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Israel’s chief rabbi calls for day of fasting, prayer for pandemic victims

Israel’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau has called on Jews in Israel and across the globe to fast tomorrow and to pray for the dead and infected.
Former Chief Rabbi of Israel Yisrael Meir Lau gets vaccinated against COVID-19 coronavirus at Sourasky Medical Center (Ichilov) in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv, on December 20, 2020. - Israel has ordered 14 million doses of the vaccine -- covering seven million people, as two doses are required per person for optimal protection -- from Pfizer as well as US biotech firm Moderna. The vaccine will be rolled out at 10 hospitals and vaccination centres around Israel for healthcare workers from Sunday, ac

Israel’s Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau called yesterday on Jews in Israel and across the globe to fast tomorrow, Jan. 21. The day of fasting will be dedicated to prayers over the many people who have died from the pandemic and for the recovery of those infected. Lau will hold a special prayer service at Rachel's Tomb, north of Bethlehem, broadcast live on TV. The global Jewish community is expected to hold similar services at the same time.

Lau wrote in a letter, "In recent days, the plague has intensified and we feel that 'outside the sword will bereave, and inside terror' [Deuteronomy 32:25]. Every day we are faced with terrible disasters. The virus does not distinguish between people, harming the elderly, young people, fathers and mothers of young children, and unfortunately many of them die, and many thousands are in a state of trouble and need prayer and a cry for help from the heavens."

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