after the
massacre in 2023 for use in the
West Bank The organization traces its roots to a group of religious volunteers who assisted in the recovery of human remains after the
Tel Aviv Jerusalem bus 405 attack in Israel in 1989, during the
First Intifada. ZAKA was formally established in 1995. During the attack on bus line 405 in 1990,
Yehuda Meshi Zahav arrived with other yeshiva boys to provide first aid to the victims. On his way home, he concluded that if in the enemy's view everyone is equal, so too for him. In the 1990s, he arrived at the scenes of suicide bombing attacks in Israel, among other things, and treated the bodies of those killed. As a result, ZAKA (Disaster Victim Identification) was founded. In his capacity as Chairman of ZAKA, he worked for inter-religious and secular reconciliation. In 2005, ZAKA established a minorities unit with
Bedouin,
Muslim, and
Druze volunteers to serve Israel's non-Jewish communities, primarily Bedouin in the
Negev and Druze in the
Galilee. These units also function when religious Jews cannot, on the Jewish
Sabbath and holidays. According to Jewish law, Jews may violate the Sabbath to save a life, but not to deal with the dead. In 2010, ZAKA said it planned to increase its minorities units to 125 volunteers. The bus was later displayed at various US universities. In August 2007, ZAKA members were accused of burning down a secret
crematorium in Israel. Most Jews believe Jews should be buried according to religious tradition, not cremated. ZAKA's founder Yehuda Meshi Zahav denied any involvement of ZAKA in the arson but called the existence of the crematorium a "desecration of the dead" and said that the crematorium was "destined to disappear in flames." In January 2016, after two failed attempts, the
United Nations granted ZAKA the status of a 'consultant
NGO'. ZAKA faced insolvency before 7 October 2023. Given the job of retrieving the dead bodies after the
October 7 attacks, they started fund-raising on 8 October 2023. By 31 January 2024, they had raised over 50 million
shekels ($13.7 million). A
Haaretz investigation accused them of "negligence, misinformation and a fundraising campaign that used the dead as props". ==Organization==