Israeli chief rabbi visits UAE
ÌýChief Ashkenazi Rabbi reportedly made a visit to the United Arab Emirates on Friday to meet its Jewish community, according to Israeli news outlet Arutz Sheva.
Lau accepted the invitation from the UAE's rabbi Levi Duchman, who was joined by the Gulf country’s Minister of Tolerance .
The rabbi also met with other officials including the Israeli envoy to the UAE Amir Hayek and the commissioner general of the Pavilion Elazar Cohen.
Chief Rabbi of Israel Rabbi David Lau, in an official visit to the UAE; meets Minister of Tolerance Sheikh Nahayan Mabarak Al Nahayan.
— Alliance Rabbis Islamic States (@RabbisAlliance)
The Chief Rabbi of Israel was invited by Rabbi to the UAE Rabbi Levi Duchman, to meet with the growing Jewish community throughout the Emirates
During Lau's visit, Duchman said: "It isÌýa great honour for us to host the Chief rabbi of Israel here in the Emirates, carry a joint Rosh Chodesh prayer and meet with the dear members of our community in Dubai and Abu Dhabi".
He went on to praise the "invaluable and most appreciated support", for permitting its Jewish community to "thrive and prosper".
There is an estimated 1,500 Jews in the UAE, according to The Times of Israel,Ìýwhile other sources indicate that the number is in the hundreds.
Lau was notÌýthe first IsraeliÌý to officially visit the UAE afterÌýthe Gulf country and Israel established diplomatic ties in August 2020, which has drawn unanimous condemnation from Palestinians and other Arab nations.
Palestinians pointed out that the UAE was offering normal diplomatic and cultural ties to Tel Aviv while Israel was still illegally occupying Palestinian land in the West Bank and besieging the Gaza Strip.
Controversial Sephardi , who said in 2016 that Israeli soldiers had a "religious duty to kill Palestinian attackers", made the first ever visit to the UAE,ÌýwhereÌýhe inaugurated a Dubai Jewish nursery school in December 2020.
Lau is also no stranger to controversy. He hasÌýclaimedÌýthat people who convert to Reform Judaism are not "real Jews", when Israel's Supreme Court decided to end an Orthodox monopoly on Jewish conversions in March last year.
In 2019, he drew ire for for Israelis with roots in the former Soviet Union to "prove their Jewishness" before they marry.
Since the UAE and Israel’s established ties, several acts of "normalisation"Ìýhave occurred, such as the establishment of restaurants, and around 1,000 Israelis to Dubai.
Public opinion surveys in the Arab world have shown overwhelming disapprovalÌýof the normalisation deal with Israel.