In Jewish tradition, the Temple mount ( as seen above) is regarded as the place where god chose the Divine Presence to rest. Jewish tradition regards the Mount, or the Foundation stone, as the location of a number of important events mentioned in the Bible, including the location from which the world expanded into its present form, Abraham's binding of Issac, Jacob's dream, the threshing floor which King David purchased from Araunah the jebusite, and the location of the two Jewish temples. Jewish texts record that the Mount will be the site of the Third temple, which will be rebuilt with the coming of the Messiah.
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The Western Wall in the midst of the Old City in Jerusalem is the section of the Western supporting wall of the Temple Mount which has remained intact since the destruction of the second Jerusalem temple (70 C.E.)
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Whenever the Jewish people faced sorrows, throughout the generations, they would traditionally pray for Rachel to cry for them at Rachel’s Tomb, believing that her tears to God have special powers.
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King David's Tomb is a site viewed as the burial place of David, King of Israel, according to a tradition beginning in the 12th century. It is located on Mount Zion in Jerusalem, near the Hagia Maria Sion Abbey. The tomb is situated in a ground floor corner of the remains of the former Hagia Zion, a Byzantine church.
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Jerusalem: believed to be the birth place of Judaism (as well as Christianity and Islam).