Archaeologists Unearth Evidence Supporting Jesus's Tomb Location in Jerusalem

Israeli police conducted a raid on two Palestinian-run bookshops in East Jerusalem on Sunday, confiscating hundreds of books and arresting the owners on suspicion of "selling books containing incitement and support for terrorism." The detained owners, Ahmad and Mahmoud Muna, faced a Jerusalem court on Monday, where the initial charges were downgraded to a public order offence. They are currently held for an additional 24 hours and will be subject to five days of house arrest upon release.
According to their lawyer Nasser Odeh, the operation signifies a troubling attempt to restrict freedom of speech and suppress Palestinian intellectual life. Protests outside the court saw demonstrators holding signs that proclaimed "cowards confiscate books" and "Palestinian books matter." The bookshops, notably The Educational Bookshop, are cultural establishments frequented by locals and diplomats alike. Germany's Ambassador to Israel criticized the police actions, asserting that the Muna family are peace-loving individuals more interested in intellectual discourse than incitement. The controversy comes amid growing tensions in a region fraught with historical conflict.