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Israel Miracles Sought At Tombs Of Sages (PHOTOS)

Israel Miracles

First Posted: 02/21/2012 12:31 am Updated: 04/22/2012 5:12 am

NETIVOT, Israel (AP) — One man prays to heal the legs he broke in a car accident. An older woman pleads for grandchildren. Another visitor has come to see "God's secretary."

These believers are part of a growing phenomenon in Israel, where hundreds of thousands of people from starkly different backgrounds flock to the tombs of ancient Biblical figures or modern-day rabbis, seeking blessings and claiming they've witnessed miracles.

At many of these sites there is scant proof that any sage is actually buried there. Some are even believed to be co-opted Ottoman or Muslim burial places. But to the faithful, the lack of hard evidence is irrelevant. It's the deep spiritual experience or, for some, the desperate desire to be blessed, that matters.

"Coming here is being able to speak to God's secretary. It's the closest you can get," said Suzy Shaked, a 55-year-old teacher from central Israel who visited the tomb of Rabbi Yisrael Abuhatzeira, one of the most popular pilgrimage sites.

Shaked said she sees Abuhatzeira, better known as the Baba Sali, as God's envoy. A visit to his tomb puts her requests in God's earshot. She was praying at the Baba Sali's tomb for her son to marry.

While there are no firm statistics on how many Israelis visit sites like the Baba Sali's tomb, researchers say the number is growing.

They cite the rising power of religious political parties, the influence of Israelis of north African descent who traditionally practiced these kinds of pilgrimages, and a growing desire by even secular Jews to find meaning in their lives through a spiritual act. Prominent businessmen and politicians are known to make appearances at the sites.

"It's hard for (people) to be satisfied with prayer in a synagogue to a God who is very abstract, who is unclear, who is not accessible," said Doron Bar, a historical geographer who studies the sites. "I think visiting a grave like this gives believers a line through which demands can be made."

Bar believes that the number of pilgrimage sites has grown into the hundreds.

The phenomenon has spawned a tourist trade, where busloads of faithful are ferried from one burial site to another to make a variety of wishes.

"People see results," said Benny Barzilai, who runs monthly trips to tombs. "That's why this tour succeeds."

Morroccan-born Abuhatzeira was revered even in life as a mystic and performer of miracles. After he died in January 1984, he gained rock star-like fandom.

Today, his tomb in the blue-collar town of Netivot in southern Israel draws an estimated hundreds of thousands of pilgrims. The anniversary of his death is especially popular, a time that is believed to grant the worshipper a heightened closeness to God.

It's the second-most visited tomb in Israel, after that of Yonatan ben Uziel in northern Israel. That site, which reportedly draws half a million people a year, is believed to answer prayers for marriage.

At the Baba Sali compound, believers of all stripes could be seen during the recent anniversary commemorations— mildly religious young women in tight jeans and red nails, pious elderly women in long floral skirts and head coverings, silver-haired politicians in pinstriped suits. The tomb was packed with a mass of wailing worshippers, which swelled gradually into the evening.

The day was joyful and festive, with barbecues, picnics and vendors selling candles and clocks bearing the Baba Sali's image. The faithful hurled candles into a large furnace, a ritual with pagan tinges meant to immortalize the sage's soul.

"I take advantage of any opportunity to go see a sage," said Shimon Kaslessi, a truck driver, who walks with crutches but was told he likely wouldn't walk at all after a car crash two years ago.

"When you've seen miracles, when the sage makes a handicapped person walk, you believe," he added, a tear streaming down his face.

Although the burial place of modern rabbis like Abuhatzeira are not questioned, those of more ancient sages are not always investigated or recognized by any official body, meaning anyone can theoretically designate a place as holy and spark a following.

A site near the central town of Modiin is believed by some to be the tomb of the Jewish priest Matityahu ben Yohanan, one of the heroes of the Hasmonean Revolt against the Greeks more than 2,000 years ago. While not officially recognized, the site draws hundreds of pilgrims a year.

Similarly, a tomb in a Jerusalem mosque is sacred to Jews, Muslims and Christians, yet each claims a different holy woman is buried there.

Researchers believe the grave of the prophet Havakuk in northern Israel was possibly deemed to be there because the prophet's name rhymed with a nearby village, Yakuk.

It's unclear how the phenomenon took root. Traditionally in Judaism, prostrating oneself at graves was forbidden, as it was likened to the prohibited custom of idol worship.

Some studies believe that after Israel gained independence in 1948, many important Jewish sites beyond Israel's boundaries were out of reach. Jews in turn assigned greater importance to less significant sites inside Israel or co-opted what was known to be, until then, an Ottoman or Muslim tomb.

