Farmers, rabbis pray for rain amidst drought

Israel’s current water crisis is the most severe in more than a decade.

By: Andrew Friedman/TPS

Several thousand people, including the country’s chief rabbis, Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel and members of kibbutzim gathered under cloudy skies at the Western Wall and among several Orthodox communities around the country Thursday to pray for rain amidst a punishing drought that threatens the country’s farming sector and fresh water resources.

The chief rabbinate distributed special prayers for the event, including chapters from the book of Psalms and selections from the Yom Kippur and Sukkot holiday services. The session was held on the 10th day of the Hebrew month of Tevet, a traditional fast day marking the day that Babylonian emperor Nebuchadnezzar began his siege of Jerusalem in 425 BCE.

In Efrat, Chief Rabbi Shlomo Riskin told a crowd of several hundred residents gathered outside at a local park that the Torah’s account of creation includes a command for mankind to “partner” with God in running the world, and said that rainfall is a sign that God purifies the Jewish people and accepts their repentance.

The service was held despite a storm earlier in the week that brought between 30 and 50 millimeters of rain. But an Israel Water Authority scientist told Tazpit Press Service (TPS) Monday that the storm did little to reverse the effects of five years of drought, including the fact Israel received just 40 percent of its average rainfall for October through December.

As a result of the drought, water officials say the country’s water resources are in danger of irreversible damage. Also Monday, Yuval Steinitz, Minister of Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources, toured the Sea of Galilee, known in Hebrew as Lake Kinneret. Steinitz said that his office would draft a national emergency water plan in the coming weeks in order to bolster Israel’s water sector and to “save” the Kinneret. Steinitz called on the government to invest in a large-scale desalination plant north of Haifa in order to channel desalinated water to the lake, Israel’s largest source of freshwater.

The current crisis is the most severe in more than a decade. Givati said the Kinneret has hit the upper red line, which indicates that the lake is at full capacity with a water level of 208.40 meters below sea level, since April, 2004; the water level in the lake currently stands at 214.38 meters below sea level.

The current water level is just 20 millimeters above the so-called black line, and just 49 millimeters above the lowest point ever measured in the Kinneret.