No, he crossed the line when he misused my post.
Like I said, Israel did not stop there. It took up ethnic cleansing again after launching the 67 war. Within 48 hours of capture, they demolished the Moroccan quarter, including ancient mosques and expelled the Palestinian residents.
There were 135 houses in the quarter,[58] and the destruction left at least 650 people refugees.[59] According to one surviving eyewitness, after its capture by Israel, the entire Old City was placed under a strict curfew.[58] On Saturday evening 10 June, the last day of the Six-Day War, coinciding with the end of the Jewish Sabbath, a number of searchlights were positioned and floodlit up the quarter's warrens. Twenty odd Jerusalem building contractors, hired by Kollek, first knocked down a public lavatory with sledgehammers. Army bulldozers were then brought in to raze the houses.[4]
The residents were given either a few minutes,[4] fifteen minutes[60] or three hours[2] to evacuate their homes. They initially refused to budge. In the face of this reluctance, lieutenant Colonel Ya'akov Salman, the deputy military governor, issued an order to an Engineering Corps officer to start bulldozing, and, on striking one particular structure, caused the whole building to collapse on its residents. It was this act which caused the remaining residents to flee their apartments and enter vehicles that were stationed outside to bus them away.[61] Amidst the rubble, a middle-aged, or elderly[62][50] woman, al-Hajjah Rasmiyyah 'Ali Taba'ki, was discovered in her death throes. One of the engineers, Yohanan Montsker, had her rushed to hospital but by midnight she was dead.[51][50] According to an interview given two decades later by Eitan Ben-Moshe, the engineer attached to the IDF Central Command who oversaw the operation, she was not the only victim. He recalled recovering 3 bodies that were transported to the Bikur Cholim Hospital, and while some other bodies were buried with the disposed rubble:
I had thrown out all the garbage. We threw out the wreckage of houses together with the Arab corpses. We threw Arab corpses and not Jewish, so that they would not convert the area to a place where it is forbidden to tread.[p][60]
The following morning, Colonel Lahat described the demolition workers as mostly being drunk "on wine and joy".[4]
Permission to salvage their personal belongings was denied. The reason given by an Israeli soldier was that they were pressed for time, since only two days remained before the feast of the "Passover" (actually Shavuot), and many Jews were expected to arrive on the following Tuesday at the Western Wall. The haste of demolition was necessary, it was argued, to prepare a yard for the festive worshippers.[64][65] The prime minister at the time, Levi Eshkol was completely unaware of the operation, and phoned Narkiss on the 11th asking the reason why the houses were being demolished. Narkiss, pretending not to know, replied that he'd look into the matter.[57]
Historic buildings razed[edit]
In addition to 135 houses, the demolition destroyed the Bou Medyan zaouia,[62] the **********h Eid Mosque, – one of the few mosques remaining from the time of Saladin, whose historic significance was identified by the Israel Antiquities Authority -[66] In destroying the a small mosque near the Buraq section of the Wall, associated with the ascent of Mohammad on his steed Buraq to heaven, the engineer Ben Moshe is quoted as having exclaimed:"Why shouldn't the mosque be sent to Heaven, just as the magic horse did?"[60]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moroccan_Quarter