Sabbath ‘Potter’ launch sparks a row in Israel
Trade Minister has threatened to fine any store that opens on Saturday
![]() Sebastian Scheiner / AP An orthodox Jewish man walks past a poster of J. K. Rowling's new book "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" on a bookstore window in Jerusalem on July 17. |
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Keeping tabs: Potter madness July 23: 72 million copies of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows sold out worldwide in just 24 hours. Many people lined up outside of book stores to obtain the book, not even waiting to get home to start reading. |
JERUSALEM - The figure responsible for Israel’s latest religious row is a bespectacled British teenager who is gifted with magical powers, world famous and entirely fictional.
The synchronized worldwide launch of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” the seventh and last installment in the wildly popular series, falls at 2:01 a.m. local time this Saturday — on the Jewish Sabbath, when Israeli law requires most businesses to close.
With Israelis already clamoring for “Deathly Hallows,” many bookstores are planning to launch the book at the appointed hour. That has drawn fire from Orthodox Jewish lawmakers, including Industry and Trade Minister Eli Yishai, who threatened to fine any store that opens Saturday.
“Israeli law forbids businesses to force their employees to work on the Sabbath, and that applies in this case as well. The minister will fine and prosecute any businesses which violate the law,” said Roei Lachmanovich, a spokesman for Yishai, of the ultra-0rthodox Jewish Shas party.
Avraham Ravitz of the United Torah Judaism Party slammed the Potter books for their “defective messages.”
“We don’t have to be dragged like monkeys after the world with this subculture, and certainly not while violating our holy Sabbath,” Ravitz said in a statement.
“We’re required by our agreement with the book’s publisher to launch the book at the same time as everywhere else in the world,” Zamir said.
The chain has already received tens of thousands of advance orders for “Deathly Hallows” in English, with the book’s Hebrew translation due out close to the end of 2007, she said.
Worldwide, the Potter books have sold more than 325 million copies, have been translated into at least 64 languages, and have been spun off into a hit movie series.
The book’s author, J.K. Rowling, has indicated that two characters die in the new book, leading to speculation that one of them might be Harry himself.
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