http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=167868
  
 
Photo by: Ben Hartman 
Samaritans mourn their high priest 
BY BEN HARTMAN 
05/02/2010 05:00 


Elazar ben Tsadaka, 83, 'wise' and 'selfless,' traced his office back to Aaron. 
  
Snow flurries drifted to the ground on Mount Gerizim overlooking Nablus on 
Thursday, as mourners gathered to bury the spiritual leader of the Samaritans, 
who passed away the previous day.

High Priest Elazar ben Tsadaka ben Yitzhaq was born during a snowstorm 83 years 
ago, one mourner said. On Thursday, as he was being laid to rest at the holiest 
site in the Samaritan religion, the snow began to fall again.

According to Samaritan tradition he was the 131st holder of the post since 
Aaron. This is not be accepted by all historians, but the office may well go 
back to the Hellenistic period, which would still make it the oldest office in 
the world. One account in Josephus suggest that it is an offshoot of the 
Zadokite high priests in Jerusalem from around the time of Alexander the Great.

Mourners took shelter from the storm inside the community center in the hilltop 
neighborhood of Kiryat Luza, where much of the ethnoreligious group of 730 
lives. Nearly all the rest live in Holon's Neveh Pinchas neighborhood.

Inside, well over 100 men gathered in a somber, eerily quiet ceremony around 
the casket holding Elazar, who will be replaced as head priest by his cousin 
Aharon Ben-Av Hisda Cohen.

The Samaritans are a tiny, largely misunderstood sect that practices a religion 
that is a close parallel to Judaism. Samaritans believe theirs is the true 
religion of the Israelites and follow their own Samarian Torah, written in an 
ancient form of Hebrew largely alien to modern Israeli eyes. Today's Samarians 
trace their lineage to Israelites who have lived in northern Samaria before the 
Babylonian exile, and they still view Mount Gerizim, not Jerusalem, as the 
center of their religion.

Elazar ben Tsadaka ben Yitzhaq was eulogized by the Palestinian Authority's 
governor of the Nablus region, Jibrin al-Bakri, before a procession of senior 
IDF officers filed in, shaking hands with village elders.

Brig.-Gen. Yoav Mordechai, head of the Civil Administration of Judea and 
Samaria,  stepped forward, and in Arabic, spoke warmly of Elazar.

Mordechai said Elazar was a kind, intelligent man who had a deep connection 
with IDF officials in the area. Mordechai also said that in the years he dealt 
with Elazar, the priest never once asked anything for himself and always put 
his community first.

Mourner Menashe Tsadaka described Elazar as "a wise man in the community who 
people always came to for answers."

Tzadka added that the high priest always served as a bridge between IDF 
officials and the Palestinian communities in the area, something he said was 
illustrated by the eulogies given both by PA and IDF officials.

The eulogies finished, the mourners began to pray in the ancient Hebrew that is 
their liturgical language. The crowd swayed and chanted a prayer that bore 
little resemblance to the Jewish kaddish, but had a moving, hypnotic cadence.

Pallbearers then carried Elazar to his final resting place in a small cemetery 
on Mount Gerizim. He was lowered into the earth and mourners quickly mixed 
cement and poured it atop the casket as the wind howled. Finally, several 
wreaths were laid upon the wet cement.

As the procession hurriedly left the cemetery, people headed to the shiva 
ceremony at the high priest's home, where over heaping plates of rice and lamb, 
mourners wept for the loss of the leader of one of Israel's tiniest communities 
atop the mountain that has been the center of their religion for millennia.

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