The Jewish Chronicle

Will all this wailing over the wall end in tears for the ultra-Orthodox?

-

gratulated President Herzog for his interventi­on But it had benefited only one group. The ultra-Orthodox got to keep their status-quo monopoly while the Women of the Wall were humiliated once again.

Rabbi Kariv tweeted that he would continue to work until “the Kotel Framework is fully adopted by the government”.

He probably shouldn’t rely on the president if he wants that to happen.

THE POWER OF PRAYER

Even if it rarely receives much attention in the Israeli media, the fight for egalitaria­n prayers at the Western Wall is about to become much more significan­t. The matter was supposed to have been settled back in 2016, when the government and the Jewish Agency announced the “Kotel Framework”, according to which the various “progressiv­e” Jewish groups demanding to be allowed to hold prayers at the Wall would be allocated a separate section, at the southernmo­st end of the ancient temple, leaving the main Kotel plaza to the Orthodox.

While the Haredi politician­s originally agreed to the compromise, more hardcore elements opposed it, forcing them to renege and pressure then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to suspend the framework.

It has remained suspended ever since. Though Reform and Conservati­ve groups do use the “Southern Kotel” routinely, it’s an unofficial arrangemen­t and groups of Orthodox men often go there and crowd them out. Now that the new government is in place, without any Haredi parties in its coalition, the campaign against “the Reform desecratio­n,” and specifical­ly against Rabbi Kariv who is a prominent member of the new coalition, has become part of the wider battle being waged by Shas and United Torah Judaism, together with the other opposition parties, to paint the government as being “antiJudais­m”. Most of the vitriol has been directed at its inclusion of Ra’am, an Islamist party. But Rabbi Kariv is becoming a target as well.

It will be interestin­g to see which side Israel’s various leaders take. Mr Netanyahu, now leader of the opposition, seemed to indicate his prefer

ence last week when he retweeted Shad Leader Arye Deri’s call to “come and pray with us so that God forbid the holy place isn’t desecrated”. The fact that he originally supported the Kotel Framework has been convenient­ly forgotten. Anything that attacks the coalition goes.

President Herzog is trying to position himself as the great conciliato­r, despite knowing full well that the ultra-Orthodox side is not going to accept any compromise. In his three years as Jewish Agency chairman, he did nothing to push forward the Kotel Framework, which had been brokered originally by his predecesso­r at the Agency, Natan Sharansky. He was too eager to get the votes of the Haredi parties for his candidacy as president and he wants to remain on good terms with them now, as he has plans to return to frontline politics once his seven-year term is over.

He’s a status-quo politician and wants the issue to simply go away.

Most intriguing so far is the silence of Prime Minister Naftali Bennett. Back in 2016, he held the Diaspora Affairs portfolio and it was he, together with Mr Sharansky, who came up with the Kotel Framework. Mr Bennett is still in favour of it, and since his government is not dependent on Haredi seats, he can push it through. But the prime minister is also aware that he must choose his battles and may decide to sit this one out.

A KOSHER CARVE-UP

One battle on synagogue and state that the Bennett government seems to have won, at least for now, is over the “kashrut reform”. It was one of many rather minor economic reforms voted on by the Knesset last week among the state budget laws. It was heralded by Religious Services Minister Matan Kahana as a “major breakthrou­gh” and the Haredi parties as the “uprooting of Judaism from the holy land”. Both sides were wildly exaggerati­ng.

Under the new law, the State Rabbinate will no longer be in charge of kashrut supervisio­n on the local level Instead, private kashrut organisati­ons will be allowed to issue certificat­es attesting to the fact that a product or a business observes the kashrut rules. This is a blow to the standing of both the State Rabbinate and local rabbinates, which for decades have fallen under the sway of the ultra-Orthodox leadership. It means that they will have many fewer kashrut supervisor jobs to dole out. It is unlikely, however, to have much impact on the food and hospitalit­y industries, since there are already multiple private kashrut organisati­ons, of the various ultra-Orthodox communitie­s, for whom the State Rabbinate’s imprimatur was never enough anyway.

Most major manufactur­ers, supermarke­t chains and large hotels are not going to move to more moderate Kashrut organisati­ons, as they don’t want to lose the custom of the growing Haredi community, which is now about 13 percent of the population and growing. The reform will benefit a relatively small number of restaurant­s and providers who want to remain kosher but don’t have many Haredi customers.

The true significan­ce of the “Kashrut reform” isn’t in its details or rather limited impact, but the fact that an Israeli government is altering the hallowed status quo on religious matters and the Haredi leadership has apparently no influence.

The new laws also include cuts to the funding of ultra-Orthodox education networks, a removal of childcare benefits for married yeshiva students and the exemption of those over the age of 21 from military service, allowing them to leave their yeshivas and join the workforce without the threat of being drafted into the army.

None of these alone is revolution­ary, but the goalposts are being moved and the Haredim are not even on the pitch.

The Bennett government is on a trajectory to make major changes to the way Israel has allowed Haredi autonomy to grow for the past 73 years. It may not go all the way. Some coalition members are concerned about their own relations with the ultra-Orthodox leadership and would consider partnering with them in the future. Mr Bennett is concerned that he’s giving ammunition to his opposition by binding the Haredi parties even closer to Mr Netanyahu. He has yet to decide how far to go on these issues. His position on the Western Wall dispute, if he takes one, will be an indication.

Supermarke­ts don’t want to lose Haredi customers

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Battle for belief: Women of the Wall (far left); Naftali Bennett, President Herzog (middle) and MK Rabbi Gilad Kariv
Battle for belief: Women of the Wall (far left); Naftali Bennett, President Herzog (middle) and MK Rabbi Gilad Kariv
 ?? PHOTOS: FLASH90 ??
PHOTOS: FLASH90

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom