In Jerusalem, funerals still going on as sirens announcing sabbath wail across city; forensic institute suspends ID process for Jewish day of rest with 32 of 45 bodies identified
Shachar Ba'al Haness, 19, describes how he was crushed beneath a pile of bodies, and struggled to breathe for five minutes until police rescuers pulled him out
Fatal crushing occurred as large numbers of ultra-Orthodox participants moved through narrow passageway, on an incline, on the exit route from the pilgrimage site
Traffic jams, frustration as throngs of men, women and children try to get home before Sabbath; lack of organization leaves hundreds of buses stuck on single-lane route
Some families of deceased arrive at morgue to identify bodies as others search for wounded at hospitals; many burials expected to take place before sundown
Residents of nearby villages set up stations for thousands making their way home; large lines at mobile units in Tel Aviv as residents wait for hours to donate
The pilgrimage site was never properly equipped to cope with the vast annual crowds. The particular walkway was a known bottleneck. So why was a tragedy foretold allowed to happen?
Shimon Lavi says ready for investigation 'for better or worse'; narrow pathway at site was known to be a danger, but other police officials say incident was unavoidable
Rivlin says he's praying for injured; Gantz: 'No words to describe magnitude of the pain'; Lapid: 'Sad and difficult night'; Odeh: 'Heart goes out to families who lost loved ones'
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