Yehuda Meshi-Zahav, former ZAKA head, attempts suicide
Yehuda Meshi-Zahav, accused sex offender and former ZAKA head, attempted to commit suicide Thursday morning.
Medical reports from Shaare Zedek Medical Center in
Jerusalem indicate that he is currently in critical condition, but doctors have
managed to stabilize him.
Emergency services evacuated him to the hospital after
performing life saving treatment at the scene where he had attempted to hang
himself.
Meshi-Zahav, 59, had been accused of sexually assaulting
women and children over a period of decades from his position of power, using
tactics of fear and intimidation to silence his victims.
In March, a police investigation was officially launched,
after an initial report opened a floodgate of abusive accusations against him,
from men, women, and teenage boys and girls of all ages.
Channel 12 was preparing an in-depth investigative article
for the Thursday night news about the sexual assault allegations facing
Meshi-Zahav when the news broke of his attempted suicide.
Rabbi Yuval Sherlow, head of the Ethics Center at the Tzohar
Rabbinical Organization, called on Channel 12 to cancel the program in light of
the recent developments in Meshi-Zahav's condition.
"Investigations about injustices are an essential
action designed to increase the moral path of society," he said. "But
the broadcast of Uvda (Fact) [on Channel 12] tonight while the person the
interrogation is about is fighting for his life will be an immoral and
insensitive step, and therefore should not be broadcast."
Following the investigation, he stepped down as head of the
organization he had founded in 1989 and forfeited the Israel Prize he was set
to receive this year.
Two months prior in January, Meshi-Zahav lost his parents to
the coronavirus, only one month after having lost his brother to the same
disease.
In January, Meshi-Zahav lost his father, Rabbi Menachem
Mendel Meshi-Zahav, while still sitting shiva (the weeklong mourning period)
for his mother Sara Zisl Meshi-Zahav, who had passed away only three days prior
– all this within 30 days of the passing of his brother, Moshe.
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