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#LOG BOMER ARCHIVE#

Welcome to the Jerusalem Cinematheque Digital Film Archive – Israeli Film Archive (Registered Association) (hereinafter: the “Website” and “the Cinematheque”, respectively), where you can browse through a personal computer or mobile phone (including through the use of a specially designed application).

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“And then I carried their bodies.The Cinematheque accessibility Website terms of use and privacy policy “I stood among them when they were alive,” he wrote. The feast became a beast, rivers of blood and streams of tears washed over the sage’s compound.”

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“A terrible sight unfolded, the buildings rocks and the metal rods appeared to have fused into a pitiless wrecking machine, there are 10 dead and 30 wounded. “Suddenly the frail metal railing tore off the roof, collapsing and dragging with it heavy rocks and the masses of people on it tumbled into the dense crowd below,” the Hapoel Hatzair journal reported about the incident. As thousands climbed a stone staircase to see the fire, the structure collapsed, killing at least 10 people. That’s exactly the moment when the Mount Meron pilgrimage tragedy happened in 1911. The event’s pinnacle is the lighting of the traditional Lag b’Omer fire as the crowd recites, mantra-like, “bizchut hatanah Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai” - Hebrew for “in the merit of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai of the Tannaim,” a reference to the generation of rabbis who flourished in the first two centuries of the Common Era. Women, particularly the newly devout, also flock to Mount Meron on Lag B’Omer, which has a separate women’s section. Entire dance parties routinely grind to a halt whenever one of the dancers loses their yarmulke so that the ritual object can be retrieved from the ground.

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Some young men also shoot bow and arrow while reciting their choice verses from the Bible as a means of fighting evil urges.Īmid the euphoric dancing and eccentric activities, revelers often display kindness and express brotherly love. At one event, a white sheet is stretched on a stage and smeared with olive oil for long minutes in a ceremony that some believe corresponds to a mystical notion that wisdom can be absorbed through objects. About 600 years ago, Shimon bar Yochai’s grave also began attracting pilgrims, eventually eclipsing the earlier rabbis, according to historians.Ī plethora of unusual customs has emerged around the Lag b’Omer pilgrimage. The pilgrimage to Mount Meron, located just outside the northern city of Safed, began in the 11th century at the gravesite of earlier sages - Hillel the Elder and Shammai the Elder - who are buried on the mountain as well. It ranges from old hymns in Aramaic to Yiddish songs to techno music and Don McLean tunes sung to Hebrew lyrics celebrating the Torah. In Israel, the celebration has become a colorful event, where tens of thousands of mostly Hasidic Jews dance into the night to a soundtrack as diverse as the revelers. Bar Yochai’s grave became a site for celebration because tradition has it that he asked his disciples to rejoice instead of mourn when they commemorate his death. Lag b’Omer is also believed to be the date of death of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, a prominent disciple of Rabbi Akiva and a major figure in Jewish mysticism, or Kabbalah, whose gravesite on Mount Meron is the locus of festivities. According to Jewish tradition, the plague ceased on Lag b’Omer, making that date a time of celebration. The Talmud ties Lag b’Omer to a plague that killed thousands of students of Rabbi Akiva, among the greatest early rabbinic figures who legend has it was put to death by the Romans for defying their restrictions on teaching Torah. Part of the reason for Friday’s tragedy appears to be rooted in the pilgrimage site itself – a remote and archaeologically significant site where construction is complicated both practically and for religious reasons - and the euphoric mindset of some pilgrims. And it occurred exactly 110 years after another disaster at the site that killed at least 10 pilgrims in 1911. Indeed, the tragedy struck during what for many observant Jews is among the happiest days of the year: the cessation of a period of mourning between the holidays of Passover and Shavuot during which many observant Jews abstain from weddings and haircuts. That description reflects an aspect of the annual pilgrimage to Mount Meron in northern Israel that was underlined by the deaths on Friday of at least 45 revelers in a stampede: It is a place whose symbolism reflects a mix of grief and euphoria. ( JTA) - “If you haven’t seen the joy of Lag b’Omer on the grave of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, you haven’t seen joy at all,” wrote the author Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Israel’s first Nobel Prize laureate.















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