Mount Meron
Mount Meron is a mountain in the Upper Galilee region of northern Israel, rising to an elevation of 1,208 meters (3,963 feet) above sea level, making it the highest peak within Israel's pre-1967 borders.[1][2] The mountain's limestone karst terrain supports diverse flora and a relatively cool, high-precipitation climate compared to much of Israel.[3] It holds central religious significance in Judaism as the site of the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, a second-century sage credited in Kabbalistic tradition with authoring the Zohar, drawing massive pilgrimages—especially on Lag BaOmer, the anniversary of his death—marked by bonfires, prayers, and festivities that can attract over 100,000 visitors.[4][5] In April 2021, overcrowding and inadequate safety measures during the Lag BaOmer event at the tomb led to a crowd crush that killed 45 people, mostly ultra-Orthodox Jewish men and boys, in Israel's deadliest civilian disaster in decades, as detailed in the subsequent state commission of inquiry which attributed responsibility to multiple officials for failing to enforce capacity limits and address known hazards like narrow, slippery pathways.[6][7]