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Jewish festival moved to occupied East Jerusalem over cross-border fighting with Hezbollah

In 2021, 45 people were killed in a stampede on Mount Meron during the annual pilgrimage for Lag Baomer. The Sheikh Jarrah lot where festivities installations are erected this year is private Palestinian land.

Jewish festival moved to occupied East Jerusalem over cross-border fighting with Hezbollah

Plumes of smoke in the border town of Metula, northern Israel, on May 23, 2024, after an attack by Hezbollah. (Credit: Rabih Daher/AFP)

OCCUPIED EAST JERUSALEM — Celebrations marking a Jewish holiday this weekend have been moved after its traditional location near Lebanon was closed due to the threat of Hezbollah rocket fire, police said.

Every year, tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews celebrate the holiday of Lag Baomer by visiting the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai on Mount Meron, in northern Israel.

Preparations for this year's festivities, which come 33 days after Passover, have been completed in Sheikh Jarrah, a tense neighbourhood of annexed East Jerusalem, a police spokesperson said.

The Israeli army reported on several occasions that Hezbollah rocket fire had targeted the city of Meron, which hosts a military base on the flank of the namesake mountain.

Israel's army has declared Mount Meron a "closed military zone" until Monday, May 27.

Sheikh Jarrah, a contested neighbourhood in East Jerusalem, illegally occupied by Israel since 1967 along with the rest of the West Bank, has experienced tensions in recent years due the forced eviction of Palestinian families to replace them with Jewish families.

The police spokesperson told AFP the force "will deploy thousands of officers and border guards in the city of Jerusalem to maintain security and public order."

He added that "the prayers directed to Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai will take place in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood on Shimon Hatzadik Street, a place sacred to religious Jews, and at a sacred site for Jews in Beit Shemesh."

The Sheikh Jarrah lot where festivities installations were erected is private Palestinian land whose owner did not respond to AFP by the time of publication.

It sits just a stone's throw away from the tomb of Shimon Hatzadik, a venerated high priest who lived in Jerusalem about 2,300 years ago and whose resting place religious Jews visit.

In 2021, 45 people were killed in a stampede on Mount Meron during the annual pilgrimage for Lag Baomer.

An Israeli investigation committee concluded in 2024 that Benjamin Netanyahu bore "personal responsibility" for the deadly stampede.

OCCUPIED EAST JERUSALEM — Celebrations marking a Jewish holiday this weekend have been moved after its traditional location near Lebanon was closed due to the threat of Hezbollah rocket fire, police said.Every year, tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews celebrate the holiday of Lag Baomer by visiting the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai on Mount Meron, in northern Israel. Preparations for...