Clashes broke out at the Jaffa protests following the attack on Rabbi Yeshiva

Three Israeli Israeli men were arrested on Sunday night, police said, as clashes erupted in Jaffa at rival protests following a violent assault on a yeshiva head living in the mixed Jewish-Arab district of Tel Aviv.

Rabbi Eliyahu Mali was attacked violently on Sunday morning in an apparent hate crime while looking to buy an apartment to house Shirat Moshe Hesder Yeshiva. Two suspects were later arrested.

In response to the incident, a predominantly religious Jewish protest took place on Sunday evening near the site of the attack, denouncing violence against Jews in the city.

Get the daily edition of the Times of Israel by email and never miss our top stories Sign up for free

At the same time, a counter-protest of local Arab Israelis formed across the road from the Jewish protest, chanting “Settlers, go home.”

With police officers forming a human barrier between the two protests, they were attacked by stones and fireworks thrown in their direction, police said in a statement.

Clashes between Israeli Arab protesters and police in Jaffa, April 18, 2021. (Screenshot: Ynet)

Images of the incident showed fireworks coming from the direction of the Israeli Arab protest.

Two police officers suffered minor injuries, police said.

In the incident early Sunday, Mali and his colleague were assaulted while going to a building in Jaffa to view the property. The two were surrounded by Arab residents in the area, who started shouting at them and ordering them to leave. When they refused and began filming the incident, the suspects began beating Mali and his colleague.

Mali did not need hospitalization for his injuries.

The photos posted online showed the rabbi, sixty years old, being kicked to the ground.

Two Jaffa residents filmed beating Rabbi Eliyahu Mali on April 18, 2021. (Kindness)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced the “violent attack” and called on law enforcement to bring the attackers to justice quickly.

Right-wing lawmakers also strongly condemned the attack, calling it anti-Semitic.

“The state of Israel is not one shtetl in which Jews can be hurt, “Yamina party leader Naftali Bennett wrote on Twitter, referring to Jewish hamlets in Eastern Europe. “The severe and blatant violence against Rabbi Eliyahu Mali, the chief of the hesesh yeshiva in Jaffa, is a … national shame.”

Jerusalem’s Foreign Minister Rafi Peretz described the incident as “terrible” and urged police to bring the attackers to justice.

Jaffa, which has now been incorporated into Tel Aviv, is traditionally Arab, but in recent years many Jewish residents have been displaced by new developments in luxury housing. This gentrification fueled tensions in the city.

I’m proud to work for The Times of Israel

Let me tell you the truth: life here in Israel is not always easy. But it is full of beauty and meaning.

I am proud to work at The Times of Israel with colleagues who pour their hearts into their daily work to capture the complexity of this extraordinary place.

I believe that our reporting sets an important tone of honesty and decency, essential to understanding what is really going on in Israel. It takes a lot of time, commitment and hard work on the part of our team to achieve this.

Your support through membership in Times of Israel Community, allows us to continue our work. Would you join our community today?

Thank you,

Sarah Tuttle Singer, New Media editor

Join the community Times of Israel Join our community Already a member? Sign in to stop seeing this

Are you serious. We appreciate that!

That’s why we come to work every day – to give discerning readers like you a must-read cover about Israel and the Jewish world.

So now we have a request. Unlike other news, I did not create a payment screen. But because the journalism we do is expensive, we invite readers for whom The Times of Israel has become important to help us support our work by joining Times of Israel Community.

For just $ 6 a month, you can help support our quality journalism while enjoying The Times of Israel NO ADS, as well as access to content exclusively available to members of the Times of Israel community.

Join our community Join our community Already a member? Sign in to stop seeing this

Source