Global News - Redeem the Oppressed

Arson Attack at Holy Tombs of Esther and Mordechai

Iranian officials have admitted that fire broke out at an ancient shrine viewed by Iran’s Jewish community as the resting place of the Biblical Queen Esther and her cousin Mordechai. The announcement published by the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) came after activists reported an overnight arson attack at the site.

Tehran stressed no damage was done to the hall housing the Tomb of Esther and Mordechai in Hamadan. IRNA said the perpetrator had tried to enter the building through an adjacent bank but had failed in his attempt. However, several fire trucks were reportedly rushing to the shrine, but authorities prevented people from getting close.

It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the alleged attempt to destroy the shrine. IRNA claimed that the suspected attacker’s face had been recorded by security camera’s and police were looking for him. The burial site is a sensitive issue in Iran, where its Islamist leadership has often called for the destruction of Israel. Thursday’s attack came on the 72nd anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center rights group accused Iran’s leadership of facilitating a “barbaric attack” resembling the Nazis-era. “Historically, Muslims safeguarded Jewish holy sites from Persia to Morocco, including the Tomb of Esther and Mordechai But all that has changed under the Ayatollahs and the terrorist movements they have spawned.”

The Center noted that in recent years “there have been annual anti-Semitic protests at the Holy Site where Jews have come to pray peacefully for hundreds of years.” It stressed that the “torching of this Jewish holy site is reminiscent of the Nazis, who not only killed the living but desecrated the dead.”

The group claimed the “attack took place against the backdrop of the Mullahocracy’s drumbeat of genocidal hatred against the Jewish people.” They are involved in a “state-sponsored policy of Holocaust denial and denigration. In such an environment, a violent attack against Jews, Judaism, and Jewish heritage should surprise no one,” the Center said in a statement seen by Worthy News.

Iranian officials have reportedly suggested that they distinguish between Jews and what they view as Zionists. But the May 14 attack came after the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom already warned this year it was “troubled” by threats to destroy Esther and Mordechai’s tomb. The Commission “e

Government controlled website in Iran publishes then deletes report that a person was seen in CCTV footage trying to torch Jewish holy site right after Israel’s 72 anniversary.

According to the Times of Israel  

“Officials from Iran confirmed on Saturday that a fire had broken out

early Friday morning at the site of an ancient shrine revered by Iranian Jews as the burial place of the biblical Esther and Mordechai, stressing that no damage was done to the hall housing the tomb itself.

An investigation has revealed that a person was caught in CCTV footage trying

to enter the holy site through an adjacent bank and “perform a series of actions” but “failed,” opposition news sites said, citing a report in the state

-run Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).

The report said the cameras had registered the person’s face, but “information about the person’s motives and identity cannot be provided until they are arrested.”

The IRNA report was deleted from its website two hours after its publication Saturday morning, the Radio Farda and Iran International websites said.

The attack came on May 15, the day after the 72nd anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel and marked as Nakba Day, or the day of catastrophe, raising widespread suspicion that it was a hate crime against Jews and the Jewish state.

The head of Hamedan province’s cultural heritage and tourism office, Ali Malmir, said only minor damage was caused to the holy site by the fire, Iranian state-affiliated news sites Fars and ISNA reported Saturday.

Some of the wires and a carpet in a side building were burned but the shrine itself appeared not to have been touched by the fire, he said, adding that there were no injuries. “

mphasizes the Iranian government’s responsibility to protect religious sites.”

By Max Gibson

Max Gibson, also known as Mosheh, holds a bachelor's degree in computer science and has competed on his college's crew, cross country and track and field teams. Max co-founded the College Republicans and has run successful businesses, including Apex Web Services, which serves as CTO for non-profits Farrukh Saif Foundation and 'Emergency Committee to Save the Persecuted and Enslaved.' He has been in a leadership position in the non-profit sector since 2011. In addition to his business pursuits, Max is a combat veteran of three major wars and is known for his generosity and strong belief in God.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x