The Jerusalem Post

The haredi bulldozer

But the state is asleep at the wheel

- • By SHUKI FRIEDMAN The writer is vice president of the Jewish People Policy Institute and a professor of law at the Peres Academic Center.

Last week, MK Yitzhak Pindrus (United Torah Judaism), said he dreams of blowing up the Supreme Court building with a D-9 armored bulldozer. One would like to dismiss his remarks as little more than a demagogic outburst aimed at excitable young people, but the reality is different. Pindrus was expressing a deep ideologica­l outlook common among the haredim, a very serious contortion of values that threatens Israeli democracy. Only a determined effort to teach democracy and to introduce core studies into haredi education will, perhaps, be able to save the Court – and with it Israeli democracy – from an explosion.

A long line of polls from recent years have repeatedly shown that the haredi public is the most anti-democratic sector in Israel. Most haredim (81%) would like Israel to be a state governed by Halacha (Jewish law); 72% feel that “Dealing with Israel’s special problems requires a strong leader who will not worry about the Knesset, the media, or public opinion” (versus 44% of secular Israelis); 67% believe that the democratic component of the state is too strong.

The principle of equality, a basic democratic value, is also unacceptab­le to the haredim. 76% of them feel that Jewish Israelis should have more rights than non-Jews (compared to 20% among secular Israelis). Furthermor­e, most haredim (65%) do not agree that the state should budget Jewish and Arab localities equally. And finally, haredi trust in the Supreme Court is almost nil – only 5%.

Among the haredim, Pindrus is not alone. Their ideologica­l views stem from a deadly combinatio­n of life within a closed religious framework, and a fundamenta­l ignorance of everything related to the state and its institutio­ns. The basic haredi outlook assigns absolute exclusivit­y to Jewish values in their haredi-literalist-extremist

interpreta­tion.

Cultivatin­g those values and negating any other external value are crucial to maintainin­g the protective walls of holiness haredi society has erected around itself. The commitment to them is the essence of haredi existence and is enforced through a rigid and sometimes cruel community regime.

At the same time, most haredim are completely, or almost completely, free of any basic, systematic familiarit­y with the state’s institutio­ns and values or with its foundation­al Jewish-democratic ethos. While some haredi girls learn a little civics as part of an educationa­l program that has been converted, civics studies simply

do not exist for haredi boys. This is how 1.2 million citizens live among us, most of whom are deliberate­ly denied the knowledge that, in all other democracie­s, civics studies forms the civic backbone of graduates of their education systems.

This state of affairs, along with the haredi community’s rapid demographi­c growth, poses an ideologica­l threat to Israel as a democratic state. As the haredi sector’s political weight increases and its representa­tives continue to espouse views that undermine state institutio­ns and democratic values, Israeli democracy will devolve into, at best, a technical democracy, with elections as the sole expression of the state’s

democratic character.

This threat may not materializ­e tomorrow morning, but if democratic Israel does not get a grip on it and begin acting today, things will unfold faster than we expect. A key tool the state can employ to mitigate this tension is the teaching of civics studies in all high schools. Unless we cultivate a shared core value system for transmissi­on to all Israeli students, the Haredi community’s values will continue to erode Israel’s democratic values, and the atrocious vision of MK Pindrus will materializ­e before our eyes.

 ?? (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) ?? MK YITZHAK PINDRUS points an accusing finger, as he is escorted out of the Knesset plenum during a stormy debate, in February.
(Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) MK YITZHAK PINDRUS points an accusing finger, as he is escorted out of the Knesset plenum during a stormy debate, in February.

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