Nissan 20, 5771, 4/24/2011
  
Take back Kever Yosef, TODAY!
by David Wilder
  The Jewish Community of Hebron
  
It is our collective responsibility to ensure that Joseph’s tomb return's to Israel
Text  messages, received at seven in the morning, aren’t a good way to start  the day. Today’s was no different. A terror shooting at Kever Yosef,  Joseph’s tomb, in Shechem, left one Jew dead and others injured. 
    A little while later, arriving at Ma’arat HaMachpela for morning  prayers, I asked a friend if he knew who’d been killed. When he answered  Ben Yosef Livnat I froze. Benyo, as he was known, had been my neighbor.  He had studied at Kollel Ohr Shlomo in Tel Rumeida for a few years. I  saw him there every morning, studying “Hassidut,” usually “Likutai  Me’oran,’ the teachings for Rebbi Nachman of Breslav, with a ‘chevruta’ a  study partner, before the nine o’clock start of the regular day’s  program. During his last year in the Torah program, he moved, with his  wife and family, to Beit Hadassah. They lived in an apartment under ours  for about a year, before moving to a Breslav neighborhood in Jerusalem.
     Benyo  dead!? Shot and killed!? At Kever Yosef!? Now, a few hours later, I  still cannot fathom Benyo – Ben Yosef Livat, no long among the living.
  Benyo’s  father, Noam, was severely wounded while serving in the IDF. Belonging  to the Beitar movement, he was involved in Gush Etzion and later became  religious. He helped initiate the Elon Moreh and Kedumim communities in  Samaria, and later studied at the Od Yosef Chai yeshiva at Joseph’s tomb  in Shechem.  Benyo – Ben Yosef, was one of six children in the family  and his name reflects the family’s bond with Joseph and Joseph’s tomb,  where ironically, he was murdered.
  
   Benyo  is not the first Jew to lose his life as a result of total dedication  to Joseph’s tomb and the Shomron – Samaria region. This holy site, was,  according to the cursed Oslo Accords, supposed to remain under Israeli  control, despite the fact that the city Shechem, was abandoned to Arafat  and the Arabs. However, numerous violent attacks at the site led to the  murder of Israeli Border policeman, Cpl. Madhat Yusuf, there in  October, 2000. Yusuf, injured by Arab gunfire, bled to death at the tomb  when Israeli forces were forbidden to entire the site and save him.
  A  week later, Hillel Lieberman, was murdered by Arabs while trying to  access the tomb following Israel’s decision to abandon the area to the  Arabs. A week and a half later Rabbi Binyamin Herling, also from Elon  Moreh, was killed during a hike in an area just outside Shechem. He too  bled to death after being wounded, when Israeli forces were forbidden to  take actions necessary to end Arab shooting in the area.
  Arabs  destroyed the tomb, burning it to the ground. However Jews refused to  abandon Joseph and leave this holy place Judenrein. For years Jewish  worshippers have secretly visited the tomb, during the night and early  morning, praying and reciting Psalms. Eventually the IDF began to offer  ‘secure visits’ to the site. But the demand to permanently return to  Joseph’s tomb continued, with many groups, including many Breslav  Hassidim, frequenting the holy site. So it was that Ben Yosef Livnat and  some of his friends arrived there early this morning for early morning  Passover prayers. Arabs in the area, including armed terrorists in  uniform, known as ‘palestinian police’ were used to seeing Jews arrive,  pray, and then leave. However, this morning these terrorists opened fire  on a few cars of Breslaver’s at the tomb, killing Benyo and wounding a  few others, one of whom is in critical condition. Benyo, only twenty  five years old, leaves a widow and four orphans, the oldest of whom is  not yet five.
  There  are many conclusions to be reached following this horrid terrorist  murder, on the eve of the last day of Passover. Again, and how many  times must it be reiterated, Israel cannot and must not initiate  so-called ‘security arrangements’ with the PA. Armed Arabs know only one  use for their weapons, and that is, as has proven hundreds of times, is  to murder Jews. Hundreds and thousands of Jews have been killed and  injured by weapons provided to the Arabs by Israel and distributed to  ‘palestinian police,’ that is, terrorists in uniform. How many more  lives must be snuffed out until Israel’s leadership understands that our  neighbors will continue to kill Jews, given the opportunity to do so.  Why should we help them to kill our own people!?
  But,  the first, and most obvious step to be implemented is the return of  Kever Yosef, Joseph’s tomb, to full Israeli control. Benyo’s murder will  not stop Jews from praying at this site; to the contrary, I expect it  will accelerate and increase Jewish presence at the site. But Israel  must, must, must, make it clear to our neighbors that there is a price  for killing of Jews. Joseph’s tomb is one of the holiest places in  Israel, similar to Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem and Ma’arat HaMachpela,  the tomb of the Patriarchs and Matriarchs in Hebron. Why should such a  sacred place remain in the hands of our enemy, who continues to  desecrate it and kill Jews there!? It is our collective responsibility  to ensure that Joseph’s tomb return's to Israel, and that responsibility  obligates Israeli leadership, the Prime Minister, the Defense Minister,  and the entire Israeli cabinet (including Benyo’s aunt, Minister Limor  Livat), to meet today, and officially decide to return a permanent  Israeli security presence to Kever Yosef, thereby allowing full, free,  secure access to all Jews who so desire to worship there, day and night,  three hundred and sixty five days a year. This is the only way to  sanctify the memory of all those killed at this site and prevent further  Jewish bloodshed at this most significant location in Israel.
  Benyo  was a wonderful person, a beautiful Jew and his murder will leave a  huge gap in the lives of all who knew him. May his memory be blessed and  may G-d comfort his widow, orphans, parents, brothers and sisters and  all who knew and loved him.
  
 
No comments:
Post a Comment