The levayah of habochur Yosef Eisenthal z”l, the 14-year-old boy who was killed Tuesday night after being struck by a bus during a protest against the draft law in Yerushalayim, is scheduled to take place Wednesday morning at 10:30 a.m.
The levayah will depart from the Ohel Torah Beis Medrash in the Ramot Daled neighborhood of Yerushalayim, where the bochur learned. Kevurah will be held on Har Hamenuchos.
Yosef was the only son of Rav Shmuel Eisenthal, R”M at Yeshiva L’tzeirim Ohel Torah-Ponevezh in Ramot and a grandson of Rav Uriel Eisenthal, rov of Ramot Gimmel. He leaves behind three sisters.
The fatal incident occurred during demonstrations against the proposed draft legislation, when a bus driver ran over Yosef, leading to his death at the scene.
Images and video from the scene circulated widely overnight, documenting the unfolding tragedy.
National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir issued a statement shortly after midnight, expressing deep sorrow over the boy’s death. “My heart bleeds following the killing of the boy Yosef Eisenthal z”l, age 14, this evening, as a result of a bus ramming in Yerushalayim. I share in the family’s profound grief at this extremely difficult time,” he said.
Ben Gvir added that the investigation would be thorough. “This is a serious incident that must be investigated in a deep and comprehensive manner. The police have updated me that all investigative directions regarding the event are being examined, and that the matter is being treated with the utmost severity.”
Shas party chairman Aryeh Deri spoke Tuesday night with Police Commissioner Danny Levy, demanding decisive action. Deri called on the police “to act with full determination in order to reach the truth and to bring the bus driver to justice.”
Police Commissioner Levy told Deri during their conversation that “the driver was immediately arrested and transferred for interrogation, and the police are treating the incident with the full severity of the law.”
Strong reactions were also voiced within United Torah Judaism. Degel HaTorah chairman Moshe Gafni said the incident was “shocking to the depths of the soul,” adding, “We demand that the driver be put on trial and punished to the fullest extent of the law. It is impossible to move on from such a horrific act of killing.”
United Torah Judaism chairman Yitzchak Goldknopf said he received the reports with shock. “My heart is with the family of the boy at this difficult time, and I send wishes for a speedy recovery and complete healing to the other injured victims,” he said. Goldknopf called on police and law-enforcement authorities “to exhaust the full severity of the law against the driver and to examine all investigative avenues to ensure justice is done.”
Condemnations also came from the opposition. Yisrael Beiteinu chairman Avigdor Lieberman said, “There is no normal scenario in which a 13-year-old child does not return home healthy and alive. This is simply unimaginable.” He added that the incident reflected “a failure by the police,” and urged authorities to restore order and swiftly complete the investigation.
Former prime minister Naftali Bennett described the footage from Yerushalayim as heartbreaking. “The tragic documentation shakes you to the core. This reality is deeply unsettling. This is not how our country should look. We are one people,” Bennett said, calling on police to fully exhaust the investigation and ensure such incidents do not recur.
Meanwhile, police continue to examine the circumstances surrounding the fatal ramming, with investigators reviewing video evidence, eyewitness accounts, and the driver’s version of events.
{Matzav.com}