An ugly incitement to terrorism in the heart of the Israeli capital was discovered during a tour with an MK: a
painting of one of the terrorists from the attack on the coastal road is on the wall of King Hussein's palace in Jerusalem.
This is a huge painting by Dalal Mugrabi, who was involved in one of the most memorable terrorist attacks, on the Coast Road in 1978.
35 Israelis were killed in the attack, including 12 children.
Police deliver posters supporting a terrorist in Jerusalem // Photo: Police spokeswoman
The painting was discovered on the wall of King Hussein's palace in Tel al-Paul, near the Pisgat Ze'ev neighborhood of Jerusalem, during an information tour of the "If I Forget You" organization led by Haim Silberstein and with the participation of MK Tzachi Hanegbi (Likud).
According to the law for incitement to violence or terrorism "publication of a call, praise, sympathy or encouragement for an offense that harms a person's body or puts a person in danger of death or serious injury, and according to the content of the provocative publication and the circumstances in which it was published, there is a real possibility."
Following the tour, MK Hanegbi sent a query to Housing Minister Zeev Elkin, who is in charge of Rami (Israel Land Authority), which is defined as the landowner.
"In Jerusalem, on the wall of the building called 'King Hussein's Palace - Tel El Paul', near Pisgat Ze'ev and the Beit Hanina neighborhood, is a huge portrait of the terrorist Dalal Mugrabi, a member of the terrorist cell that murdered dozens of Israelis on the coastal road in 1978, including 12 children," Hanegbi wrote. To minister.
"Mugrabi appears in the mural armed with a weapon, a symbol of the armed terror fight against the State of Israel. I would like to ask: Is the land belonging to the King Hussein Palace complex under the supervision of your office and the Israel Land Authority?
Will the drawing be deleted?
The graffiti on the building of King Hussein's palace in Jerusalem, Photo: The "If I Forget You" movement
MK Tzachi Hanegbi (Archive), Photo: Gideon Markovich
Minister Zeev Elkin (Archive), Photo: Yonatan Zindel / Flash 90
Haim Silberstein, chairman of the organization "If I Forget You": "The inciting graffiti on the biblical historical site Givat Shaul / Tel El Paul, which praises a despicable terrorist with a rifle in front of a white Arab school is another sign of loss of sovereignty in Jerusalem and lack of enforcement in the face of wild incitement. Hostile factors.We call on the government and the municipality to significantly increase enforcement against incitement and against illegal construction.
"The immediate response should be the resumption of archeological excavations at Tel al-Paul and the unveiling of more layers of Jewish history in Jerusalem. It should be noted that King Hussein's palace belongs to the Kingdom of Jordan. Construction of the palace began shortly before the Six Day War in 1967. "Israel. Despite the long time that has passed, the palace skeleton as it is due to the political sensitivity that exists around the place."