Masked Palestinians gesture as the Dome of the Rock is seen in the background following clashes with Israeli police at the compound that houses al-Aqsa Mosque, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount, in Jerusalem’s Old City, May 10, 2021. Photo: REUTERS/Ammar Awad.
The iconic American monthly magazine National Geographic recently turned its attention toward what it dubbed one of Jerusalem’s “most controversial” landmarks — the Dome of the Rock. The outlet wrote a 4,000-word feature piece that takes readers on a tour of the Muslim shrine that was built atop the Temple Mount.
Describing in great detail the Dome’s ornate architecture and splendid decoration, Andrew Lawler’s piece gives a history of the structure’s 13 centuries as the “jewel in the crown of Jerusalem’s sacred acropolis,” and explains how it has “miraculously survived looters, earthquakes, religious strife, bloody invasions and more prosaic threats like pigeon droppings clogging its drainpipes” over the years.
The Muslim shrine is constructed over the ruins of the two ancient Jewish temples — something Lawler acknowledges to his credit.
Where the piece does fall short, however, is in Lawler’s apparent effort to minimize the Jewish connection to the Temple Mount, while simultaneously treating the Islamic claim to the site as indisputable.
For example, in one paragraph he refers to the Well of Souls, the cave directly below the Dome of the Rock:
A narrow set of worn marble steps leads beneath the rock to a rough-hewn grotto called the Well of Souls. A Muslim tradition asserts the waters of paradise flow under the cave, while some Christians and Jews have long imagined that the space conceals a secret passage filled with valuable artifacts.”
The problem — subtle but significant — is in the linguistic framing of the two religions’ competing beliefs about what lies below the cave. The Muslim assertion that there are magical paradise waters flowing beneath is a longstanding “tradition,” compared to “some” Christians and Jews who have merely “imagined” there might be artifacts underneath the ancient structure.
