Rabbi Yaakov Yosef detained, released after interrogation

Yosef stopped on suspicion of incitement for alleged support of book endorsing death of gentiles; "This is all an attempt to harass rabbis from the Right," rabbi's son says; thousands expected to protest arrest in J'lem.

rabbi yaacov yosef_311 (photo credit: Marc Israel Sellem)
rabbi yaacov yosef_311
(photo credit: Marc Israel Sellem)
Police arrested Rabbi Yaakov Yosef on Sunday morning on his way back home from morning prayer, and questioned him on suspicion of incitement to violence and racism over his alleged endorsement of the controversial Torat Hamelech (The King’s Torah) book. Yosef's arrest came after police repeatedly beseeched him to arrive on his own volition for questioning, but the rabbi refused.
“We were returning from morning prayer at the Tomb of Shimon Hatzadik – my father, a student who was driving the car, and I,” relayed Yosef's son Amram. “At a quarter to seven, when we were at the hotel junction on Route 1, police detectives stopped the car, and removed the driver and I. They took my father to the nearby national police headquarters for a few minutes of questioning, and then released him.”
RELATED:Hundreds gather over rumors of Rabbi Yaakov Yosef’s arrest 2nd rabbi ignores summons over book controversy The Yosef family knew that Yaakov's arrest was imminent and inevitable, after Rabbi Dov Lior was taken in for the same reason last week. But they also insisted that Yaakov shouldn't show up for police questioning, since they said there was no equality before law, and a rabbi shouldn't be questioned for writing about Torah.
“Father didn't want to show up for investigation since he endorsed a Torah composition, which shouldn't be given to investigation since intellectuals in Israel have freedom of expression,” Amram said. “It is inconceivable that people like Ben Gurion University professor Dr. Eyal Nir said that right-wing marchers' necks should be broken, and nothing came out of that incitement to murder. My father only expressed a scholastic Torah opinion. This is all an attempt to harass rabbis from the Right,” said Amram.
Amram said that at 2 PM today a protest will be held at the Shmuel Hanavi neighborhood, during which thousands are expected to protest the arrest and “contempt for the dignity of Torah, which is publicly being trampled by police and the State Attorney's Office.”
Yosef is the son of Shas's spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, and his arrest – or detainment, as police defined it – is feared by law enforcement to lead to disruptions in the capital.
Immediately following news of the arrest, demonstrators tried to block the light rail path on Haim Bar Lev Street/Highway 1 with burning tires. Three men were arrested and brought for questioning. The light rail was able to continue operating without delay . 
National Union party Chairman Yaakov Katz called on yeshiva students to gather around Yosef's home, “to express our admiration and estimation for a great rabbi, while keeping the law.”
“We will win by continuing to grow and wait till we are the majority in the state, then we will legislate the appropriate laws, through which we will investigate anyone who broke the law on behalf of the courts and State Prosecution's Office clique, who sat on the neck of the Jewish people and committed crimes against it,” his statement continued.
“The Netanyahu government is losing its moral legitimacy by abducting and arresting two Torah giants. This is a crime that the People of Israel won't be able to forgive.”
On Thursday, hundreds of yeshiva students gathered in Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of Shmuel Hanavi within minutes as a rumor raced through the neighborhood that police cars were outside Yosef’s house and his arrest was imminent.
Clashes between right-wing activists and police erupted on Monday at the entrance to Jerusalem and near the Supreme Court building following the short detention and questioning that day of Kiryat Arba-Hebron Chief Rabbi Dov Lior, who also allegedly endorsed the 2009 book.
Melanie Lidman and Yaakov Lappin contributed to this report.