Daily Dispatch

Alarm as new Israeli coalition takes back the ultra-Orthodox

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THE return of ultra-Orthodox parties to government as part of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new coalition will lead to a rollback in religious reforms and boost internal tensions, experts say.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews, who make up about 10% of Israel’s population of 8.3 million, have long enjoyed influence beyond their numbers.

Often kingmakers in coalition government­s, ultra-Orthodox parties have secured a wide range of benefits for their community, including exemptions from military service and funding for a separate school system focused mainly on religious studies.

This has caused resentment among Israel’s secular majority, which Net previous coalition took steps to address via a raft of legislatio­n passed during a two-year period when there was no ultra-Orthodox representa­tion in government.

But this time Netanyahu has chosen to include two ultra-Orthodox factions – United Torah Judaism (UTJ) and Shas – in his five-party coalition, which has 61 of the 120 seats in the Knesset, or parliament.

Now experts say the government will be under pressure to reverse course, setting the stage for another round of the cultural battle over the identity of the Jewish state.

Law professor Yedida Stern said Netanyahu has agreed to a number of key concession­s in his agreement with UTJ.

Crucial legislatio­n the eased conversion rules – instituted for the 330 000 people who immigrated to Israel from the former Soviet Union and are not considered Jewish under Orthodox law – will be nullified.

A provision allowing for the imprisonme­nt of ultra-Orthodox men who evade military service will also be cancelled and ultra-Orthodox schools that do not teach core curriculum studies will again be eligible for state funding.

These steps are likely to anger many secular Israelis, who accuse the ultra-Orthodox of not doing their share to support the country.

Concession­s to the ultra-Orthodox appear to have been at the heart of Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s refusal to join the government. His nationalis­t Yisrael Beitenu party dropped out of coalition talks five days after the agreement with UTJ was signed.

“The government being formed is not a nationalis­t government but rather one of opportunis­m,” Lieberman said.

Secular activists by the deal.

It is “one of the worse in the history of coalition agreements”, said Shahar Ilan, a vice-president of Hiddush, an Israeli group promoting religious freedom.

Economists are unanimous that Israel will face a “serious crisis” unless the ultra-Orthodox, who have a high birthrate, start entering the workforce, he said.

“We’re creating a situation here in which we’re investing lots of money to encourage them to work, (but) we’re also paying them to not do so.”

Rolling back the demand to teach core subjects at ultra-Orthodox schools was also “ruining the personal future of tens of thousands of children”, he said.

Ilan predicted a resurgence of the kind of religious controvers­ies that plagued Israel between 2010 and 2012, such as segregatio­n on busses and closing roads on the Sabbath.

“Concession­s to the ultra-Orthodox would also likely cause friction between Israel and Jews abroad, in particular with the US Jewish community.” — AFP

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 ?? Picture: EPA ?? SEEKING PARTNERS: In this 2014 file picture Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, centre, and Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, left, attend a vote at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem
Picture: EPA SEEKING PARTNERS: In this 2014 file picture Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, centre, and Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, left, attend a vote at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem

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