Photo Credit: courtesy, Simon Wiesenthal Center
Jordanian border security personnel harass Jews at the crossing, confiscating their religious items. Sept. 2022

(TPS) Israel has lodged an official complaint with Jordan over the repeated harassment of religious Jewish tourists at border crossings, the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem said Tuesday.

The protest expressed in a letter from Foreign Minister Eli Cohen came two weeks after a group of ultra-Orthodox Jews said they were asked to cut off their payot (sidelocks) after being detained for two days at the Jordanian side of the Yitzhak Rabin/Wadi Araba border crossing north of Eilat. It also follows multiple reports of Jordanian authorities refusing to allow religious Jews to enter with religious objects.

Advertisement




“It is beyond the pale that Israelis will be humiliated at the crossings to Jordan and their entry denied only because they are religious Jews,” Cohen said.

Israel’s top diplomat said that he was working with the Jordanian embassy in Israel and Jordanian authorities to find a solution to thousands of religious Israelis who are interested in visiting Jordan but are prevented from entering because they carry tefillin (phylacteries) prayer shawls or holy books.

In the latest incident, the Jewish tourists said that the Jordanian guards at the Yitzhak Rabin crossing who asked them to cut off their traditional side curls told them that it was safer for them not to be visibly Jewish in the kingdom.

Earlier this year, a U.K.-born rabbi on his way to board a connecting flight at Jordan’s main airport—Queen Alia International Airport near Amman—had the straps of his tefillin cut by security guards who called them a security threat.

Holy sites in Jordan visited by Jewish pilgrims include the Tomb of Aaron, Mount Nebo, where Moses viewed the land of Israel before his death, and the Hill of Elijah, where Elijah the Prophet ascended to heaven.

There are reports that the Kingdom of Jordan is afraid of religious Jews visiting, due to the historical ties Jews have the east bank of the Jordan, which was once part of the greater Israelite kingdom.

Advertisement

SHARE
Previous articleIsrael Signs Free Trade Agreement with Vietnam
Next articleFrench Defense Firm ‘Thaler’ Acquires Israel’s ‘Imperva’ Cyber Company for $3.6 Billion