Google – AFP, 7 October 2013
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Hundreds of
thousands of Ultra-Orthodox Jewish mourners attend the
funeralof of Rabbi
Ovadia Yosef in Jerusalem on October 7, 2013 (AFP,
Menahem Kahana)
|
Jerusalem —
More than 700,000 people took to the streets of Jerusalem on Monday night to
mourn influential Sephardic Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, making it the biggest funeral
in Israel's history, police said.
"We
estimate there are more (than) 700,000 people taking part in the largest of
funerals ever in Israel," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld wrote on his
official Twitter account, referring to Yosef's funeral.
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Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the spiritual leader
of Israel's Sephardic Jewish community
and the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, gestures
during a meeting in Jerusalem on
December 11, 2011 (AFP/File, Gali Tibbon)
|
The
mourners, mostly ultra-Orthodox Jews wearing traditional black clothing and
with men separated from women, gathered outside the seminary Yosef had studied
at, before going to his funeral in Jerusalem's conservative Sanhedria district.
"We've
lost a father," Eliel Hawzi, a 26-year-old mourner in the middle of his
military service, told AFP. "Rabbi Yosef is irreplacable for the Jewish
people."
The rabbi's
death came two weeks after he had heart surgery at Jerusalem's Hadassa
hospital, where he eventually passed away.
"Despite
all our efforts... since his deterioration overnight and huge efforts to halt
that, and after a great struggle, the rabbi died just a few moments ago,"
cardiologist Dan Gilon said in remarks aired on radio.
News of his deteriorating health prompted President Shimon Peres to cut short a working meeting with his Czech counterpart Milos Zeman and rush to the rabbi's bedside, his office said.
News of his deteriorating health prompted President Shimon Peres to cut short a working meeting with his Czech counterpart Milos Zeman and rush to the rabbi's bedside, his office said.
Peres later
delivered a eulogy for Yosef, whom he described as "my teacher, my rabbi,
my friend."
"I
held his hand which was still warm and kissed his forehead. When I pressed his
hand I felt I was touching history and when I kissed his head it was as though
I kissed the very greatness of Israel," the 90-year-old head of state said
of his earlier meeting with the rabbi.
Yosef, a
former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel whose son took over the same role in
June, had frequently played the role of kingmaker in the country's fickle
coalition politics.
He was
spiritual leader also of ultra-Orthodox party Shas, which was a member of most
ruling coalitions before going into opposition after January elections.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed deep sorrow over Yosef's death, saying
the Jewish people had lost "one of the wisest men of this
generation."
![]() |
Ultra-Orthodox
Jewish youths wait for the
body of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef in
Jerusalem on October
7, 2013 (AFP,
Ahmad Gharabli)
|
"He
was filled with love of the Torah and the people. I very much appreciated his
convivial personality and his directness," Netanyahu said, extending
condolences to his family and followers.
His death
sparked an outpouring of emotion within the Sephardi community, with Shas
leader Arye Deri openly sobbing as he expressed his grief in radio interviews.
"We
are all alone," he said, referring to the rabbi as "our father."
Yosef
founded Shas in 1984 on the platform of a return to religion and as a counter
to an establishment dominated by Ashkenazi Jews of European ancestry.
But the
Baghdad-born rabbi frequently courted controversy with his outspoken remarks,
describing Palestinians and other Arabs as "snakes" and
"vipers" who were "swarming like ants."
He called
on God to strike down then prime minister Ariel Sharon over Israel's 2005
withdrawal from Gaza, and during the 2006 war in Lebanon, he implied Israeli
soldiers killed in battle died because they didn't follow Jewish commandments.
Despite the rabbi's often sharp-tongued outbursts, he had for many years been an advocate of peace talks with the Palestinians based on his respect for the sanctity of life, explained Jerusalem Post religious affairs correspondent Jeremy Sharon.
Despite the rabbi's often sharp-tongued outbursts, he had for many years been an advocate of peace talks with the Palestinians based on his respect for the sanctity of life, explained Jerusalem Post religious affairs correspondent Jeremy Sharon.
"Yosef
was of the opinion that if a peace process could be conducted with Palestinians
and save lives, then territorial compromises could be considered," he
said.
Sharon
added that Yosef's death without having appointed a successor could lead to
splits in Shas, which had its heyday in the late 1990s with 17 seats in
parliament.
But
following the failure of the 1993 Oslo Peace Accords to bring about an end to
the conflict with the Palestinians, Yosef shifted politically to the right.
Nonetheless,
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was quick to pass on his "condolences
to Ovadia Yosef's family" on Monday.





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