UN What these red cows from Texas have to do with war and peace in the Middle East - They have to do with an ancient prophecy regarding building a hypothethical Third Temple in Jerusalem and messiahs.

When Hamas spokesman Abu Ubaida began a speech marking the 100th day of the war in Gaza, one confounding yet eye-opening proclamation escaped the headlines. Listing the motives for the Palestinian militant group's Oct. 7 massacre in Israel, he accused Jews of "bringing red cows" to the Holy Land.

The cows he was talking about are red heifers, which now graze at a secure, undisclosed location in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Some Jews and Christians believe they're key to rebuilding the Jewish temple that once stood in Jerusalem, and to beckoning the Messiah.

To understand, you have to look back almost 2,000 years in the tumultuous history of the Middle East, when the ancient Romans destroyed the last temple in Jerusalem.

To rebuild it, fervent believers point to the Bible's Book of Numbers, which commands the Israelites to offer "a red heifer without defect or blemish and that has never been under a yoke."

Only with that offering, they insist, can the temple rise again.

From Texas to the West Bank​

Instrumental in bringing the heifers to the Holy Land was Yitshak Mamo, of Uvne Jerusalem, a group committed to seeing a new temple built in Jerusalem's Old City.

"You can check to see if they have any white or black hairs," he told CBS News, explaining that any hair that isn't red would disqualify the cows from fulfilling their prophesied role.

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Red heifers, brought to the Israeli-occupied West Bank by Yitshak Mamo of Uvne Jerusalem, a group committed to seeing a new Jewish temple built in Jerusalem's Old City, are seen at his settlement in the West Bank. CBS News

Finding the red heifers took years. The quest led Mamo not to Jewish breeders but to Christian ranchers thousands of miles away.

"After a long search, we found them in Texas," he said. "Texas red angus."

To bypass strict laws in place at the time that banned the export of U.S. cattle to Israel, the heifers were classified as pets, Mamo said with a laugh. But to those following biblical commandments, the cows are no laughing matter, he added, stressing that it was no publicity stunt.

"Harry Potter is a good story. The Bible is not a story," he said. "The Bible is a way of God to lead us."

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Yitshak Mamo, of Uvne Jerusalem, a group committed to seeing a new Jewish temple built in Jerusalem's Old City, speaks with CBS News at his home in a settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. CBS News

But while they're classed as pets, there are no plans to let the red heifers live out long happy lives.

A massive white altar awaits, where they are to be burned on a plot of land overlooking the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem. Mamo said the ceremony must be performed looking directly into where the ancient Second Temple stood, until it was destroyed by the Romans in the year 70.

"A Pandora's box that nobody can close"​

What Mamo didn't mention is what stands in the temple's place now: The Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque, which are among the holiest sites in Islam.

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Israeli security forces guard the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound following clashes that erupted during Islam's holy fasting month of Ramadan in Jerusalem, April 5, 2023. AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty
Today, heavily armed guards ensure that only Muslims are allowed inside the complex. But that hasn't stopped Jewish activists, like Melissa Jane Kronfeld, from leading groups up the Temple Mount five days every week.

"There's one true God, and it started here," she said, before falling to her knees and bowing where the First Temple, or the Temple of Solomon, was built in 957 BCE. The Second Temple, or Temple of Herod, was a reconstructed version of the first, built in the 6th century BCE, according to scripture.

"It's so important for the Jews to return and rebuild the temple," said New York native Kronfeld, who founded the High on the Har organization to lead the tours. "It's not about taking anything from our Muslim brothers and sisters. It's not about the destruction of Islamic holy sites. It's about preserving this place and being guardians over the house of God for all people."

But she makes no secret about what she wants to happen to the Dome of the Rock.

"I believe it's going to go, 100%. The whole thing is going to go to build a temple," she said, insisting that the shrine and its golden dome should be preserved, but relocated.

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Melissa Jane Kronfeld speaks with CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay as they walk in front of the golden dome of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem's Old City. CBS News

It's a suggestion that many fear, if acted upon, could make the current war even bloodier, and see it spread rapidly beyond the Gaza Strip.

"Everyone says that the building, the Third Temple, is what will bring the war, it would destabilize the Middle East," she said. "The Middle East seems pretty destabilized right now, and the war, if I'm not mistaken, is already here."

To be clear, Kronfeld's dream of seeing a Third Temple constructed on the site is just that, a dream, and it is not shared by the Israeli government or by the vast majority of Israelis or Jews. But the suggestion has been more than enough to incite numerous Islamist groups.

Hamas dubbed its Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel "the Al-Aqsa Wave," and the group's emblem features the Dome of the Rock behind two crossed swords.

While most Muslims do not support Hamas' violence, they do share its unwavering devotion to sacred ground, says Mustafa Abu Sway, the Imam Al-Ghazali Chair at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

"Al-Aqsa Mosque belongs to all Muslims," he said. "So, you will find reactions from Indonesia to Toronto to New York. Today there are 2 billion Muslims worldwide."

He told CBS News that removing Al-Aqsa or the Dome of the Rock was "unimaginable," and warned that it would be "opening a Pandora's box that nobody can close."

U.S. evangelicals, the cows, and the second coming​

Jewish activists have not been deterred by Hamas' Oct. 7 massacre or the ongoing war in Gaza. Some have been using the conflict as a backdrop to promote their cause in the United States.

At the recent National Gathering for Prayer and Repentance in Washington, D.C., Mamo spoke of his heifers and his hopes for a Third Jewish Temple. The gathering was convened by U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, who gave a keynote prayer before a who's-who of evangelical leaders and congresspeople spoke. Many American evangelicals believe the red heifers will usher the second coming of Christ.

