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  2. Western Wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Wall

    A Jew praying at the Western Wall. Most Jews, religious and secular, consider the wall to be important to the Jewish people since it was originally built to hold the Second Temple. They consider the capture of the wall by Israel in 1967 as a historic event since it restored Jewish access to the site after a 19-year gap. [191]

  3. Kotel compromise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotel_compromise

    Western Wall. The Kotel compromise (or Western Wall compromise or Kotel plan or Western Wall plan, Hebrew: מתווה הכותל, Mitveh Ha'Kotel, lit."The Western Wall outline") is a compromise reached between orthodox and non-orthodox Jewish denominations, according to which the non-Orthodox "mixed" prayer area for men and women was supposed to be expanded in the southern part of the Western ...

  4. Jewish Quarter (Jerusalem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_Quarter_(Jerusalem)

    In late medieval times, the Jewish part of the Old City was known as Haret el-Yahud (where Yahud is Arabic for Jews), in the south-west part of what is today known as the Jewish Quarter. [10] The convention of the modern boundaries of the Jewish Quarter may have originated in its current form in the 1841 British Royal Engineers map of Jerusalem ...

  5. Old City of Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_City_of_Jerusalem

    The Christian Quarter (Arabic: حارة النصارى, Ḩārat an-Naşāra) is situated in the northwestern corner of the Old City, extending from the New Gate in the north, along the western wall of the Old City as far as the Jaffa Gate, along the Jaffa Gate – Western Wall route in the south, bordering the Jewish and Armenian Quarters, as ...

  6. Placing notes in the Western Wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placing_notes_in_the...

    According to Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, Rabbi of the Western Wall and author of Minhagei HaKotel, a book of halakhot about the Western Wall, burning is a "pure" way to deal with the notes, but burying them is more honorable. [8] Rabinowitz further states that the letters are buried because they have the status of letters to God. [11]

  7. Western Wall Plaza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Wall_Plaza

    Western Wall Plaza with the Western Wall in the background. The Western Wall Plaza is a large public square situated adjacent to the Western Wall in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem. It was formed in 1967 as a result of the razing of the Mughrabi Quarter neighborhood at the very end of the Six-Day War.

  8. East Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Jerusalem

    East Jerusalem includes the Old City, which is home to many sites of seminal religious importance for the three major Abrahamic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, including the Temple Mount / Al-Aqsa, the Western Wall, the Dome of the Rock and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Arab residents of East Jerusalem are increasingly ...

  9. Pro–Wailing Wall Committee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro–Wailing_Wall_Committee

    Early image (c. 1910) of Dr. Joseph Klausner, founder of the Pro–Wailing Wall Committee. The Pro–Wailing Wall Committee was established in Mandatory Palestine on 24 July 1929, [1] by Joseph Klausner, professor of modern Hebrew literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, [2] to promote Jewish rights at the Western Wall.