Sephardic chief rabbi Yitzchak Yosef, author of the Yalkut Yosef 30-volume halachic compendium, recently visited Tunisia and was asked by a local Jewish person whether he should emigrate to Israel. Rabbi Yosef answered that if he would live in a chareidi neighborhood then he should indeed emigrate, but if he was going to live in a secular neighborhood he would be better off staying in Tunisia.
Rabbi Yosef spoke at his weekly shiur after Shabbos which was attended this week by Tunisian chief rabbi Chaim Bitan. Rabbi Yosef related the question he had been asked and said: “I told them that it depends on where they will live, if they will live near a chareidi yeshiva, they should come but if they will live in Herzliya and in other secular places, when they come here they will leave the path of Judaism and it’s better that they stay there.”
Rabbi Yosef is known for his outspoken and uncompromising views on alternative lifestyles and on Russian Jewry. In 2020 he criticized the previous governments for bringing “masses of non-Jews who hate the Jewish religion, many of whom go to church” and claimed that they were brought to “even out the chareidim.”