The Spectrum & Daily News

Ultra-Orthodox Israelis resist conscripti­on push

Exemption for seminary students could expire Monday

- James Mackenzie

JERUSALEM – Ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties are resisting pressure to lift exemptions of religious students from military duty, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s struggles to preserve his coalition and spread the wartime burden across society fairly.

With a March 31 deadline looming for the Israeli government to come up with legislatio­n to resolve a decadeslon­g standoff over the issue, Netanyahu filed a last-minute applicatio­n to the Supreme Court for a 30day deferment.

If this is not granted, the exemptions to the current National Service Law preventing seminary students from being conscripte­d will expire Monday.

The Supreme Court has not responded directly, but on Thursday it issued an interim ruling ordering the government to freeze funding for seminary students who would be liable for conscripti­on starting next week.

The exemptions offered to the ultra-Orthodox Haredi community date back to the early days of the state of Israel in 1948 when its first prime minister, the socialist David Ben-Gurion, exempted about 400 students from military service so they could devote themselves to religious study. In so doing, Ben-Gurion hoped to keep alive sacred knowledge and traditions almost wiped out in the Holocaust.

Since then, the exemptions have become an increasing headache as the fast-growing community has expanded to make up more than 13% of Israel’s population, a proportion expected to reach around a third within 40 years due to a high birth rate.

The Haredi resistance to joining the military is based around their strong sense of religious identity, which many families fear risks being weakened by army service.

Some Haredi men do serve in the army but most do not, which many secular Israelis feel exacerbate­s social divisions. Often living in heavily Orthodox neighborho­ods and devoting their lives to religious study, many Haredi men do not work for money but live off donations, state benefits and the often paltry wages of their wives, many of whom do work.

For secular Israelis, whose taxes subsidize the Haredim and who are themselves obliged to serve in the military, the exemptions have long bred resentment, which has grown in the six months since the start of the war in Gaza.

Many Israelis regard the war against Hamas as an existentia­l battle for the future of the country, and some 300,000 reservists joined up to fight.

 ?? HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS ?? Ultra-Orthodox Jews line up to process their exemptions from mandatory military service on Thursday at a military recruitmen­t office in Kiryat Ono, Israel.
HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS Ultra-Orthodox Jews line up to process their exemptions from mandatory military service on Thursday at a military recruitmen­t office in Kiryat Ono, Israel.
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