The Jerusalem Post

Har Nof name change agreed in stormy meeting

- • By TZVI JOFFRE

The Jerusalem Naming Committee approved a motion to change the name of the Har Nof neighborho­od to “Neot Yosef” after Sephardi rabbi and Shas Party co-founder Rabbi Ovadia Yosef.

About 30 residents of Har Nof representi­ng multiple religious and ethnic sectors attended the committee meeting on Tuesday. Residents of Har Nof who have spoken to The Jerusalem Post have requested to remain anonymous, as they felt that having their names publicized could put them at risk.

One Har Nof resident told the Post that whenever they attempted to speak, they were silenced by Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion.

A couple of minutes were set aside for four residents to speak at the end of the meeting.

The residents were forbidden from filming the meeting. The committee filmed the meeting from an angle that didn’t show most of the residents and shouted at anyone else who attempted to film, according to one resident. A few residents were able to get away with filming a few moments of the meeting.

Lion budged somewhat and stated that he was prepared to discuss different options for the name, including Har Yosef and Givat Yosef, but did not even address the fact that the residents of Har Nof did not want the name of their neighborho­od changed at all, according to the resident.

When it came to the vote, the resident claimed that Lion ignored calls to involve locals in the decision and kept repeating that everything was being done according to the law.

In one of the videos taken at the meeting, a member of the committee can be heard stating that residents will be given two weeks to voice opposition to the decision, before a final decision is made by the committee. Lion interjecte­d multiple times to point out that everything was proceeding according to law.

The municipali­ty claimed that it would publish an official announceme­nt in newspapers and in the neighborho­od. The Har Nof resident told the Post that this did not occur. The committee is obligated to invite representa­tives of the neighborho­od to a meeting in order to express opposition to the decision, but it’s currently unclear who they’ll invite.

ON WEDNESDAY morning, the name of the neighborho­od was already changed to Neot Yosef, with the name Har Nof in parenthese­s on the Waze navigation applicatio­n.

Residents warned that the decision would influence their vote in the next municipal elections. Lion beat his independen­t, secular rival Ofer Berkovitch

by only 2.9% in the 2018 elections.

Lion announced the sudden decision to change the name of Har Nof last week. Residents responded with outrage, claiming that the municipali­ty did not consult residents or their representa­tives at all before making the decision. Their main issue with the decision is also that the municipali­ty ignored their opinions about the change. The logistical issues, such as changing addresses for mail, also bother residents.

A municipali­ty representa­tive told the Post on Monday that the public would be “a full partner in the final decision through questionna­ires and activity in the neighborho­od. Any resident who wants to bring up their opinion will have their opinion heard willingly.”

Some residents of Har Nof claimed that the decision to change the name of the neighborho­od was connected to Shas, a complaint that has come up in other name change incidents in Israel.

In 2017, in Netanya, the municipali­ty’s naming committee decided to change the name of Tahkemoni Street to Rav Gabbai Street, although local residents were against the change, according to MynetNetan­ya, a local news source.

“Where’s the tradition?” said

Avi, a resident of the neighborho­od in Netanya where the street is. “If someone who grew up here will want to come back to the street in another 50 years, there won’t be a place for him to come back to. There’s no justifying the stealing of the name of a street of people who grew up there and raised children there, when there’s new roads that don’t have names yet.”

“This is an old street in Netanya with a close community,” said Lior, another resident, according to MynetNetan­ya. “The residents of the neighborho­od have a deep emotional connection. It defines and represents me. I am a resident of Netanya, from Tahkemoni Street.”

Residents and local politician­s in Netanya saw the decision to change the name as a forcible action by Shas. “We all feel that the mayor is working for Shas against the wishes of the residents,” said Lior.

Like in Har Nof, residents of the neighborho­od in Netanya feared that the name change could affect the current character of the area.

The Jerusalem Naming Committee has been the source of controvers­y before. In 2010, the committee approved a decision to not name roads in Jerusalem after fallen soldiers, unless a later committee specifical­ly approved the name.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? PRESIDENT SHIMON PERES visits Rabbi Ovadia Yosef at his sukkah in Har Nof.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) PRESIDENT SHIMON PERES visits Rabbi Ovadia Yosef at his sukkah in Har Nof.

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