Fury Erupts After Satirical Show Mocks the Yenuka in What Critics Call an Assault on Kavod HaTorah
A wave of anger swept through the Torah-observant public after Israel’s satirical television program Eretz Nehederet released a promotional clip widely condemned as a degrading mockery of Rav Shlomo Yehuda Be’eri, known throughout the Torah world as the Yenuka.
The segment, aired ahead of the show’s scheduled broadcast, triggered sharp backlash from rabbanim, askanim, and countless ordinary Jews who view the portrayal as a direct affront to kavod haTorah and to a revered talmid chacham.
In the sketch, comedian Daniel Chen appears as a caricature dubbed the “Tenuka,” a clear and deliberate play on the Yenuka’s title. The character is presented as confused and theatrical, accompanied by exaggerated behavior including playing an organ, while a submissive aide, portrayed by Ortel Tsabari, hovers in exaggerated reverence. Viewers say the skit reduces a talmid chochom to an object of ridicule, turning spiritual greatness into cheap satire.
The reaction was immediate and intense. Social media platforms filled with denunciations accusing the program of crossing an inviolable line. Many commenters warned that mocking tzaddikim is not humor but a serious transgression, expressing outrage that a public broadcaster would demean someone seen as embodying Torah purity and yiras Shamayim. Calls to boycott the show have spread rapidly, alongside pleas that those responsible reflect on the gravity of their actions.
The promotional clip itself attempts to frame the parody as lighthearted, presenting the “Tenuka” as an obsessive Torah phenomenon surrounded by sycophantic admiration. Lines in the sketch portray the aide as utterly insignificant before the rov, a depiction critics say cynically twists sincere kavod into parody and derision.
Defenders of the Yenuka point out that the real Rav Be’eri is renowned for extraordinary Torah knowledge, with vast portions of Tanach and Shas committed to memory, alongside niggunim that have inspired thousands. To them, the skit represents not satire but a willful distortion of a life devoted to Torah and kedushah, emptied of context and respect for the sake of a laugh.
Opponents of the broadcast argue that this incident fits a broader pattern in which secular media figures target the Torah world, particularly from cultural centers in Tel Aviv, portraying emunah and spiritual leadership as backward or absurd. They see the sketch as another salvo in an ongoing struggle over Jewish identity and values in the public sphere.
{Matzav.com}