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Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Four worshipers, one policeman killed in Jerusalem synagogue - CNN





  • A policeman wounded in the attack has died, a hospital spokeswoman said

  • Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas condemns the attack

  • Two Palestinian cousins enter a Jerusalem synagogue with knives and a gun

  • Netanyahu blames Palestinian Authority, others for spreading "libels" against Israel




Editor's note: Are you there? Share images, if you can safely


Jerusalem (CNN) -- A Jerusalem synagogue turned from a peaceful sanctuary to a house of horrors within moments Tuesday when two Palestinian cousins wielding a gun and butcher knives attacked during morning prayers, killing four rabbis and a policeman.


Characterizing the attack as "blood libel" fanned by Palestinian leaders, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed a strong response for the deaths.


Even as Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas condemned the attack, Netanyahu insisted it was "not enough" of a response.





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Addressing reporters Tuesday night, the Prime Minister called for national unity against "those human animals who committed this massacre" and against those -- singling out Hamas, the Islamic movement and the Palestinian Authority -- who he claims "disseminate libels against the state of Israel."


"There are those who wish to uproot us from the capital, from our land," he said, referring to Jerusalem. "They will not be successful... We have to unify forces."


Netanyahu spoke hours after the latest act of violence to afflict the region, this time at a synagogue in West Jerusalem's Har Nof area.


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Photos taken inside the Jewish house of worship, and released by Israeli officials, painted a grim scene -- from lifeless bodies sprawled on a floor to a shattered pair of glasses to blood seemingly everywhere, drenching holy books, prayer shawls and walls.


The pictures did not relay the full scope of the brutality. "It was much worse," Israeli police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told CNN.


Three dual U.S.-Israeli citizens and a British-Israeli citizen died in the attack before police shot and killed the two assailants.


Hours after the attack, a policeman shot during the rampage while pulling a woman to safety died from his wounds, Racheli Goldblatt, a spokeswoman at Hadassah hospital, told CNN.


While investigators say the synagogue was targeted, Rosenfeld said it was not known whether the four with dual citizenship were specifically targeted.


Jerusalem terror attack 'strikes at soul' of Jews worldwide


The terror attack -- the deadliest in Jerusalem since a man with an automatic weapon killed eight seminary students in March 2008 -- came at a particularly tense time in that city and the region at large. It follows a series of recent deadly stabbings and vehicle incidents that, while not the large-scale suicide bombings that defined last decade's second intifada or the rocket attacks from Gaza earlier this year, have left Jerusalem on edge.


Netanyahu blasts 'incitement' by Palestinian leaders


The answer to what's next came quickly, as Israeli authorities moved into the slain attackers' East Jerusalem neighborhood of Jabel Mukaber to demolish their homes on Netanyahu's order. The Palestinians' official WAFA news agency reported 13 people were arrested, including an al-Aqsa Mosque guard.





Attackers kill 4 at Jerusalem synagogue




Obama condemns Jerusalem terror attack

Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat -- whose city is about two-thirds Jewish and one-third Arab -- said the attack were incited by Hamas and terror organizations who use "rumor and misfacts" about Palestinians are treated in the city.


Mark Regev, Netanyahu's spokesman, said that authorities were also beefing up security around Jerusalem.


"The goal is to make sure that there are not copycat attacks," Regev said.


The war of words between the two sides, meanwhile, continued.


"(Abbas) does not send out terrorists, he doesn't directly encourage acts of terror, and this is good," the Netanyahu said, echoing an assessment by an Israeli security chief. "On the other hand, the incitement of the Palestinian Authority -- and he heads the Palestinian Authority -- and even some things he says ... encourage terrorism, in terms of incitement (of) tensions that run high."


There was no such equivocation about Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls Gaza. It's been at odds with Israel and also with Abbas' Fatah movement, which controls the West Bank.


Hamas did not claim responsibility for the synagogue attack, though it didn't back away from it either. Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for the group, instead linked the attack to the discovery Sunday of an Palestinian bus driver hanged in his bus not far from where Tuesday's attack occurred. (For his part, Netanyahu said that claims the bus driver was killed were lies and that his death was ruled a suicide.)


Senior Hamas official Ghazi Hamad predicted to Al Jazeera International that "there will be more revolution in Jerusalem, and more uprising."


"Hamas in general supports action against the occupation," Hamad said. "Hamas supports any military action against the occupation anywhere it can be carried out."





Palestinian reaction to synagogue attack




Stopping violence in Jerusalem








Israeli statesmen David Ben-Gurion and Yitzhak Rabin lead a group of soldiers past the Dome of the Rock in June 1967, during a victory tour following the Six-Day War. The dome in Jerusalem is part of the Temple Mount, the holiest site in Judaism and the third-holiest site in Islam. The Temple Mount, which Muslims know as Haram al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary), also includes the al-Aqsa Mosque and the Western Wall.Israeli statesmen David Ben-Gurion and Yitzhak Rabin lead a group of soldiers past the Dome of the Rock in June 1967, during a victory tour following the Six-Day War. The dome in Jerusalem is part of the Temple Mount, the holiest site in Judaism and the third-holiest site in Islam. The Temple Mount, which Muslims know as Haram al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary), also includes the al-Aqsa Mosque and the Western Wall.



Israeli soldiers are seen in front of the Dome of the Rock in October 1990.Israeli soldiers are seen in front of the Dome of the Rock in October 1990.



