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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: As Hagia Sophia Opens to Muslim Worshippers, Turkish President Vows To 'Liberate' Jerusalem Mosque As Hagia Sophia Opens to Muslim Worshippers, Turkish President Vows To 'Liberate' Jerusalem Mosque Turkish President Recep Erdogan delivered a speech Friday that many international observers took to contain a veiled threat against Israel and its control over the Old City of Jerusalem. Erdogan is pictured in a file photo from 2005, when he was still his country's prime minister. (Yasser Al-Zayyat / AFP via Getty Images) By Jack Davis Published July 12, 2020 at 2:34pm As he announced the conversion of the former Byzantine cathedral Hagia Sophia into a mosque, on Friday, Turkish President Recip Erdogan also called for the liberation of a mosque in Israel. Erdogan announced that Hagia Sophia, which had been a museum since 1934, will open for prayers on July 24, according to NBC. He also stressed that the structure, built in 537 A.D., would still welcome all. I underline that we will open Hagia Sophia to worship as a mosque by preserving its character of humanitys common cultural heritage, he said in a televised address to the nation, according to the network. Like all of our other mosques, the doors of Hagia Sophia will be open to all, locals or foreigners, Muslims and non-Muslims. But elsewhere in the remarks came language that raised eyebrows in Israel, where the al-Aqsa mosque stands in the Old City of Jerusalem A report in the Jerusalem Post said the language was tweaked, depending on whether the speech was rendered in Turkish, English or Arabic. The Arabic version talks of the return of freedom to al-Aqsa, the Jerusalem Post reported. The Arabic version also discusses spreading Islam from Bukhara in Uzbekistan to Andalusia in Spain. No references to Spain are in the Turkish text, the Post reported. This terminology, linking al-Aqsa in Jerusalem to Hagia Sophia and Spain, is a kind of coded terminology for a wider religious agenda, the Post reported. The Jewish News Service, citing a pro-government Turkish publication, reported Erdogan as saying that the resurrection of Hagia Sophia was the harbinger of the liberation of Masjid al-Aqsa [Al-Aqsa Mosque] and footsteps of Muslims will to leave hard days behind. In an opinion piece for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Louis Fishman, an assistant professor at Brooklyn College, said Erdogan is trying to portray himself as a Muslim hero. Among Islamist groups, the restoration of Hagia Sophia to a Muslim house of prayer is nothing less than proof that Islam is winning its ancient battle with the West, and that includes against the new Crusaders Israel,' he wrote. He wrote that the Turkish presidents focus on Muslim groups was made explicit by the wildly divergent official texts that Erdogans office put out in English (determinedly pluralistic: Hagia Sophias doors will be
wide open to all, foreign or local, Muslim or non- Muslim) and Arabic (more aspirationally militant: the Revival of Hagia Sophia is a sign of the return of freedom to the Al-Aqsa mosque.) The di fferent words appeal to different groups Erdogan wants to support him as their hero, Fishman wrote. Hardcore Islamists accept Erdogan maintaining relations with Israel as a necessary evil, a prelude to him marching into Jerusalem one day and liberating the Al-Aqsa mosque in person. More moderate followers more realistic scenario would have Erdogan as the key facilitator and mentor of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, with Jerusalems Al-Aqsa mosque under Palestinian sovereignty, he wrote. The Hagia Sophia that stands today is the third by that name, according to History.com. The first was begun as a Christian basilica in the reign of Byzantine Emperor Constantius in the year 360. The structure was burned to the ground in 404 and rebuilt in 415 under Emperor Theodosios II. The current structure was built during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I and is nearly 1,500 years old. After the fall of Constantinople in 1453, the Hagia Sophia became a mosque until 1934, when it was converted into a museum. Poster Comment: It seems Erdogan wants to start the Crusades again. If he thinks Israel will allow the Turks to meddle in the affairs of Jerusalem he might find out too late that he has made an egregious error. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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