A group of youths shoved Rabbi David Stav and hurled
epithets at him at a wedding on Sunday evening, a day after Shas spiritual
mentor Rabbi Ovadia Yosef unleashed a scathing verbal attack on the candidate
for the post of Israel’s Ashkenazi chief rabbi, Yedioth Ahronoth reported.
Stav was at the wedding of the daughter of Shmuel Rabinovitch,
the rabbi of the Western Wall, when the incident occurred.
Yosef, in his weekly sermon on Saturday night, said that
Stav was “a wicked man,” someone “dangerous to Judaism” who had “no fear of God
at all.” Electing Stav would be like “bringing idolatry into the temple,” Yosef
added. “He is not worthy… this man is dangerous to Judaism, dangerous to the
rabbinate and dangerous to the Torah.”
During the wedding, when Stav joined the celebratory
dancing, Shas MK Ariel Atias immediately left the dance floor, the report said.
Some of the youths then reportedly tried to trip up Stav while cursing him.
According to one person who was at the wedding, when Stav later left the hall,
“dozens of people surrounded him” and called him names.
Others were embarrassed
by the behavior of the youths and apologized to Stav, who “quickly left the
premises,” one wedding guest was quoted as saying.
Stav serves as head of Tzohar, an organization that says it
seeks to make Judaism more accessible to all Israelis, religious and secular
alike.
His candidacy is opposed by the ultra-Orthodox and conservative
religious Zionist camp on the grounds that he is too liberal. Stav has cultivated
an image as an alternative to a rabbinate dominated by the ultra-Orthodox, and
is waging a public campaign that has won him a strong base of popular support.
He also enjoys the backing of MKs in the coalition and in the opposition.
On Sunday, Education Minister Shai Piron, himself a member
of the Zionist religious camp, questioned the place of Yosef’s statement and
whether it was even allowed under traditional Jewish law. “Why? Why does Rabbi
Ovadiah have to curse [Rabbi Stav],” he wrote on Facebook. “Does he think that
that this will bring people closer to Torah and to Judaism? Does he think that
to speak this about a person he has never met is moral? Halachic? Jewish?”
In a statement, Tzohar called Yosef’s remarks a testimony to
“the urgent need for change across the rabbinate” and said he should “repent
and ask forgiveness.”
“We protest the incitement voiced yesterday by Rabbi Ovadia
Yosef,” Tzohar said. “Israel needs a rabbinate that will connect it to Judaism,
and not antagonize.”
On Sunday, Stav thanked supporters for standing at his side
after Yosef’s sermon.
“I want to express thanks for the thousands of emails, text
messages and phone calls I received today from rabbis, public officials and
members of the public to strengthen me and my family in light of the personal
attacks against me,” Stav wrote on his Facebook page. “I am torn by the
divisive atmosphere that has risen over the elections for chief rabbi. However
when I chose to go down this path, I put the interests of Torah before my own.”
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