Officials have said displaying the symbol in the cemetery is offensive to the relatives of Jewish troops laid to rest nearby
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has threatened to rebury a fallen Christian soldier unless his family agrees to remove a cross from his gravestone, the man’s relatives have told local media. David Bogdanovsky moved to Israel from Ukraine in 2014 and was killed by an anti-tank rocket in Gaza last December.
In late 2023, Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics estimated that Christians accounted for 1.9% of the population.
Bogdanovsky’s family told the media on Monday that they had received a letter from the Defense Ministry demanding that they remove the cross or have the staff sergeant’s remains reinterred outside the Haifa military cemetery.
”By law, it is not permissible to place a cross or any other religious marker on a military headstone,” the ministry said. The letter reportedly cited a ruling by the IDF’s chief rabbi saying the holiness of the Jewish cemetery is violated by the presence of a cross.
Military officials also reportedly claimed that they had received complaints from “families whose loved ones are buried nearby [and] who claim that the cross hurts their feelings and their ability to pray.”
Bogdanovsky’s mother told Ynet that when she visited her son’s grave earlier this month, she found his gravestone covered in black cloth.
“I don’t have words to describe the humiliation I felt,” the woman told reporters.
”I thought that my David, who gave his life to the country, who loved the country with all his heart… is no different than any of the other guys, [and] is not a second-class citizen. I stood there and cried with anger, frustration, and disbelief,” she said.
In a post on Facebook, the soldier’s mother explained that her late son’s faith was an “integral part” of his identity. She also expressed shock over her son being singled out, noting that there are other graves with crosses in the cemetery.
While graveyards are typically separated by religion in Israel, a special law allows the burial of non-Jewish service members alongside their Jewish comrades in military cemeteries.
Israel launched its military operation in Gaza after Hamas militants staged a deadly incursion into Israeli territory in October 2023, killing around 1,100 people and taking more than 200 hostages. According to the health authorities in the Palestinian enclave, a year of heavy Israeli aerial bombardment and a ground offensive have left nearly 42,000 people dead in Gaza.