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The Dome of the Rock mosque in Jerusalem
Photo: Yadid Levy/PA/Alamy

Pilgrimage to Detention:
24 Hours in Israeli Immigration Custody

As the world waits to see whether Donald Trump’s Gaza plan can lead to lasting peace, Zimarina Sarwar recounts how her lifelong dream of praying at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem recently turned into a far darker experience

It is fair to say that Israel probably is not top of the holiday bucket-list for most British Muslims. Jerusalem, however, is different.

It is considered one of the earliest homes of monotheism on Earth. Muslims view it as the land Prophet Abraham migrated to and settled in; where Prophet David reigned over his sprawling kingdom; where Prophet Solomon constructed the first temple; where Prophet Jesus’ entire life’s mission was carried out. Prophet Muhammad honoured it as the original direction of prayer.

There is a certain spiritual significance that the iconic gold-topped Dome of the Rock, at the centre of the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, holds for even the most lapsed Muslim, with its distinctive octagonal structure and intricate blue and turquoise tiling.

We Are Utterly Reliant on Immigrant Workers – But Who Cares About Reality?

Penny Pepper shares her experiences of recruiting migrant care workers, who can find themselves enduring exploitation and abuse for their efforts
Penny Pepper

Notes on Now – Cruelty

A lecture by Paul Gilroy led me to read At the Mind’s Limits by Jean Amery. It includes an account of how he was captured and tortured by the Gestapo before being sent to a concentration camp. Amery insists that “torture was the essence of National Socialism”. Many states have tortured people, he writes, but a Nazi had “to torture, destroy, in order to be great” and “achieve his full identity”.
Anthony Barnett