Israel bans entry of Sukkot-related plants, purchases thousands of Four Species sets to distribute to arriving visitors.
l is keeping plants used to celebrate Sukkot (the Festival of Tabernacles) from coming into the country.
A task force charged with implementing the ban on three of the four
species used to celebrate the holiday will begin working in the coming
days at Ben Gurion Airport.
The Agriculture Ministry said the ban on the lulav, a frond from a date
palm tree, leaves from the myrtle tree, and willow branches is rooted in
the need to prevent the spread of plant diseases and pests rather than
any protectionist policy.
Israel is the only country in the world that exports all three plants,
and one of a handful where the lemon-like etrog, the fourth of the
species, is grown commercially. Inbound passengers may bring a single
specimen of the etrog pending an inspection by Agriculture Ministry
experts for plant diseases, the Makor Rishon daily reported earlier this
week.
All four plants are either cultivated in Israel or occur there naturally
and are used in rituals connected with Sukkot, which this year begins
on the evening of Sept. 23.
Those caught bringing in the proscribed plants will be subject to fines
and may be charged with a criminal offense, a ministry official told
Makor Rishon. But the ministry task force also has purchased thousands
of sets of four species deemed kosher for Sukkot rites that will be
distributed for free at the airport to anyone who may wish to have one.
Last week, ministry inspectors prevented the smuggling in of 40 etrogim,
valued at more than $1,000, by a woman in her 40s from Barcelona,
Spain. The etrog by far is the most expensive of the four species.
The woman falsely declared her suitcase was lost in the hope of
retrieving it later without subjecting it to a customs inspection on the
way out of the terminal, Makor Rishon quoted a ministry official as
saying.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/37457
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