UK Media Watch reports (via Elder of Ziyon):
In 2014, the PLO issued a memo
to journalists “advising” them not to use the term “Temple Mount” when
referring to the area within Jerusalem’s Old City which houses Judaism’s holiest site
and the third holiest site in Islam. Instead, they instructed reporters
to refer to the site as the “Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound”, and even
bizarrely suggested that using the term “Temple Mount” is a violation of
international law.
Though many journalists reporting from the area now note both names (Temple Mount and Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound), Financial Times’ Jerusalem correspondent did the PLO one better. In a 2000 word article about Jerusalem’s Old City (Jerusalem: City of Ruins,
Oct. 1), he not only referred to the compound as Haram al-Sharif (the
Arabic term), but didn’t once note that the Temple Mount (Har Habayit in
Hebrew) is located in the holy city.
The Temple Mount is the site where both Jewish Temples stood, and represents nothing less than the epicenter of the Jewish faith.
As CAMERA noted in a backgrounder last
year, “Jewish reverence for the Temple Mount long predates the building
of the Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa Mosque in the 7th century CE, and even predates the construction of the first Jewish Temple in 954 BCE”.
In addition to the omission in the text,
graphics and photos used by FT editors also erase the existence of
Judaism’s holiest site.
Note that the caption in this photo fails to mention the Temple Mount.
Now, take a look at this FT graphic map of the area which similarly omits the Temple Mount.
The only passage which even alludes to
Jewish history in Jerusalem is in a paragraph which notes that
“archaeologists digging in and around the Old City…often find..signs of
an ancient Jewish presence…including ruins from the Temple period.” However, even that passage is “balanced”
by citing Palestinian claims that such Israeli archeology is used as a
“political tool”. Read more.
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