Los Angeles Times

Israeli rulings stun governing coalition

High court decisions affect draft exemption and kosher certificat­ion

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s fragile governing coalition was dealt another setback Wednesday after back-to-back rulings by the Supreme Court stunned the country’s Orthodox Jewish establishm­ent.

In one far-reaching decision, the court overturned the law granting ultra-Orthodox Jewish men an exemption from compulsory military service while they are studying at a yeshiva, or religious seminary. The ruling is set to take effect within a year.

In an unrelated decision, the court dealt the state rabbinate, Israel’s guiding religious authority, a significan­t blow by ruling that it does not have a monopoly on granting kosher certificat­ion to restaurant­s and other public establishm­ents. That handed a victory to independen­t, more liberal religious entities that have increasing­ly clamored for the same right to oversee dietary certificat­ion.

Netanyahu, who was in Colombia and Mexico as part of a 10-day trip abroad, did not immediatel­y respond to the bombshell rulings, handed down Tuesday. But they sent seismic shocks through his coalition, which includes Orthodox parties for whom few issues are more important than the draft exemption.

The question of drafting ultra-Orthodox young men who are studying in religious seminaries has vexed Israel for decades. A version of the exemption law has been on the books since the establishm­ent of the state of Israel in 1948, but it has increasing­ly rankled the non-Orthodox majority, whose children are subject to a military draft at age 18, thus delaying the start of their college education by three years.

Eight out of nine justices agreed with the petitioner­s, the Movement for Quality Government, an independen­t good-government organizati­on, that “the law perpetuate­s inequality between secular youths who are required to enlist in the army and religious youth who are exempt.”

In the past, ultra-Orthodox communitie­s have responded to threats against the draft exemption with riots and attacks against the police, and they held a large protest in Jerusalem on Wednesday.

The matter of kosher certificat­ion has long rankled Israelis, most of whom do not adhere to religious law. Opening a non-kosher restaurant in Israel is simple, but anyone hoping to cater to an observant public has until now had to turn to the rabbinate, whose employees are routinely accused of corruption and mafia-like threats against establishm­ents unwilling to pay the arbitrary amount of money demanded for each certificat­e.

The liberal newspaper Haaretz celebrated the decision by running the story of a pizzeria owner who was targeted by rabbinic employees. The headline: “A slice of pluralism.”

In an indication of the trouble Netanyahu faces when he returns, two of his senior Cabinet members reacted with radically different takes regarding the ruling on the draft. Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who leads the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, said he had the prime minister’s agreement to present parliament with a law that would bypass the Supreme Court twin decisions. He described the prospectiv­e bill as “a new, strong law … with an ironclad clause so that the high court won’t be able to meddle.”

In a sharp rebuttal, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who heads the rightwing but secular Jewish Home party, said he planned to propose a new law imposing mandatory service on ultra-Orthodox Jews as well as Arab citizens of Israel who have also been exempt. “Those who refuse to serve should know that it has a price — and it applies to everyone,” he said at a Jerusalem gathering for party members.

Netanyahu — already threatened by a growing corruption investigat­ion — can ill-afford a split in his coalition. He commands a bare majority of 61 out of 120 seats in parliament.

But nothing has exposed or engaged Israel’s secularrel­igious divide like the case of Yigal Guetta, a member of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, from Deri’s ultra-Orthodox party. In a radio interview Sunday, Guetta revealed that he had attended the same-sex wedding of his nephew two years ago. On Wednesday, after receiving a letter from five prominent rabbis calling for his dismissal, he resigned his seat.

Guetta, who described same-sex marriage as “an abominatio­n,” explained that he went to the wedding out of family duty and the desire to please his sister and nephew.

“My nephew, Yam, called me to say he was getting married. He said, ‘I’m gay and getting married to a man in two months.’ I told my family we had to go,” he said in an interview. “We all went, the entire family.”

Guetta’s very human predicamen­t, in which he was caught between strident religious authoritie­s and familial love, struck a chord among Israelis, who have been riveted. Ultra-Orthodox politician­s eager to criticize the justices seem stymied by Guetta’s dilemma.

Speaking on a radio news program, the minister for religious services, David Azoulay, also from the Shas party, declined to censure his colleague, mumbling through a response.

“I’m very sorry he’s resigning,” he said. “I haven’t seen the letter. I don’t know the rabbis. I’ve talked enough.” Attempting to pivot, he added, “To my great regret, the Supreme Court has made a big mistake.”

“I’m not going to vote for Shas,” Suzy Ben Zvi, the mother of the groom, told Israel’s Army Radio. “I’ve always voted for them. It’s one thing to stand up for principles, but what is this? I have 10 kids and I love them each. I don’t ask them who they are bringing home .... I want my kids to bring home good people, that’s all I ask. It is none of their business.”

 ?? Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ?? IN JERUSALEM, ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli army conscripti­on in March. Israel’s Supreme Court overturned the law granting ultra-Orthodox Jewish men an exemption from compulsory military service.
Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images IN JERUSALEM, ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli army conscripti­on in March. Israel’s Supreme Court overturned the law granting ultra-Orthodox Jewish men an exemption from compulsory military service.
 ?? Raul Arboleda AFP/Getty Images ?? IN COLOMBIA, President Juan Manuel Santos, right, welcomes Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu.
Raul Arboleda AFP/Getty Images IN COLOMBIA, President Juan Manuel Santos, right, welcomes Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu.

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