Shots Fired at Mosque Amid Rising Tension Between Israeli Druze and Muslims
Error: Contact form not found.
by JNS.org
JNS.org – Unidentified assailants fired gunshots and threw a stun grenade at a mosque in the northern Israeli town of Maghar early Monday, in the second time in three days that a stun grenade was thrown at the mosque.
The mosque is situated in a Muslim neighborhood in the hometown of Israeli Druze policeman Staff Sgt. Maj. Haiel Sitawe, who was killed by Arab terrorists in an attack near the Temple Mount last week.
The Maghar mosque incurred slight damage to one of its windows on Monday, and no injuries were reported in the incident.
“Forces were deployed openly and covertly in order to maintain a sense of security and to prevent escalation,” the Israel Police said.
Residents of Maghar have reported increased tensions between Muslims and Druze following the Temple Mount terror attack, with several attempts to incite violence between the two communities.
The spiritual leader of the Israeli Druze community, Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, condemned the attack on the mosque and urged that relations between the communities be properly upheld, saying, “The attack on the Temple Mount does not represent Arab society.”
Knesset member Ayman Odeh, the leader of Israel’s alliance of Arab political parties, called Tarif’s statement a “responsible standpoint.”
Irish Band Kneecap Sues Canadian Indigenous Leader for Defamation After Accused of Hamas Support
77 Percent of American Jews Experienced Antisemitism After October 7, New Poll Shows
Brad Lander Endorses Anti-Israel Progressive Candidate Who Hesitated to Condemn Synagogue Terror Attack
The Dream of Chachmei Lublin
Why Is Moses Not Called Mosheh? A Journey Through Biblical History and Translation
The MOU with Iran Is ‘Over’ — Are We Returning to War?
A Room That Stayed Standing
Almost Half of American Muslims Hold “Favorable” View Towards Hamas, Poll Finds
Israel’s Hapoel Tel Aviv Signs NBA Veteran Amir Coffey on One-Year Deal
Silicon Valley’s Language Models Don’t Debunk Persian Language Antisemitism, Report Says










