Yehuda Glick, the former CEO of the Temple Institute, was allowed to enter the Temple Mount for the first time in seven months Sunday following the court order requiring that the police allow him to do so. The police have been denying Glick's right to enter holy place by claiming that it will cause the Arabs to riot.
Sunday morning, the first day that Glick was permitted to enter the Temple Mount, is also his daughter Avital's wedding day. Earlier in the morning, Glick and his daughter drove from their home in Otniel, in the southern Hevron Hills, to Hevron, where they prayed together in the Cave of the Patriarchs. From there they continued to Jerusalem and the Temple Mount.