Wildfires raged in Israel on Thursday amid a major heatwave, with police ordering the evacuation of several communities in the country’s center and south.
Firefighters battled brushfires along the Gaza boundary, as well as near Ben-Gurion International Airport and outside Jerusalem. A major Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway was also closed to traffic because of the fire.
Israel and the region are gripped by a major heatwave, with temperatures around the country reaching 100 F (38 C) and higher.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed the Foreign Ministry to seek firefighting aircraft from abroad to help battle the blazes, a spokesman for the premier’s office said.
An Israeli police official told Hebrew media that a fire had almost completely destroyed the village of Mevo Modi’im — a community founded by the late songwriting Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach.
Residents of the nearby town of Gimzo evacuated Torah scrolls from the community synagogue as the flames approached.
While police said emergency services were still working to bring the fires under control and had no immediate indication of their cause, the fires broke out a day after Israelis marked the minor Jewish festival of Lag Ba’Omer with bonfires.
A Netanyahu spokesman blamed “incendiary balloons launched by Hamas” for fires near the Gaza Strip in southern Israel.
A massive forest fire in 2010 burned for four days on northern Israel’s Mount Carmel, claiming 44 lives and destroying around 12,000 acres, much of it woodland.
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