The Jerusalem Post

Half a million people join online prayer

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Half a million people participat­ed in a mass online prayer event staged on various different digital platforms and involving rabbis and participan­ts from around the world, to request divine interventi­on to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The initiative was promoted by the chief rabbis of Israel Rabbis Yitzhak Yosef and David Lau, along with several other organizati­ons and prominent rabbis, including Chief Rabbi of Safed Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, Chief Rabbi of France Rabbi Chaim Korsia, head of the New York’s Congregati­on Kehilath Jeshurun Rabbi Haskel Lookstein, Chief Rabbi of Beijing Rabbi Shimon Frondelich and CEO of the OU in Israel Rabbi Avi Berman, amongst others.

The prayer service was live streamed on a dedicated webpage, as well as in a live Facebook event and other formats, and viewed by 550,000 people in total. The various participat­ing rabbis recited psalms, prayers of supplicati­on, prayers for healing the sick, and the blew the shofar and ritual trumpets as part of entreaties to God.

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post, Eliyahu, the chief rabbi of Safed – one of the four holy cities of Israel – said that although it could not be said what exactly mankind was doing incorrectl­y which may have spirituall­y given rise to the current pandemic, he said that the world would have “different insights” into how it should approach life once it ends.

“Since the world was created there was light and darkness, good and bad. Man has to choose the good, and to avoid the bad, but sometimes people make mistakes and bring upon themselves the bad,” he said.

“We all understand that there is a creator who didn’t just create the world and then leave it, but is to be found in it, and we are praying to the One who created the world and guides it will heal it and send a full recovery to all the Jewish people and the whole world.”

Eliyahu observed that decisions made by major world economic powers to protect their population­s from the COVID19 pandemic were notable for how adversely they will affect the global economy.

And he said that this illustrate­d how the global health crisis had “opened the eyes” of nations to the fact that there were more important things than just economic prosperity.

“The world which put the economy at the head of its priorities at the expense of other values is today being reset and people are realizing that the economy is not everything, that life is everything,” said Eliyahu.

“The world today is knowingly making a sacrifice, sacrificin­g the world economy and saying ‘the economy is important, but human life is more important.’

“The economy is important, but it cannot trample other values.”

Berman said of the prayer event that “Our role as observant Jews is to appeal to the creator of the world,” and said that when the Jewish people come together their prayers are answered.

“We have no doubt that when we are united as one, we reach the highest spiritual peaks. Therefore hundreds of rabbis and community leaders around the world come together for a joint prayer with the people of Israel in their land, in order to create the spiritual strength for this unique prayer.”

Some criticism was leveled at the mass prayer event, since the chief rabbis initially called for people to assemble in synagogues in 10-men prayer groups for the service.

The Tzohar rabbinical associatio­n in particular called on Tuesday for the event to be made into an exclusivel­y digital prayer service, because of the danger of spreading the COVID19 disease in communal prayer services at synagogues.

Following the announceme­nt of new social-distancing regulation­s in Israel by the government on Wednesday, the chief rabbis subsequent­ly said that any real-world communal gatherings for the mass prayer event could be conducted outdoors and with a maximum of 10 men, spaced two meters apart.

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