Jerusalem chief rabbi visits mourning tent for killed autistic Palestinian man
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Jerusalem chief rabbi visits mourning tent for killed autistic Palestinian man

Aryeh Stern met local Muslim leaders following the killing of Iyad Halak, after Israel apologised for the death

Rabbi Aryeh Stern. Source: Wikimedia Commons. Credit:  Boaz Lev- Ari
Rabbi Aryeh Stern. Source: Wikimedia Commons. Credit: Boaz Lev- Ari

A Jerusalem chief rabbi visited the family of Iyad Halak, the autistic Palestinian man who was shot to death by Israeli Border Police, at their mourning tent in eastern Jerusalem.

Aryeh Stern, the city’s Ashkenazi chief rabbi, also met local Muslim leaders at the tent on Tuesday evening.

Halak, of eastern Jerusalem,  was shot in the Old City of Jerusalem by officers who said they thought the cellphone in his hand was a gun. Israel has apologised for the killing.

Stern, who was joined by Jerusalem Municipality officials, said he was coming with “a message of peace and reconciliation,” according to The Jerusalem Post. Halak’s father thanked him for the condolence visit.

Iyad Halak,

Public Security Minister Amir Ohana said he would investigate Halak’s death. He also said that police officers “are required to make fateful decisions in seconds in an area that has been inundated with terror attacks, and in which there is a constant danger to their lives,” The Times of Israel reported.

Ohana reportedly cancelled a visit to the family for Tuesday evening after Halak’s father posted a video on social media in which he said he did not want visits from any government officials.

On Wednesday in the Knesset, Ohana called for police officers to be trained to recognise a person with a disability and said he would advance such a requirement.

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