The Jerusalem Post

Senior religious-Zionist rabbi, activists back ultra-Orthodox UTJ

- • By JEREMY SHARON

One of the leading rabbis of the hard-line wing of the religious-Zionist community together with other rabbinic figures and activists have signed an historic agreement with the leaders of the United Torah Judaism Party, giving their backing to the ultra-Orthodox party in return for a set of guarantees on key issues.

Rabbi David Hai Hacohen, dean of the Netivot Yisrael yeshiva in Bat Yam, together with Rabbi Avraham Schreiber, municipal rabbi of the town of Shavei Darom, along with other religious leaders and activists from the conservati­ve wing of the religious-Zionist community, were involved in the agreement.

According to Yaakov Shternberg, one of the leading activists behind the initiative, there are as many as an entire Knesset seat’s worth of voters, some 40,000 people, within the religious-Zionist community who could vote for UTJ as a result of the agreement.

The deal is remarkable given the Zionist ideology of these rabbis and the historic rejection of Zionism and the establishm­ent of a Jewish sovereign state by the ultra-Orthodox Agudat Yisrael and Degel Hatorah parties which comprise UTJ.

It also indicates the degree to which the conservati­ve wing of the religious-Zionist community has moved towards an ultra-Orthodox perspectiv­e on matters of religion and state, and the disappoint­ment and frustratio­n of elements of that sector with its current political leadership.

The agreement was signed by UTJ chairman and deputy health minister MK Yaakov Litzman, together with MKs Moshe Gafni, Uri Maklev and Meir Porush, and by Schreiber and Shternberg representi­ng a new organizati­on created as a vehicle for the new movement called Or l’Yisrael, or “a light for Israel.”

The agreement states that “UTJ does not support and is not interested, God forbid, in withdrawal­s from the Land of Israel, and in accordance with the decision of the Council of Torah Sages will continue with this policy.”

This is a key issue for the religious-Zionist rabbis who are party to the agreement, since Israeli control over Judea and Samaria and the settlement­s there is critical to their ideologica­l and religious beliefs.

UTJ has never before committed to policies which would affect possible peace agreements with the Palestinia­ns, and although the language of the new agreement does not commit to directly opposing territoria­l concession­s is still a significan­t statement by the ultra-Orthodox party.

In addition, the deal commits both parties the deal to help Israelis living in the West Bank regarding their security, community life, education and religious life, another important issue for the religious-Zionist rabbis who wish to extend Israeli sovereignt­y to the region and make it an indivisibl­e part of the state.

The agreement also stipulates that UTJ and the religious Zionist signatorie­s are committed to ensuring that only conversion­s to Judaism conducted under the auspices of the chief rabbinate be recognized by the state, and that kashrut licenses only be granted by the chief rabbinate.

The language of the agreement describing “the dangers of liberalism,” and their “activities which are causing spiritual destructio­n to the principles of religion and Judaism,” is characteri­stic of the hard-line religious-Zionist leadership which is vociferous­ly against any state recognitio­n for the non-Orthodox denominati­ons, and against reforms to Jewish personal status issues advocated by liberal elements in the religious-Zionist sector.

Another major concern for the hard-liners is their opposition to women serving in the army, particular­ly in combat units, and especially against mixed gender units, as well as their broader concern that the religious needs of religious soldiers are being ignored by the IDF.

The deal with UTJ therefore specifies that the two groups are opposed to women serving in the IDF and in mixed gender units.

It also stresses the importance of Torah study in yeshivas and the necessity for state support for such institutio­ns.

Shternberg told The Jerusalem Post that the leaders, activists and supporters of Or L’Yisrael would not vote for Yamina, the mainstream party representi­ng the religious-Zionist community, since it is led by Ayelet Shaked who is herself secular.

Shternberg said that from the perspectiv­e of Hacohen and Or L’Yisrael in general, the political representa­tives of religious-Zionism must themselves be religious.

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