Chareidi Journalist Detained in Kuwait After Tefillin Spark Espionage Suspicion
A chareidi journalist working for B’Kehilla magazine was detained in Kuwait after authorities suspected him of espionage, with his tefillin reportedly triggering alarm during questioning before he was ultimately released.
Yitzchak Horowitz, who ended up in Kuwait due to wartime flight disruptions, was initially suspected of being Iranian. However, once tefillin were found in his belongings, officials began to suspect possible ties to Israeli intelligence. After an extended interrogation, he was released. Reflecting on the ordeal, he said, “We learned a lesson about who the real enemy is. Maybe one day we will make peace with Israel.”
Horowitz was first stopped after he was seen photographing activity near the shoreline involving American patrol vessels, even though local civilians were doing the same. Writing about the scene, he noted, “They are quite far away, but large, and their speed is amazing, creating waves and tremendous noise that can be heard from the shore.” Despite this, he was singled out because he was a foreigner.
Describing the moment of his detention, Horowitz said, “A policeman asked who I was, what I was photographing, and why. ‘It’s just a precaution,’ the officer said politely. ‘Because of the sensitivity, we want to make sure everything is okay.’” He recounted that more officers soon arrived and asked to search his belongings. “I handed it over, everything was spread out. A bottle of water. Dates. More dates. A charger, and a velvet pouch that was opened, revealing the tefillin. He took them out, and I suddenly heard everyone around gasp in astonishment. For a moment they didn’t understand what they were seeing. It looked to them like a communication device with all the straps. They had never seen such an object in their lives.”
He explained the item to them, saying, “This is a Jewish religious item,” and clarified, “Tefillin, and I pray with it every morning.” According to Horowitz, the officer noticed the Hebrew letter on the box and questioned him further. “Yes, this is the letter ‘shin,’ the first letter of one of the names of Allah. Inside are passages from the Jewish Torah.”
The officer then tried to determine his identity, asking whether he was Jewish and possibly Israeli. Horowitz described the confusion: “So you are Jewish? He looks at me carefully. I am apparently the first Jew he has ever seen. A real Jew. He is amazed and confused. If I am Jewish, then I am certainly not an Iranian spy. On the other hand, maybe I am Israeli. Then maybe I am a Mossad spy. But then what would a Mossad spy be doing in Kuwait?”
The questioning intensified when the officer asked directly, “Are you Israeli? Did you serve in the Israeli army? Do you have connections to Israel?”
Horowitz continued, “He seemed confused. He took my passport again, flipping page after page looking for any stamp suggesting a connection to Israel. There was none, but it still seemed strange to him. Finally he said, ‘Alright, we will have to check this matter.’” He was then taken into custody, though he noted that the facilities were surprisingly comfortable despite the heavy security presence.
He also described a hostile atmosphere once his Jewish identity became known. At one point, an officer pointed to images on a screen and said, “Look what the Israelis are doing in Gaza.” Horowitz corrected him, noting the footage was from Lebanon, but the officer responded, “It’s all the same, and you are all the same.”
As the hours passed, investigators went through his phone messages, finding nothing suspicious. Eventually, a senior officer arrived and continued the questioning. Horowitz told him, “Look, I have been in other Gulf countries. In all of them, Jews are treated with respect. In Bahrain there is even a synagogue. Because I am Jewish, the attitude toward me here is hostile. This is not fitting for an advanced Western country like Kuwait.”
The officer replied that the matter would be reviewed further, saying, “Listen, this needs to go to the general to decide. Maybe he will want to speak with you. You will have to wait.”
When Horowitz asked to contact his family, he was told, “The general says you can call your ambassador only after they examine your case in depth.”
He was then moved to another section and later questioned by intelligence officials. During that interrogation, he challenged their suspicions, saying, “Let’s speak honestly. You suspected me of being an Iranian spy. Well, I am Jewish and not hiding it, so that suspicion is gone. Now you suspect me of being a Mossad spy. Do you really think Israeli intelligence is so unprofessional that it would send an agent on a mission with tefillin?”
He also remarked to them, “From my perspective, you and Israel are actually on the same side in this war. Am I not right?”
After further review, the authorities decided to release him. He described the moment: “The general told me to tell you that if you want to call your ambassador, you may. But perhaps you would prefer to go home, because you are free.”
Following his release, Horowitz contacted a Kuwaiti acquaintance, who shared his view on changing attitudes in the region. “Know this,” he told him, “my impression is that this war has changed the attitude of many Kuwaitis and even people in the government toward Israel. Israel is not the enemy; on the contrary, it is the only one that had the courage to stop the Iranian enemy. It is the only one with the technology that can stop the missiles aimed at us. Maybe after the war Saudi Arabia will normalize relations with Israel—and I wouldn’t be surprised if we do as well.”
{Matzav.com}