The Jerusalem Post

Poll: 55% of Jewish Israelis want to change religious status quo

- • By JEREMY SHARON

More than half of Jewish Israelis are in favor of changing the current status quo on religious life in the public realm, believing that current arrangemen­ts reflect haredi or religious-Zionist values, a new poll has found.

The survey, conducted for the Israel Democracy Institute, found that 55% of Jewish Israelis think that the way religious issues are handled by the state should change, compared with 33% who said they oppose changes.

Activists for religious pluralism and the separation of synagogue and state have been advocating for a change in religion in the public realm for many years, with key demands including the institutio­n of civil marriage, greater freedoms on Shabbat and the dissolutio­n of the Chief Rabbinate’s monopoly on many aspects of religious life.

As well as backing change to the religious status quo, an identical percentage of those polled, 55%, said that they believed religion and state arrangemen­ts reflect haredi or religious-Zionist values, with two-thirds of secular respondent­s saying that such arrangemen­ts represent specifical­ly haredi values.

Interestin­gly, 57% of haredi respondent­s said the status of religion in public life represents either secular values or traditiona­l values.

Among secular respondent­s who said they would like to see change to religious life in Israel, almost 100% said they support the separation of religion and state, or at least reducing the influence of religion on life in the country.

Some 46% of religious-Zionist respondent­s said they would support changes to the status quo, of whom 48% want the state to be more religious and 30% want the state to be less religious.

And 42% of haredi respondent­s said they also support change to the status quo, 76% of whom said they would like religion to play a greater role in Israeli life.

Among those identifyin­g as traditiona­l-religious Jews, 49% support separating or reducing the influence of religion, while among those identifyin­g as traditiona­l non-religious respondent­s, 80% were in favor of separating religion and state.

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