Ariel Sharon, then a candidate for Israeli prime minister, is flanked by security guards as he leaves the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in September 2000. The Second Intifada, a five-year Palestinian uprising, was sparked by Sharon's visit, Palestinians say. Sharon insisted that his visit was not intended to provoke Palestinians, but many saw it as an attempt to underline Israel's claim to Jerusalem's holy sites.Ariel Sharon, then a candidate for Israeli prime minister, is flanked by security guards as he leaves the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in September 2000. The Second Intifada, a five-year Palestinian uprising, was sparked by Sharon's visit, Palestinians say. Sharon insisted that his visit was not intended to provoke Palestinians, but many saw it as an attempt to underline Israel's claim to Jerusalem's holy sites.



Jewish women pray behind a barrier at the Western Wall in February 2004, following a collapse of the wall into the prayer area.Jewish women pray behind a barrier at the Western Wall in February 2004, following a collapse of the wall into the prayer area.



Pope Benedict XVI stands in front of the Dome of the Rock in May 2009.Pope Benedict XVI stands in front of the Dome of the Rock in May 2009.



The al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock overlook a neighborhood in East Jerusalem in March 2010.The al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock overlook a neighborhood in East Jerusalem in March 2010.



A Palestinian worshipper who was prevented from reaching the al-Aqsa Mosque prays outside Jerusalem's Old City while Israeli forces stand guard in March 2010. Police had temporarily limited access.A Palestinian worshipper who was prevented from reaching the al-Aqsa Mosque prays outside Jerusalem's Old City while Israeli forces stand guard in March 2010. Police had temporarily limited access.



Israeli police detain activist Noam Federman after he tried to enter the Temple Mount on Thursday, October 30, in Jerusalem. Israel says it temporarily closed access to the Temple Mount "to prevent disturbances" after the drive-by shooting of controversial activist Rabbi Yehuda Glick. Israel partially reopened access to the Temple Mount for Muslim prayers Friday.Israeli police detain activist Noam Federman after he tried to enter the Temple Mount on Thursday, October 30, in Jerusalem. Israel says it temporarily closed access to the Temple Mount "to prevent disturbances" after the drive-by shooting of controversial activist Rabbi Yehuda Glick. Israel partially reopened access to the Temple Mount for Muslim prayers Friday.




Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims

Temple Mount: Holy site for Jews, Muslims



Photos: Temple Mount holy sitePhotos: Temple Mount holy site



Four rabbis killed


The latest example of such an action came at 7 a.m. Tuesday, when two Palestinian men entered a synagogue in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood, where about 30 worshipers in prayer shawls and phylacteries were doing their morning prayers.


"They began attacking worshipers, stabbing them before opening fire," Israel's foreign ministry said.


Who were the victims?


The four killed were all rabbis: Avraham Shmuel Goldberg, 58; Aryeh Kupinsky, 43; Moshe Twersky, 59; and Kalman Levine, 55. Goldberg was a dual British-Israeli citizen, and the other three were U.S.-Israeli citizens -- which is why the FBI is investigating the attack, according to a U.S. law enforcement official.


"When four great men, wonderful men, wise in Torah study, are slaughtered while praying in public, there is no public grieving greater than that," said a rabbi who eulogized the men later Tuesday, before their burial.


Seven others were wounded, including three who were seriously hurt, according to the Foreign Ministry.


Are you there? Share images, if you can safely


Officials overseas such as British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond strongly condemned the killings, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro called them "a barbaric new low in the sad and outrageous history of such attacks."


"Tragically, this is not the first loss of life that we have seen in recent months," U.S. President Barack Obama said after condemning "in the strongest terms" attacks he said were "a tragedy" for Israel and the United States. "Too many Israelis have died, too many Palestinians have died. And at this difficult time, I think it's important for both Palestinians and Israelis to work together to lower tensions and reject violence."


While no group claimed responsibility for the attack, Israeli officials say the attackers came from East Jerusalem, where Palestinians can move more freely about the city than those living in Gaza, who must pass through stringent checkpoints.


Obama condemns 'horrific' Jerusalem terror attack


Ma'an, a Palestinian news agency, identified the two men as Ghassan Abu Jamal and his cousin, Udayy.


Whether their actions were part of a coordinated campaign or a spontaneous reprisal, Tuesday's attack raises the specter of yet more violence against civilians.


The latest wave began earlier this year with the kidnapping of three Israeli teens, who were later found dead. Reprisal attacks, rocket fire and retaliatory airstrikes followed that incident, with more than 2,000 Palestinians and 67 Israelis reportedly killed after weeks of heavy fighting.


Much of the most recent unrest has been centered around Jerusalem. That includes the discovery of the body of Palestinian bus driver Yousuf al-Ramouni on Sunday, the same day an Israeli was stabbed with a screwdriver near central Jerusalem.


Last week, a 20-year-old was stabbed and killed in Tel Aviv, and three people were stabbed -- one fatally -- near the entrance to a settlement in the West Bank, the same spot where the three Israeli teens were kidnapped.


CNN's Greg Botelho and Chelsea J. Carter reported and wrote from Atlanta, while CNN's Ben Wedeman reported from Jerusalem. CNN's Ralph Ellis, Michael Schwartz, Kareem Khadder, Jethro Mullen, Rachel Kitchen, Shimon Prokupecz, Jason Hanna and Khushbu Shah contributed to this report.









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