ISIS terrorists are calling for Muslims across the planet to set fire to churches and synogogues over the holy weekend to attack Christians and Jews for Israel closing the sl-Aqsa mosque over security concerns involving the Iran war.
ISIS butchers are ramping up evil over Easter weekend by calling on all Muslims across the globe to set fire to churches and synagogues in the US and Europe to defile the religious holidays of Easter for Christians and Passover for the Jews. The terrorist call is due to Israel closing the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for security reasons and was issued in the latest edition of its weekly propaganda outlet, al-Naba, which was released on Thursday.
“In the face of the tragedy of the closure of the blessed al-Aqsa Mosque, it is incumbent upon Muslims everywhere—those who yearn to come to the aid of the site of their Prophet’s Night Journey—to rise up and set fire to the Jewish synagogues scattered across America, Europe, Russia, India, and elsewhere,” ISIS proclaimed.
“The same applies to the synagogues in Tunisia, Morocco, the UAE, and Syria; their locations are well-known, and their details have been published,” the Islamist monsters added while calling for similar attacks on churches, according to the New York Post.
The outlet went further by calling for attacks on “Jewish gatherings” across the globe, ordering its supporters to “emulate the actions of the ‘Sydney Heroes,’” which apparently is a reference to 2025’s Hannukkah terror attacks in Australia – the Bondi Beach massacre – that left 16 dead, including one of the gunmen, and 40 wounded.
ISIS went on to brag that they killed 60 people in “15 operations” that took place over the last week.
The closing of the al-Aqsa mosque by Israel in late February was due to a “security situation” as a result of the Iran war being fought by the US and Israel. Muslims call the hilltop where the mosque is located the Noble Sanctuary. Israelis refer to it as the Temple Mount.
The move forced Muslims to gather outside the walls of the Old City for Eid prayers during Ramadan so they could get as close as possible to the mosque.
That’s not the only “holy site” closed. Out of an abundance of caution, Israel also banned mass gatherings at other religious sites such as the Western Wall and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem.
Palestinian authorities are enraged over the closure of the site to Muslims. Jewish groups have also called for access to the site for Passover.
Israeli police also prevented Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulcher for Palm Sunday. In protest, Spain summoned Israel’s top envoy to Madrid on Monday, saying Catholic worship must be able to be “celebrated normally”.
Foreign ministers from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan, Indonesia, Turkey, Qatar and the UAE have condemned what they described as continued Israeli restrictions on Muslim and Christian worship in Jerusalem.
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