"We're going to accept the Messiah, and we need the Messiah to come," Byron Stinson, a Texan who helped bring the cows to Israel, said at the gathering. "For me, the red heifer is red for the blood of Jesus Christ. That's why it's red."

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Byron Stinson (right), a Texan who helped bring Texan red angus heifers to the West Bank, speaks at a Jan. 31, 2024 event in Washington, D.C. CBS News

Back at his settlement in the West Bank, Mamo told CBS News the heifers need only pass a final purity test. The ceremony that he hopes will resurrect the temple and usher in the Messiah could take place any day. He said he understands why Hamas could be outraged.

"But I cannot understand, even if they are right, why they have to slaughter and rape people to win their war," he said. "Terrorists have been attacking us before we ever dreamed of these cows," he reflects. "They don't need them as an excuse to kill."

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While controversial advocacy groups of both Christians and Jews want a Third Temple it is fascinating how their own reasons for wanting to build it contrast with one another since they both have separate end goals in mind.

Excerpt from another article on the heifers:
In the Bible, red heifers feature heavily in Temple law. The cows must be pure red, without even two hairs of another color, and without any other form of blemish, and they’re an essential part of sacrificial purity laws. Their ashes are required, according to passages in Numbers, to purify the Temple’s priests and its altars.

But these laws have long been irrelevant — after all, there hasn’t been a Temple in well over a millennia in which to slaughter the cows. Some religious stories, however, say that before the Third Temple is built, heralding the messianic era long prayed for by both Jews and Christians, a pure red heifer will be sacrificed again.

In Judaism, this era is prophesied to mean the coming of a time that includes the return of biblical laws of purity, thus allowing for truly holy life. For Evangelical Christians, it would herald the End Times, the return of Jesus to Earth and the Rapture; this belief has long driven Christian Zionism and Christian lobbying on behalf of Israel.

For both groups, there are a few requirements for this time to arrive: the restoration of the nation of Israel, Jerusalem becoming a Jewish city again — which was accomplished, sort of, by Israel in 1967 — and the birth of a red heifer to purify it all.

Apparently, according to a breathless announcement in the UK tabloid The Mirror, a red heifer has been born — the first born in Israel in 2,000 years.

The Temple Institute, a Jerusalem-based organization led by American-born Orthodox rabbi Chaim Richman, advocates for building the Third Temple. They have said they will be examining the calf carefully as it grows for blemishes in order to see if the time is right to start construction.

The heifer herself

This particular calf is not an accident; the Temple Institute has been working to breed a sacrificial cow for years, after importing red Angus cows from Nebraska. The most recent calf is not the first birth that has been announced with great excitement, and several have also been shipped in from the U.S., where Evangelical Christian farmers support the Jewish efforts.

While some Jews believe that the Third Temple can only be built in the prophesied messianic age, groups like the Temple Institute believe that the Jews have to take the prophecy into their own hands. In their interpretation, the long-prayed-for epoch can only come once the Temple has been built and purified, and, they believe, that’s up to them.

The Institute maintains an active YouTube channel, where they post “Temple Talk” podcast episodes, Torah lessons, and videos detailing their efforts to pave the way for a Third Temple, including recreating dozens of temple vessels. They have also built a giant gold menorah, according to Torah specifications and weighing in at half a ton — including 45 kilograms of 24-karat gold. It currently stands in the central plaza of the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old City, “ready to be kindled in the rebuilt Holy Temple,” according to the Institute’s video.

Boneh Israel, another pro-Third Temple group, has both Jewish and Christian members that, according to its website, work on “actively bringing the redemption closer”; they are responsible for shipping several red heifers from Texas to the U.S. earlier this year.

And Rabbi Yitzchak Mamo, from yet another Third Temple group, Uvne Jerusalem, told the Christian Broadcasting Network that he has planned a ceremony for Passover 2024 to slaughter the imported heifers, assuming they have not developed any blemishes before then. Mamo said he bought a plot of land overlooking the Temple Mount 12 years ago, specifically in hopes of using it for the slaughter ceremony and beginning preparations for the Third Temple’s construction.
 
Isn't it against scripture to use genetic engineering to get your holy cows?
Didn't the Jews already get a genetically engineered red heifer several years ago?

Also, you're assuming Jews actually care about the scripture besides giving off the appearance that they are following it. A very expensive wire (eruv) encircling NYC (so that they could technically do some work on the Sabbath, like pushing an elevator button) wouldn't have been erected if they did.
 
Didn't the Jews already get a genetically engineered red heifer several years ago?

Also, you're assuming Jews actually care about the scripture besides giving off the appearance that they are following it. A very expensive wire (eruv) encircling NYC (so that they could technically do some work on the Sabbath, like pushing an elevator button) wouldn't have been erected if they did.
They also did some projector thing and claimed it was "the third temple". It was also tied to some retarded organization literally trying to bring about doomsday or some shit like that via doing it and going "and thats a good thing!" IIRC. People are fucking stupid and stupid fuckers with deep pockets will do dumb stuff like this.
Those cows look brown not red.
Kinda in the territory I guess?
 
Isn't it against scripture to use genetic engineering to get your holy cows?

Selective breeding is technically genetic engineering

Those cows look brown not red.

Get them in sunlight and they turn a dark red, sometimes it's a lighter red

My family used to have a few red Angus although we normally have black angus or the weird multicolor ones you get from crossbreeding. A white face on a black body or white face on a red body. Or a cream colored cow 🐄 🐮

We had one cow that was legitimately tigerstriped
 
They keep disappearing these things, but I swear I saw an article in the last few weeks that the mosque is experiencing “settling” and cracking in the walls, and some people suspect an infestation of tunnel Jews trying to collapse or render the mosque unusable.

Too funny to check either way.
 
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