Over time, myths surrounding the different graves emerged, and Jews began making pilgrimages to these sites. The custom is practiced at tombs of Jewish sages around the world as well, including a massive yearly pilgrimage to Ukraine.

Many are nondescript tombstones while some are grand domed mausoleums. Each sage is typically associated with different requests, whether for health, wealth, love or fertility.

More than 100 such sites are considered official holy places by Israel's Tourism Ministry, meaning they are maintained with government funds. New sites are rarely added to the ministry's list because they "lack proof" that anyone of importance is interred there, said Mina Genem, a ministry official.

Nonetheless, these tombs attract Jews from all backgrounds who return year after year because they say their prayers have been answered.

Sarah Cohen, 69, said her daughter became pregnant after she prayed for her at the Baba Sali's tomb.

"I've been coming here for 20 years," she said, after flinging a candle into the red furnace. "My daughter came too because she saw that my prayers were answered."

___

Follow Goldenberg at: http://twitter.com/tgoldenberg

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In this Sunday, May 22, 2011 file photo, an Ultra-orthodox Jewish youth covered in a prayer shawl take part in prayers on the grave of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai during Lag Ba'Omer celebrations at Mt. Meron in northern Israel. These believers are part of a peculiar and growing phenomenon in Israel, where hundreds of thousands of people from starkly different backgrounds flock to the tombs of ancient biblical figures or modern day rabbis, seeking blessings and claiming they've witnessed miracles. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File)
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NETIVOT, Israel (AP) — One man prays to heal the legs he broke in a car accident. An older woman pleads for grandchildren. Another visitor has come to see "God's secretary." These bel...
NETIVOT, Israel (AP) — One man prays to heal the legs he broke in a car accident. An older woman pleads for grandchildren. Another visitor has come to see "God's secretary." These bel...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allison Knight-Khan
Love 4 All, Hatred 4 None
11:33 PM on 02/29/2012
In Pakistan there are also many Muslims who pray at graves. This is a mistake if the person praying thinks that the one who died can grant anything at all.

I think this is correct: "Traditionally in Judaism, prostrating oneself at graves was forbidden, as it was likened to the prohibited custom of idol worship." It is the same, according to Ahmadiyyat, the true Islam, also. See www.mta.tv

As an Ahmadi-Muslim, the only thing I will do at a grave is pray for the person who occupies the grave.

We attend a mosque to pray to God because that creates a sense of community for the living. Praying at a grave by yourself does not accomplish this.
08:32 PM on 02/25/2012
You dont have to go to a tomb for a miaracle , ISRAEL IS THE MIRACLE .
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06:35 PM on 03/03/2012
Ha ha!

Man.
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cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
11:46 PM on 02/24/2012
Must be the national pastime. Just look at the hundreds of thousands who go to the Western Wall in Jerusalem to pray, even after it was revealed that the wall was actually built by the Romans. I suppose these sites are only the objects upon which to focus a life of devotion.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
10:10 AM on 02/25/2012
Well put.
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katwright
06:33 PM on 02/24/2012
I just came back from Israel vacation. The only miracle there that people can afford to pay for gas.
I filled half tank for 70 dls!!!!!!! And it was a small car,mind you.
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Richard Aron
Be the change you wish to see in the world. Gandhi
07:42 PM on 02/24/2012
They get billions of our hard-earned money every year. That's why they are rich and we are poor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I think I think
And I fear that it is later than we think.
05:25 PM on 02/24/2012
Faith, by definition defies rational explanation. Let's just leave them alone to find comfort and hope in whatever they can. I say: May God Bless Them.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
10:11 AM on 02/25/2012
I agree. Religious faith in an of itself isn't the problem. It can be a source of good or evil.
05:06 PM on 02/24/2012
Shame that sort of thing has turned into a profit. What's new, though? People have been making a profit off of desperate people for a long time.
03:24 PM on 02/24/2012
The tradition of pilgrimage has been popular in the Middle East and places like India for thousands of years and is prevalent with Jews, Christians and Hindus. In the states, we don't have any ancient holy sites so the phenomena is virtually unknown. In India, if a site has a reputation for having prayers answered and miracle cures performed, Hindus will make pilgrimage to Muslim sites, believing that the piety of the sage is more important than the religion he belonged to.
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american-dolt
Divide and Conquer
11:20 AM on 02/24/2012
What I find is a Miracle is the lack of coverage about the tensions between Israel and Iran with War on the horizon, instead you get silly stories like this while Israel tries to take coercive actions to get the Us into War with Iran.
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01:27 PM on 02/23/2012
During the holiday season...
I placed biblical statuettes around my home...
I was late taking them down...
they were tired...

The world is a lot of work...

This may be why deities
have a day a year and not much more.

