By Judy Lash Balint
JERUSALEM—This morning
the Associated Press reported the murder of "an Israeli settler,"
Eliyahu Asheri, 18. This afternoon, Eliyahu Pinchas Asheri, son,
brother, grandson, yeshiva student, friend was buried on the Mt. of Olives,
the oldest Jewish cemetery in the world.
Thousands flocked to the funeral home in Jerusalem's Sanhedria neighborhood to
pay their respects and listen to the eulogies for the 18 year old, who had
been shot in the head shortly after he was abducted by Arab terrorists last
Sunday. His burned body was found near Ramallah early today.
No government official was anywhere to be seen in the mostly Orthodox crowd. A
few public figures including Knesset member Effie Eitam, Rabbi Yitzhak Levy
and former Prisoner of Zion Yosef Mendelevich were present, but the
overwhelming majority of mourners were teenagers, many sporting the orange
ribbons of solidarity with the dispossessed of Gush Katif.
All through the eulogies, the sobbing of Eliyahu's four siblings could be
heard over the amplification system. The crowd stood quietly in front of
the gray stone funeral hall under the early afternoon sun.
There were no shouts for revenge; no machine guns fired into the air; no
religious figures whipping up the crowd into a frenzy of hatred. Only
the soft sounds of weeping from dozens of girls and women and the flipping of
pages of Tehillim (Psalms) as speaker after speaker poured out their anguish
at the loss of another young soul to the barbarity of Arab terror.
Several of the rabbis emphasized that the pain of Eliyahu's loss is not just
the pain of the family and those who knew him, but a national pain.
"We here are just representatives of the Jewish people," said the
rabbi of Eliyahu's community of Itamar. "Everyone must cry out," he
sobbed.
Benzi Lieberman, the head of the Regional Council incorporating Itamar noted
that in the picture circulated after the kidnapping, Eliyahu embodied love of
the land. He was pictured sitting on a beautiful hill in Samaria.
"He reminded us of our connection to this land," Lieberman
exclaimed.
Lieberman excoriated the Olmert administration for continuing to push further
unilateral withdrawals from Judea and Samaria even after Eliyahu was kidnapped
and his fate was unknown. "Olmert can't protect our lives in Sderot,
Ofra or Itamar," Lieberman proclaimed. "We who ran out of Gaza, Gaza
will run after him..." he added.
The entourage accompanied Eliyahu to his final resting place on the Mount of
Olives, overlooking the Temple Mount.
"We'll continue to build on our only land with your intercession in
heaven, Eliyahu. We'll continue on the process of redemption,"
vowed the final euolgizer before Yitro Asheri managed to recite the first
Kaddish for his first-born son.
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Judy Lash Balint is an award-winning Jerusalem-based writer and author of
Jerusalem Diaries: In Tense Times. (Gefen) www.jerusalemdiaries.com
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