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Resilience is Part of the Jewish Tradition—For Masa, it s in our DNA

Resilience is Part of the Jewish Tradition—For Masa, it s in our DNA
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45th Meron burial: Hundreds attend funeral of Argentinian student

4 shares Ultra Orthodox Jews attend the funeral of Abraham Ambon in Jerusalem on May 3, 2021. Amnon was one of the victims of the Meron disaster, where 45 people were crushed to death during a Lag b Omer celebration. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) Abraham Daniel Ambon, a 21-year-old Yeshiva student from Argentina, was buried Monday morning, in the last funeral of the 45 victims of the Mount Meron disaster. Ambon’s funeral took place at the Heichal Yitzhak Yeshiva in Jerusalem, after his parents landed in Israel early Monday morning from Argentina. Hundreds attended the funeral and joined the procession from the Jerusalem yeshiva to the Har HaMenuhot Cemetery.

A Mensch of the Highest Order : Thousands of Mourners Pay Tribute to Victims of Lag B Omer Stampede

An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man is silhouetted near the Israeli national flag, which was lowered to half-mast as the country observes a day of mourning after dozens were crushed to death in a stampede at a religious festival on the slopes of Israel’s Mount Meron, at the Western Wall in Jerusalem’s Old City May 2, 2021. REUTERS/Ammar Awad As Israel marked a national day of mourning on Sunday to commemorate the Mount Meron stampede tragedy, which occurred on the eve of Lag B’Omer, many more of the victims were buried in a number of locations across the country. The catastrophe, which occurred early Friday at Mount Meron and claimed the lives of 45 people, is the country’s deadliest-ever civilian disaster.

You were loved by so many: Thousands at funeral, online ceremony, for NJ teen

The ceremony was also live-streamed to allow friends and family overseas to participate. Donny Morris, 19, of New Jersey, one of 45 people killed in the crush on Mount Meron during Lag B’Omer celebrations. (Courtesy) Almost 70,000 people watched online. “I have so many questions but little to no answers,” sobbed his mother Mirlana Morris, calling his death “a pain more than a mother can bear.” “But what I do know for sure is that you were loved by so many,” she said. “We all always knew how wonderful you were, but in the last 72 hours countless people reached out to me to say how you touched so many lives with your kindness and love,” she said.

After Meron calamity, Haredim question the price of their own autonomy

0 shares The shock of Friday’s catastrophe at Mount Meron is still raw. The graves of the victims, including the children killed in the crush, are still fresh. Yet the debate over what it all means for the country and for Haredi society has only begun. A few overpowering facts, not least that nearly all the victims were Haredi, are driving an unusual new introspection, and leading the major media outlets of the community to turn against one of its characteristic traits: its longstanding and much-criticized “autonomy” from the Israeli state. Haredi Israelis are simultaneously part of and apart from broader Israeli society. Making up as much as 12 percent of the Israeli population, the community is not uniform; different sects and subcultures interact in very different ways with the state and with other subgroups. While the “autonomy,” as Israelis often refer to the phenomenon, does not encompass all Haredim, it encompasses enough of the community to be so growing

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