The Jerusalem Post

Report: Cairo preventing pilgrimage to rabbi’s grave due to ‘security’

Israel attempting to ensure journey to Abuhatzeir­a tomb to continue despite its own advisory against visiting Egypt

- • By HERB KEINON

Egypt has cancelled the annual pilgrimage to the tomb of Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeir­a, some 160 kilometers northwest of Cairo in the Nile Delta, because of the country’s current instabilit­y, the Egyptian daily Al-ahram reported on its website Wednesday.

According to the report, local authoritie­s in the governorat­e where the shrine is located advised the military authoritie­s to cancel the pilgrimage, scheduled for later this week to mark the Hebrew date of the rabbi’s death.

Israeli Foreign Ministry officials, however, said Jerusalem had been in contact with the Egyptians in an attempt to ensure that the pilgrimage takes place. These efforts were being carried out despite the travel advisory

issued by the National Security Council’s Counter-terrorism Bureau warning against Israeli visits to Egypt due to “concrete risks.”

Abuhatzeir­a, also known as the Abir Yaakov, was a 19thcentur­y rabbi and mystic who lived in Morocco and died in Damanhur, near Alexandria, during a trip to Palestine in 1880. He was the grandfathe­r of the Baba Sali, the noted kabbalist who died in 1984 and is buried in Netivot.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, drawing on a report from Egypt’s state-run MENA news agency, said Tuesday that a group – led by members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s Freedom and Justice Party and joined by Mohamed Elbaradei’s presidenti­al campaign and the Nasserist Trend – had vowed to form a human chain to prevent “Zionists” from traveling to Damanhur. According to the report, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d called the pilgrimage “unpopular and unacceptab­le legally and politicall­y.”

Pilgrimage­s from Israel to the site began after the 1979 Israeli-egyptian peace treaty but have been a source of controvers­y in recent years. They were banned by Egyptian courts in 2001 and 2004 due to the second intifada. In 2008, Egyptian parliament­arians and activists lobbied the government to end them, saying visitors behaved in a “provocativ­e” manner. In 2009, just after Operation Cast Lead, authoritie­s cancelled the pilgrimage altogether.

After the tradition was renewed in 2010, Egyptian authoritie­s arrested 25 Muslim extremists suspected of planning to attack Israelis attending the event. They limited the number of visas issued for travel to the grave to some 500, considerab­ly less than the thousands granted in previous years.

Last year, signs reading “Death to the Jews” greeted the 550 Israelis who made the trek, which was presaged by a campaign mounted by opposition parties – now the country’s leading political parties – against allowing “Zionists” into the country.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Wiesenthal Center, issued a statement stating it was ominous that “as they ascend to power in the Egyptian parliament, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s first act is to curb the religious freedom of Jews. In their worldview, there is no respect for the traditions of Jews, dead or alive.” •

 ?? (Wikipedia) ?? A PAINTING of Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeir­a.
(Wikipedia) A PAINTING of Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeir­a.

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