JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that some businesses and supermarkets may remain open on Shabbat.
The decision issued Wednesday dealt with the operation of businesses
in entertainment complexes including the Tel Aviv and Jaffa harbors
along with the old train station, as well as the opening of supermarkets
in some parts of the city.
Tel Aviv-Jaffa Mayor Ron Huldai said in response to the ruling,
according to Ynet, “As I said four years ago, the city of Tel Aviv-Jaffa
was free and will remain free.”
Haredi Orthodox lawmakers, including Interior Minister Aryeh Deri,
called the ruling a “severe blow” to the sanctity of the Jewish Sabbath.
Retail businesses in Israel are not permitted to open on the Jewish
Sabbath, which begins at sundown Friday and ends after sunset Saturday.
Businesses that ignore the ban are levied modest fines.
In 2013, the Supreme Court ordered the Tel Aviv-Jaffa municipality to
enforce the ban. At the time, the municipality had been working to find
a way to allow a percentage of the city’s grocery stores to stay open
on Saturdays, using an amendment to the existing law. The stores would
have been spread throughout the city, with fewer open in areas that are
more religious and more in secular areas.
However, the interior minister at the time, Gideon Saar, did not approve the amendment. JTA
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