Change the Status Quo on the Temple Mount
Jews and Muslims can share the holy place.
January 16, 2017
Economic history, hidden in dung.
Archaeologists first discovered a 10th-century fort in the Timna Valley—located near Eilat at Israel’s southern tip—in 2014. But only recently, by performing tests on the remarkably well preserved animal bones and dung in the complex’s stables, were they able to realize some of their discovery’s implications. James Rogers writes:
Jews and Muslims can share the holy place.
Non-combat officers should also learn to shoot.
Did he really equate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism?
The new era of religious inquisitiveness.
Economic history, hidden in dung.
Archaeologists first discovered a 10th-century fort in the Timna Valley—located near Eilat at Israel’s southern tip—in 2014. But only recently, by performing tests on the remarkably well preserved animal bones and dung in the complex’s stables, were they able to realize some of their discovery’s implications. James Rogers writes:
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