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Berland followers evicted from campsite

300 Breslovers descend on holiday retreat for Yom Kippur with Rabbi Berland. The only problem was that the Jewish-owned campsite only has a capacity for 30, the number booked for, & the island municipality of Texel in the country’s north issued an order for the removal of the other 270 Shuvu Bonim Breslovers last Friday ahead of Yom Kippur according to the Noordhollands Dagblad daily newspaper. The visitors came from various countries to spend the holiday with Berland, who was arrested and released in the Netherlands last month after Israel could not show a Dutch court proof that an arrest warrant had been issued for R. Berland.

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The Times of Israel reported today that the Dutch municipality ordered the eviction of 270 Jews from a camping site that is overcrowded with followers of the fugitive Rabbi Eliezer Berland.

The order was issued on Friday by the island municipality of Texel in the country’s north in connection with the arrival of 300 Orthodox Jews from the Breslov Hasidic sect ahead of Yom Kippur to a Jewish-owned camping site with a capacity of 30 people, the Noordhollands Dagblad daily newspaper reported Friday. 

The visitors came from various countries to spend the holiday with Berland, who was arrested in the Netherlands last month.

Berland, the founder of the Shuvu Bonim religious seminary, fled Israel to Morocco and from there to South Africa last year amid allegations that he molested two female followers, including a minor. Israel requested his extradition; he is staying in Holland while justice authorities review the request.

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Berland and his followers arrived ahead of the weekend at Camping Dennenlust, which belongs to a Jewish couple, Avraham and Rivka Pranger.

Out of consideration for the religious sentiment of the campers, Mayor Francine Giskes gave the Prangers until Sunday for their site to adhere to its legal capacity, Noordhollands Dagblad reported. She consulted several mayors in the region on how to approach the matter.

Avraham Pranger told the daily that he and his wife did not know 300 people would descend on their small business and that the guests kept multiplying, despite the couple’s request that they find an alternative arrangement.

 “It all began with a reservation by a rabbi from Amsterdam and 30 of his followers,” he told the daily before Yom Kippur. “We are totally overrun, but these are fellow Jews and I can’t just chase them away. I think it’s through social media that the message spread.”

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