Lag Ba’omer holiday celebrations at Mount Meron will be held with symbolic participation only next Tuesday, according to the government and the IDF Home Front Command, amid security concerns and guidelines that limit the number of people who can gather in nearby towns.

News guidelines were announced on Sunday night that only up to 1,500 people would be permitted to gather in the communities in the vicinity of Mount Meron: Safsofa, Or HaGanuz, Bar Yochai, and Meron.

In a missive, cabinet secretary Yossi Fuchs explained that the Lag Ba’omer commemoration at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai would be only "symbolic" this year, and that guidelines would likely not change by the time of the pilgrimage.

"The context of the directive is the fear of a mass casualty event amid the fragility of the ceasefire toward Lebanon, proximity to the Lebanon border, rocket launches to the area, and difficulty of broad evacuation at relevant speeds," wrote Fuchs.

Concerns about a mass casualty event come five years after the 2021 Mount Meron crowd crush that claimed the lives of 45 people. The disaster unfolded when a large crowd sought to attend a bonfire lighting and attempted to funnel into a narrow, steep stairway slick with spilled drinks. When some people fell, the crowd behind them continued on the path, resulting in extreme pressure and suffocation of the victims.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews look at stairs with waste on it in Mount Meron, northern Israel, following the Mount Meron tragedy. April 30, 2021.
Ultra-Orthodox Jews look at stairs with waste on it in Mount Meron, northern Israel, following the Mount Meron tragedy. April 30, 2021. (credit: REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun)

Netanyahu, police commanders blamed for disaster

The Mount Meron Disaster Commission’s final report in 2024 assigned personal responsibility to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel Police commanders, and local officials for failing to prevent the disaster.

The report detailed how negligence, lack of preparation, absent governance, lack of enforcement of construction law, and conflict over responsibilities, authority, and territorial responsibilities among politicians, civil servants, and law enforcement led to dangerous overcrowding and hazardous and illegal facility conditions year after year during the pilgrimage.

While the potential for disaster was known to the authorities involved, who feared such an event, they did not seize the opportunity to improve conditions, the commission said.