Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jewish pilgrims to be allowed daytime visits to Joseph’s Tomb

Visiting hours are being expanded for the first time in a quarter century, the Defense Ministry announced.

Joseph's Tomb in Shechem (Nablus). Credit: Tom Miller/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons.
Joseph’s Tomb in Shechem (Nablus). Credit: Tom Miller/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons.

For the first time in 25 years, Jewish pilgrims will soon be allowed to visit Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus during daylight hours, Defense Minister Israel Katz announced on Monday.

The shrine, which is venerated by Jews, Samaritans, Christians and Muslims, has a history of decades of Palestinian violence.

The move will expand the heavily guarded nighttime visiting hours, enabling pilgrims to stay at the shrine, located on the outskirts of the Palestinian city in Samaria, during the morning hours for prayers as well.

The holy site, which remains under Israeli control according to the 1990s Oslo Accords despite its location in a Palestinian-designated area, had previously been restricted to sporadic nighttime visits until 4 a.m. due to security reasons. Now, it will remain open to Jewish pilgrims until 8 a.m., the Defense Ministry said in a statement, with a further potential daytime expansion to be examined in the future.

This change, set to go into effect in the coming weeks, was agreed by Katz and military authorities, although specific start dates or schedules must still be coordinated with security forces.

The decision, which was taken in coordination with political officials, updated a nighttime-only policy put in place in 2000 when the Od Yosef Chai Yeshiva at Joseph’s Tomb was evacuated on the orders of then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak, who also served as defense minister, following Palestinian violence at the site that led to the death of an Israeli border police officer.

The Druze officer, Madhat Yusuf, succumbed to his wounds at the scene after Palestinian security forces prevented his medical evacuation for more than five hours in an incident that shook the nation.

Sporadic Israeli visits later resumed in 2002 under military escort and advance coordination.

See more from JNS Staff
“Anti-Zionism can be a framework for justifying anti-Jewish hostility,” Rafaela Dancygier, of Princeton University, told the N.J. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
A board member at the Orthodox synagogue told the FBI that members began attending services less frequently after Kevin Charles Pyles allegedly targeted the synagogue in separate July and August 2025 incidents.
The Senate rejected a resolution calling for the removal of U.S. forces from the war against Iran after U.S. President Donald Trump hammered Senate Republicans for approving a similar measure the day before.
“When someone uses the N-word on campus, no one thinks about free speech. No one talks about, ‘Let’s understand what they’re thinking. Let’s have a discussion,’” Rep. Randy Fine said. “But somehow when it came to Jews, everyone wanted to rediscover the idea of free speech.”
“Leadership should be responding with moral clarity, not suggesting that the act of teaching about the Holocaust has somehow ‘missed the mark,’” said Kurt Schwartz, CEO of CAMERA.
The judges said the sanctions, which the United States imposed in response to the Hague-based court’s targeting of Israel, are unlawful.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.