Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sa’ar condemns Djerba machete attack

A Jewish jewelry store owner was wounded, a week before the annual Lag B’Omer pilgrimage to the ancient El-Ghriba synagogue on the Tunisian island.

The Lag B'Omer festival in Djerba, Tunisia, in May 2015. Credit: Quatchenerlo via Wikimedia Commons.
The Lag B’Omer festival in Djerba, Tunisia, in May 2015. Credit: Quatchenerlo via Wikimedia Commons.

Israel’s Foreign Minister MK Gideon Sa’ar decried a machete attack on a Jewish jeweler on the Tunisian island of Djerba on Thursday, which left the victim in need of hospitalization.

Sa’ar called on the Tunisian authorities “to take all necessary measures to protect the Jewish community.”

Rene Trabelsi, a senior figure in the Tunisian Jewish community and the country’s former tourism minister, said a 50-year-old man was wounded in his hand and needed hospital treatment to reattach one of his fingers.

The El Ghriba Synagogue, a 2,600-year-old landmark and center of Tunisia’s small Jewish community, which now numbers approximately 1,500 people, the majority of whom live on Djerba, is set to host a three-day pilgrimage next week to celebrate Lag B’Omer. While details of the latest incident remain unclear, community leader Trabelsi urged restraint, telling reporters, “We fully trust Tunisian authorities because we’re Tunisian too.”

This comes two years after a terrorist attack during the festival left five people dead—two Jewish cousins and three police officers. Last year’s event was scaled back due to security concerns.

Tunisian officials have not yet released a formal statement, but Trabelsi confirmed to the Associated Press that security forces have increased their presence on the island.

Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) is the fastest-growing news agency covering Israel and the Jewish world. We provide news briefs features opinions and analysis to 100 print newspapers and digital publications on a daily basis.
Delta delays return of Tel Aviv route until June as damage from missile debris prompts renewed passenger limits and widespread cancellations.
The IDF struck over 200 regime targets in central and western Iran.
Troops confiscated numerous weapons, including RPGs, anti-tank rockets, ammunition, a hunting rifle and additional combat equipment.
U.N. nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors still have not accessed Iran’s new underground Isfahan enrichment facility, leaving the plant’s status unknown.
Israel ramps up ground maneuvers and mass evacuations in Southern Lebanon as it moves to dismantle Hezbollah’s presence south of the Litani River and impose a new “Yellow Line” security reality.
At least 21 people, all noncombatants, have been killed in hundreds of Iranian ballistic missile attacks targeting civilians in the Jewish state.