SEPTEMBER 8, in the year 70 AD, the Jewish capital of
Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans.
This was the same date, known as
Tisha B'Av in the Hebrew calendar, that
Jerusalem was destroyed by the Babylonians 655 years earlier.
Historian Josephus recorded over a million Jews died as the Roman army laid siege, led by the future Roman Emperor Titus.
The
conquest included the destruction of the Second Temple and the carrying
away of the Temple treasures, memorialized on the Arch of Titus and
used to finance the building of the Colosseum in Rome.
Judea was made into a Roman Province.
In 135 AD, after Bar Kokhba's revolt, Roman Emperor Hadrian renamed the Province "Syria Palaestina," and renamed
Jerusalem "Aelia Capitolina," in an attempt to erase Jewish history from the area.
Jews
were even banned from entering the city on pain of death, though in 325
AD, Jews were allowed to enter once a year to pray at the Western Wall
on
Tisha B'Av.
The Land of Israel was successively invaded or occupied:
390 AD Byzantine Empire
614 AD Sassanid Persians
635 AD Umayyad Caliphate
750 AD Abbasid Caliphate
909 AD Fatimid Caliphate
1071 AD Seljuk Turks
1099 AD Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
1187 AD Ayyubid Sultanate
1260 AD Mongolian Empire
1291 AD Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
1517 AD Ottoman Sultanate
1660 AD Druze Dynasty
1799 AD French Napoleon
1844 AD Tanzimat Ottoman Empire
1864 AD Ottoman Vilayet of Syria
1917 AD Britain Mandate, issuing the Balfour Declaration establishing the Jewish homeland.
On May 14, 1948 AD, the Nation of Israel came into being again, and after the 1967 War,
Jerusalem was once again under Jewish control.
Jerusalem was reaffirmed as Israel's capital with
"The Basic Law: Jerusalem, the Capital of Israel," passed in 1980.
For centuries, people desired to pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, including Abraham Lincoln.
A
scrapbook in the Library of Congress contains the account of Rev. N.W.
Miner of Springfield, who officiated at Lincoln's burial, recalling
President Lincoln's last words while at Ford's Theater with his wife:
"Mrs.
Lincoln informed me that...the very last moments of his conscious life
were spent in conversation with her about his future plans...
He said he wanted to visit the Holy Land and see those places hallowed by the footprints of the Saviour.
He was saying there was no city he so much desired to see as
Jerusalem."
Israel was pressured by the U.S. to evacuate its Gaza region in exchange for a promise of peace, with the last residents being forced out on August 22, 2005.
The
next day, on the other side of the world, a tropical depression turned
into Hurricane Katrina which headed for New Orleans, forcing tens of
thousands to evacuate.
With property damage estimated at $81 billion and nearly 2,000 people dead, it was the deadliest hurricane in U.S. history.
On SEPTEMBER 8, 2005, President Bush declared a Day of Prayer and Remembrance, saying:
"Hurricane
Katrina was one of the worst natural disasters in our Nation's history
and has caused unimaginable devastation and heartbreak throughout the
Gulf Coast Region...
Communities...decimated...Lives...lost...Hundreds of thousands of our fellow Americans are suffering great hardship."
President Bush continued:
"To honor the memory of those who lost their lives, to provide comfort and strength to families of the victims...
I call upon all Americans to pray to Almighty God and to perform acts of service...
Across our Nation, many selfless deeds reflect the promise of the Scripture:
'For I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in.'"
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