Opposition MKs scold leader Netanyahu for phoning Olympic medalist on Shabbat
After leaders of all 3 religious slates in bloc slam ‘desecration’ of Jewish day of rest, Likud apologizes for ‘technical error’ that led to statement’s publishing before nightfall

Opposition chairman Benjamin Netanyahu came under fire from lawmakers within his own Knesset bloc after he phoned Olympic gymnast Linoy Ashram to congratulate her on winning a gold medal and publicized the call before nightfall on Saturday.
While Netanyahu is not religious, he avoided issuing public statements during the Sabbath when he was prime minister.
The blowback took some time, as many of the MKs in the opposition traditionally observe Shabbat and refrain from using electronics.
But reactions were swift once the stars came out. United Torah Judaism chairman Moshe Gafni said Netanyahu’s statement had “desecrated the Sabbath.”
“I am glad that the president and the prime minister waited [to congratulate Ashram] until after Shabbat. Mr. Netanyahu should have done the same,” Gafni said, refraining from even addressing the opposition chairman by his title.
In his call to Ashram, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett made a point of emphasizing that he only learned of the gymnast’s Saturday morning victory after Shabbat, upon which “we celebrated here at home.”
https://twitter.com/netanyahu/status/1424069756651458568?s=20
Gafni’s fellow UTJ MK Yaakov Litzman also censured Netanyahu, saying there was no “real need” for him to put out the statement on Shabbat.
“It’s expected of someone with an official state title to respect the Sabbath, as the president and prime minister did in this case,” Litzman said in a statement.
Shas chief Aryeh Deri said Netanyahu’s release of the statement “offended many Sabbath-observing Jews and offended his loyal partners, for whom the holy Sabbath is very dear to their hearts.”
Deri noted that the Sabbath is considered so holy that one cannot desecrate it and then ask for forgiveness.

The head of the Knesset caucus for observing the Sabbath, Shas MK Moshe Abutbul, issued a statement reminding Netanyahu that he should have been more respectful, particularly given the fact that “the majority of his political partners are Sabbath observers” who expect him to “respect the values of the Jewish heritage.”
Bezalel Smotrich, who heads the far-right Religious Zionism party, echoed the ultra-Orthodox lawmakers’ remarks, tweeting that an Olympic gold medal is not enough of a reason to “desecrate the Sabbath.”

“It’s sad that there are those here who take advantage of the medal to laugh at the Sabbath and its observers,” he added, in an apparent reference to a tweet published hours earlier by Labor MK Ram Shefa, which appeared to mock Smotrich and other Sabbath observers for missing out on the medal win in real-time.
Following the flood of condemnations, Netanyahu’s office made an attempt at damage control, with the Likud party issuing a tweet claiming the release of his statement on the Jewish day of rest was due to a “technical error.”
“Likud always safeguarded and honored the Sabbath and made sure not to publish statements to the press during the Sabbath. This is how we will continue to act,” his party said.
The Times of Israel Community.