Once again...
poor Jesus.
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Raglimidechi
standing on fishes
01:17 PM on 02/23/2012
The real miracle is Israel's very existence. Dubious relics have nothing to do with it.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
03:36 AM on 02/24/2012
The real miracle would be a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians.
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Raglimidechi
standing on fishes
01:07 PM on 02/23/2012
The real miracle in Israel is the fact that Israel exists. It's not about dubious relics.
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CraigVale
09:18 AM on 02/23/2012
Snake oil special: 1.2 ounces of the finest Frankensense combined with myrth with glass applicator.$59.99 and if you act now will will double your order for FREE. Just pay additional S & H
Please have your credit card ready when you call 555-5555 Act now while supplies last !
kokobin
Against stupidity the gods contend in vain
06:19 AM on 02/23/2012
These are the times when I am glad that I saw the light
and affirmed my atheism anew. How can people be so
dumb and bereft of rational thoughts? "God's secretary"?
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Sheldon archer
Facebook name is Yuyun Archer
11:58 PM on 02/22/2012
Getting like Lourdes where 500 million people have asked for a cure and 67 have been classed as "miracles." Ever head of someone going to these places with one leg and returning with two? Now THAT would be a miracle.
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amadeus617
08:31 PM on 02/25/2012
I am one of those millions who went to Lourdes, and had an unseen miracle of deep inner conflict and healing. No one ever saw any miracle with.me....I didn't get THAT miracle of a new leg. I got a miracle with in my heart and life that is with me very minute. You know if 67 people were healed from cancer, etc etc....that's not to shabby.
I was deeply offended by your comment, as I'm sure many sincere people also. When your told you have terminal cancer, and 6 months to live, maybe we'll see you at Lourdes.
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Sheldon archer
Facebook name is Yuyun Archer
09:20 PM on 02/25/2012
I am now 78. I have practiced hypnosis for many years and understand the power of suggestion and the placebo effect. When I was a young lad, my sister developed a brain tumor. My parents took her to the top specialist called Sir Hugh Cairns, if I remember correctly. He advised an operation but stated that the optic nerve would have to be cut out making her blind. Father refused the operation. Six months later, the tumor dissipated and my sister recovered. She is now 70. If we had been at Lourdes, it would have been classed as a miracle. By the way, the teenager Bernadette herself, suffered for many years from tuberculosis of the bone and died at age thirty-five).
A Jew with a View
Act justly, love mercy, walk humbly
10:51 PM on 02/22/2012
Why are there so many posts that have nothing to do with this article? This article has nothing to do with the Arab-Israel conflict. Let's stay on topic. Furthermore, why should those who don't believe in G-d, miracles or prayer demean others who do? Does atheism have its own orthodoxy which can't accept those with different beliefs? Many of these posts appear to be as intolerant as the orthodoxy of some religons who can't accept any other belife system other than theirs. Why do so many people get disjointed if others want to explain events in their their lives by using terms like "luck", "coincidence", "miracles" or "the unexplainable" or wants to offer "best wishes", "hope" or "prayer"? Why do so many people care? Whether others think of themselves as being either "lucky", "blessed" or "self-made", let them. Who is to tell them they are wrong?
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ttsgw
Atheist and secular humanist
04:35 PM on 02/23/2012
They might prevent their children from receiving proper medical treatment as their superstitious parents believe more in miracles than science.
A Jew with a View
Act justly, love mercy, walk humbly
09:44 AM on 02/25/2012
You make a valid point that some parents may seek prayers in lieu of medical treatment. I am reminded of the story of a very pious man who is warned that a flood is coming and everyone is to evacuate. The man says he does not worry, that G-d will save him so he prays. A neighbor comes by with a truck and offers him a ride to avoid the flood but the man declines saying that G-d will save him. As the waters rise, another person comes in a boat and offers to help but the man again refuses. As the water rises the man is forced to the roof of his home when a helicopter comes to lift him to safety. Again the man declines, leaving his fate in the hands of G-d. The water conitinues to rise and the man drwons and goes to heaven. In heaver he approaches G-d and says "I have been pious all my life and done everything that you asked. But in my time of need, I prayed to you and you didn't save me." G-d repsonds "What are you talking about? I sent you the truck driver, the boat and the helicopter. I tried to save you. You didn't act." As Zig Ziglar says. "Positive thinking won’t let you do anything but it will let you do everything better than negative thinking will."
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amadeus617
08:37 PM on 02/25/2012
Why would you be so constantly nasty to desperate people looking for hope? When they tell you that you have cancer and 6 months to live I wonder if you might look for a miracle. OF COURSE NOT you'll say. But thats now....not sure of what you might do when the time comes. GOD bless you dear friend.