West Bank - Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef and a delegation from the Shomron Regional Council visited Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus late Sunday night to inspect the compound after it was severely damaged by Palestinian rioters who set fire to the site on Friday.

“‘The nations came and desecrated your sanctuary’,” said Yosef, citing a verse from the Book Psalms.

“What was done here was quite simply the work of ISIS,” he continued. “The heart cannot grasp the evil. What kind of people destroy a holy site in this way? Us, the Jewish people, protect their holy sites, their mosques, and they, without shame, treat this holy site [Joseph’s Tomb] in this manner.”

Rabbi Elyakim Levanon, the municipal chief rabbi of the Shomron district in the West Bank, called on the state to establish Israeli sovereignty over the site.

“There is no reason we should rely on the Palestinian police force to protect this place,” said Levanon, a hardline leader of the conservative sector of the national-religious community.

“It is the responsibility of the Jewish people to protect this holy place and it is in the hands of the Israeli government.”

The recent attack on the site was heavily condemned by Israeli ministers, while the UN General Secretary also issued rare criticism of the Palestinians, describing the incident as “reprehensible.”

President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas was also critical of the arson attack on the holy site.

The Book of Joshua records that the biblical figure Joseph was buried in the city of Shechem, close to present day Nablus, and the tomb is believed to be his final resting place, although there is an archaeological debate on the issue.

There is a history of Jewish, Christian and Muslim worship at the site.

Friday’s arson attack is the second time that Palestinians have tried to destroy the shrine.

In October 2000 at the beginning of the second intifada, Palestinian rioters entered the site and set fire to it, gutting the place and burning the prayer books and furniture at the tomb. The dome of the tomb was subsequently painted green in an apparent attempt to Islamicize the site, although the paint was subsequently removed.

The site was restored and re-dedicated in February 2011, but Jewish worship at Joseph’s Tomb has been strictly controlled since October 2000 and the site is fully under the control of the PA.

Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post