• It’s called the Western Wall, but also called the Wailing Wall, and both names have a history behind them.
  • Old Jerusalem's Western Wall, also called the "Wailing" Wall, is Judaism's most sacred site today. Above is the Western Wall during the Shavuot (see below).
  • While in Jerusalem, many visit a place of tremendous significance for all three faiths: the Western Wall, also known as the Wailing Wall.
  • The Wailing Wall also referred to as the Wall of tears or the Western Wall is one of the few surviving parts of an ancient fortification in the Old City of Jerusalem.
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  • So, the first point is that the Wailing Wall has nothing to do with the earlier Jewish temples. The second point is a theological one.
  • The location of the Wailing Wall — also known as the Western Wall — is alongside the Temple Mount and is much disputed between Arabs and devout Jews.
  • The Western Wall, also known as the “Wailing Wall” or the “Kotel”, is the most religious site in the world for the Jewish people.
  • The Wailing Wall (嘆きの壁, Nageki no Kabe), is the place the Gold Saints met in Judecca, inside Hades's Palace at the heart of the Underworld.