The Jerusalem Post

Ultra-Orthodoxy meets the truth

- • By AMOTZ ASA-EL www.MiddleIsra­el.net The writer, a Hartman Institute fellow, is the author of the bestsellin­g Mitzad Ha’ivelet Ha’yehudi (The Jewish March of Folly, Yediot Sefarim, 2019), a revisionis­t history of the Jewish people’s political leadershi

The most veteran, corrupt, and profane deal ever struck in the Jewish state is ready to die.

The 47-year-old pact, whereby ultra-Orthodoxy got wholesale draft exemptions, budgets, and subsidies in turn for joining Likud’s coalitions will next month come to an end, due to a rare alignment of juridical, political, and social stars.

The juridical part is the High Court of Justice’s ruling last month that since the government has not amended the unconstitu­tional Conscripti­on Law, and since the deadline for its amendment is this month, the government must explain why it won’t conscript ultra-Orthodox men, and also stop funding their yeshivas.

The political part is Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s demand, announced dramatical­ly last week, that the law will be amended through an agreement with Benny Gantz’s National Unity party.

Gantz wants an amendment that will make most ultra-Orthodox young men, gradually over a decade, serve either in the army or in civilian alternativ­es. Gallant concurs. “All must get under the stretcher,” he said, using the Israeli metaphor about soldiers’ helping each other. “Without physical existence, there is no spiritual existence,” he said, echoing what every Zionist thinks.

An alternativ­e bill, one that would sideline Gallant, is impractica­l since a bill concerning the military must be introduced by the defense minister.

Gallant, a former commander of the Naval Commando, may not be particular­ly eloquent, but he sure is brave. He has his idea of justice and is prepared to run with it no matter what the political risk, the way he did last year when he demanded that Benjamin Netanyahu halt his judicial reform, arguing that the disunity it was fomenting was strategica­lly unaffordab­le.

Now Gallant’s move is forcing Netanyahu to woo the very political center that his longtime alliance with ultra-Orthodoxy disparaged and abused. Worse, from Netanyahu’s viewpoint, the deal he so cherishes is now ready to explode socially, because of the war.

The war, which will be recalled as the Netanyahu era’s aftermath and emblem, is exacting an exorbitant price from Israeli society: physically, economical­ly, and emotionall­y.

Millions of citizens follow anxiously the IDF’s announceme­nts of fallen soldiers’ names. Mainstream Israelis have personal acquaintan­ces among the war’s fallen, wounded, hostages, and their families.

Ultra-Orthodox Israelis do not. That gap alone pushes ultra-Orthodoxy out of the social pale. Now add to this the army’s need, because of the war, to make those who do enlist serve even more, and you get the wrath that ultra-Orthodoxy’s non-service now evokes.

Ultra-Orthodox Israelis’ absence from the funerals and the hospital wards where thousands of other Israelis arrived over the past five months is making a critical mass of Israelis fume. And this fury is no longer about people ultra-Orthodoxy can dismiss as virulently anti-religious or knee-jerk liberals. It’s everyone, including rabbis who previously avoided confrontat­ion with their ultra-Orthodox peers.

“It’s the numbers,” said Ilai Ofran, the rabbi of Kibbutz Yavne, referring to the war’s high rate of casualties. “That transforme­d the debate from theoretica­l to existentia­l,” he told Yediot Aharonot.

Rabbi Haim Navon of Yeshivat Har Etzion was harsher. “Ultra-Orthodox draft dodging is a disgrace and its excuses don’t hold any water,” he wrote in Makor Rishon. “We never agreed for the deal whereby we get killed and they identify our bodies,” he wrote, referring to ultra-Orthodox volunteers’ dominant role in that thankless work following the October 7 massacre.

Even so, as of this writing, ultra-Orthodoxy’s leaders are failing, along with Netanyahu, to fathom their deal’s corruption and detect its approachin­g collapse.

“WE WON’T agree to anything concerning the [yeshiva] boys’ enlistment,” said Rabbi Meir Zvi Bergman, 95, the head of the Council of Torah Sages, last week. “No one is sovereign to give up the Torah, and nothing will help them,” he said – “them” being us.

With all due respect to Rabbi Bergman’s scholarshi­p and age, his statement is based on a brazen lie. No one is out to make anyone “give up the Torah.” The Jewish state is not Emperor Hadrian’s Rome.

First of all, conscripti­on is only about ages 18-21. The rest can study day and night. Secondly, thousands of Modern Orthodox soldiers have proven, empiricall­y, that military service is no obstacle to Jewish scholarshi­p. Some of this generation’s outstandin­g Talmudic scholars, for instance, rabbis Re’em Hacohen, Yuval Cherlow, and IDF Chief Chaplain Eyal Krim, were combat officers.

The ultra-Orthodox politician­s who make a living crafting the crooked deals that their elderly rabbis then have to defend, are making them lie. Moreover, they make the ultra-Orthodox population violate

Jewish law, three times:

First, they ignore Moses’ question to those he suspected of draft dodging: “Are your brothers to go to war while you stay here?” (Numbers 32:7). Second, they violate the sages’ law that “in mandatory wars” – that is, wars of defense, like today’s – “everyone goes, even a groom from his room and a bride from her wedding canopy” (Sota 8:6). And now, as their brethren risk their lives in Gaza and Lebanon, they violate the command “You shall not stand against the blood of your neighbor” (Leviticus 19:16).

BACK WHEN this government was created, this column warned that Netanyahu’s nonchalant delivery of ultra-Orthodoxy’s redoubled demands in budgeting and legislatio­n will ignite civic rebellion (“The Middle Israeli revolt,” December 9,

2022). Now the revolt is here.

Chances that Netanyahu will change course after his lifelong tango with ultra-Orthodoxy are nil. At 74, he is too old to overcome his addiction to what he calls, absurdly, “Likud’s natural allies.”

Well, ultra-Orthodoxy is not Likud’s natural ally. The political center is. And now that center, embodied by Gantz and Gallant, is telling Likud: Your draft-dodging deal was all along a celebratio­n of lies, hypocrisy, and deceit, and next month, with or without you and your Bibi, it will come to its end.

The 47-year draft-exemption deal with Likud, a celebratio­n of lies, hypocrisy, and deceit, is ready to die

 ?? (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90) ?? HAREDI JEWS walk in the streets of the ultra-Orthodox neighborho­od of Mea Shearim, in Jerusalem, earlier this month. Military service is no obstacle to Jewish scholarshi­p, the writer says.
(Chaim Goldberg/Flash90) HAREDI JEWS walk in the streets of the ultra-Orthodox neighborho­od of Mea Shearim, in Jerusalem, earlier this month. Military service is no obstacle to Jewish scholarshi­p, the writer says.
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