Body of Israeli Killed in Nigeria Returned to Israel

The body of a 42-year-old construction-site manager from Kfar Saba, Israel, who was killed in a failed kidnapping attempt earlier this week in Nigeria was returned to Israel for burial Friday.

Nir Rosmarin, a father of five, was a pillar of the expatriate Israeli community in Abuja, Nigeria, said Rabbi Israel Uzan, co-director of Chabad Lubavitch in Nigeria, who had worked tirelessly with Israeli and Nigerian officials since learning of the murder to ensure the prompt return to Israel for burial without an autopsy.

According to Uzan, four armed attackers drove a Jeep into the construction site where Rosmarin worked and attempted to kidnap him for ransom—an all-too-common crime in Nigeria’s capital. A local police officer and an Israeli worker tried to prevent the kidnapping; Rosmarin was shot while attempting to flee.

The rabbi said that Rosmarin lived in Nigeria for many years, sometimes with his family, and that he recently moved back to Abuja for work on a construction project while his wife and children remained in Israel.

“He was a dear friend of ours,” said Rabbi Israel Uzan, who has served the community of mostly Israeli expatriates since 2011, “a dear friend of the Chabad center and a dear friend of many others.”

“Nir was a smart guy, amazing, funny and intelligent,” Guy Golding, Rosmarin’s brother-in-law, told Israel’s Ynet news. “His family was the most important thing in his life. He was supposed to return to Israel for vacation during the High Holy Days.”

From the moment he learned of the shooting, the rabbi said his focus was to ensure that the body be brought to burial without an autopsy. Tampering with the dead is considered a grave form of disrespect in Jewish law.

“Judaism places a premium on respecting those of us who are most vulnerable, those who are no longer alive,” the rabbi explained. “As the home to the G‑dly soul, which is literally a part of G‑d, we believe that the body must be accorded the highest form of dignity.”

Chabad Lubavitch of Nigeria is a project of Chabad-Lubavitch of Central Africa, headed by Rabbi Shlomo Bentolila of Kinshasa, Congo.

Rosmarin is survived by his wife, Dinor, and four children: Roei, 13; Mika, 12; Omer, 8; and Noam, 6.

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