Enforcement Policy
Authorities have, for the first time, allowed Jewish visitors to bring printed prayer guidance sheets onto the Temple Mount—distributed at the entrance and restricted to designated areas.The move signals a notable on-the-ground shift in enforcement at Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site, with major political and regional implications.

8 comments:
Shrei that Chareidim getting people killed but then encourage yeder einer to run up on Har Habayis to get Kuress
2:06
Who is getting "Kuress?" You am Ha'artz!
Did the Rambam and his father and the Chief Rabbi of Akko get "Kuress" when he went up to the Har Habyis?
Stop with your "shittisim n' havalim"
The Belzer Chusid Elbaum, who was from the first to go up to the har habayis in 1967 lived way into his 90's!
Shut up with your brazen an-raatzis!
Also leshtissoi
Genig shoin vus dee klapst on your daas yuchid in Rishoinim vus iz nisht lehalucha. If einer hut arichas yumim durch groisse aveiros dee veisst vus iz pshat but you koifer in befeirish pussek yeshaleim el punuv
Cool! You know some yiddish words!
You know there was once a shul up there next to Al Aqsa?
There are places on the Har HaBayis we know are off limits, places we know aren't and some that are doubtful. So I would suggest a good map be made available and a reminder to toivel first and the problem is fixed.
2:54
Dee bist a varvorferiner ligner! Baa dir tomer emetzer halt nish vee dir, damultz iz ehr a koifer, pinkt vee R' Yoilish vus hut geriffen dem Gerrer and Belzer in ala vus zenen gevehn in de Knesset "koifrim"
dein SHIT'eh is a falsheh!
Yeder yid can zich farlozin oif the Rambam ...
Ich hub kein muhl gehert oz emetzer farloszt zich oif a Ramabm is "koifer"
In ess nisht nur der Ramabm vus halt ozoi, nor the heiliger Meerie lerant oichit azoi az men can gein oif der Har Habayis "lechachilaH'
A niieh maaseh, oib men halt vee der Rambam iz nem a koifer!
Her oif mit diineh Ungarishe Romanishe shtissim
Wow wow wow! Look at that, Garnel more religious than DIN alein!
Some say that it itself was originally built as a Shul by a benevolent King. Accordingly, under the current walls etc and Hebrew inscriptions
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