Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Egypt bans Abuhatzeira shrine visits for good



CAIRO - An Egyptian court  has banned a Jewish celebration that has taken place since the 1979 peace deal with Israel and asked the government to remove the tomb where it takes place from a list of official shrines, the Jerusalem Post reports. Although the authorities have threatened to ban pilgrimages to this Moroccan  rabbi"s shrine on previous occasions, this time the ban looks permanent. So much for official protestations that Egypt is not anti-Jewish, just anti-Zionist.

The court said its decision was due to "moral offenses" committed in previous years at the three-day festival celebrating the birth of Rabbi Jacob Abu Hasira. It did not elaborate on what the offenses were.

Jews, mostly from outside Egypt, have congregated every year at the 19th century tomb around Jan. 1 even though the festival was cancelled for security reasons after the 2011 uprising that ousted former President Hosni Mubarak.

Monday's ruling would make the ban permanent unless a higher court overturns it on appeal.

The court called for the government to reverse the 2001 recognition of the festival by state tourism officials and to remove the tomb in Egypt's Nile Delta region of Buheira from a list of recognized shrines.

Local residents have previously complained of the disruptive security presence that comes with the festival. 

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