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How politics hurt Israel's Rabbi Ovadia Yosef

Ovadia Yosef, spiritual leader of the Shas party, turned 90 this week. But what is his legacy?

September 21, 2010 13:41
Rav Ovadia meets representatives from the town of Sderot, which was under fire from Gaza,  in his home in 2006

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak received a personal letter last week wishing him good health and thanking him for his involvement in the direct talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

"I want to strengthen your hands and bless all the leaders and nations, Egyptians, Jordanians and Palestinians, who are partners in this important process to achieve peace in our region and prevent bloodshed. May you all have lengthy days and years and succeed in your endeavours for peace," wrote Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the most influential spiritual leader in Israel, who turned 90 years old on Monday.

Thirty-one years ago, Rabbi Yosef, then the Sephardi Chief Rabbi, scandalised the religious world with his ruling that for peace, Israel should retreat from the territories it captured in the 1967 Six Day War.

But over the last two decades, the rabbi's actions and words seem to have worked for the opposite cause. In 1993, Shas, the political party he founded after being forced to leave the chief rabbinate and over which he still exercises complete control, abstained in the vote over the Oslo accords. In 2000, the party left the coalition on the eve of the Camp David talks and in 2005, it opposed disengagement from Gaza.

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