
Rav Yitzchok Yosef Calls Those Who Say Hallel on Independence Day ‘Fools’
Rav Yitzchok Yosef delivered unusually sharp comments criticizing the police, government authorities, and religious-Zionist influences, expressing deep pain over what he described as hostility toward the chareidi and religious public.
In remarks published Tuesday by Ynet, the Rav said he is scheduled to deliver a shiur to police officers ahead of Pesach and made clear that he intends to address what he sees as a disturbing attitude toward frum Jews.
Referring to the upcoming session, Rav Yosef said, “How much hatred do they have for the chareidi? I intend to give them a hard time. Where does this hatred for the religious people come from?” He portrayed the issue as part of a broader cultural and ideological struggle facing Torah-observant Jews in Eretz Yisroel.
Rav Yosef went on to place blame on religious-Zionist messaging and protest activity, stating, “It’s the pamphlets from the Mizrachi people, all of them. How much hatred they have. Those who are protesting, what kind of beatings do they give them?” His words reflected outrage over reports of police violence and what he described as aggressive treatment of demonstrators.
Expanding his criticism, Rav Yosef turned his attention to the current government, accusing it of targeting Sephardic Torah Jews in particular. “We need to break this government, what wicked people. They come only for our Sephardim, trying to break their spirit. I can understand Russian police officers, there are non-Jews among them, I understand why they hate us. But also the Sephardic police officers have become haters? What kind of beatings do they give.”
Rav Yosef concluded by sharply opposing the custom practiced in some circles of reciting Hallel on Israel’s Independence Day, framing it as fundamentally incompatible with a Torah view of galus. “We are in exile. How can you say Hallel on Independence Day? One of the Mizrachi people told me he says Hallel on Independence Day. What is there to say Hallel on Independence Day for? For the beatings from the police? For the arrests? For the mixed swimming pools? For the mixed beaches? For the secular education? They tell me, ‘No, we have a country.’ Fools.”
{Matzav.com}